Top Relocation States - podcast episode cover

Top Relocation States

Jan 04, 202445 min
--:--
--:--
Download Metacast podcast app
Listen to this episode in Metacast mobile app
Don't just listen to podcasts. Learn from them with transcripts, summaries, and chapters for every episode. Skim, search, and bookmark insights. Learn more

Episode description

Amy King hosts your Thursday Wake Up Call. ABC News’ Jordana Miller reports live from Jerusalem to talk about Mossad Chief vowing to hunt down Hamas members. Amy speaks with 'The Street Vet' Dr.Kwane Stewart who was named CNN Hero of the Year. ABC News Correspondent Jim Ryan comes on the program to breakdown U-Haul’s ranking of the top relocation states. The show wraps with ABC News Correspondent live from London Tom Rivers discussing the runway warning lights being broken at the time of the Japan Airlines fire per reports.

Transcript

You're listening to KFI AM six forty wake Up Call with me Amy King on demand on the iHeartRadio app kf I and kost HD two Los Angeles, Orange County. Improve up your host, Amy Kay. It is five o'clock. This is your wake up call for Thursday, January fourth. I'm Amy King. Had to think about what the day was. We're already deep into twenty twenty four. I can't even say Happy New Year anymore, Nah, I can, I still will. We're only four days in Kono. Don't give

me that look too late. Four days, no more celebrations. That's it, all right? Fine, Hey, I'm celebrating that it wasn't super windy on my way into work last night. I don't know about where you are, but last night I went to bed and it was blowing like crazy, Like I couldn't go to sleep because the winds were just howling. The cats are like, hey, what's going on? But and I was just sort of waiting for the roof to come off, like it was seriously blowing that

hard. And we're expecting more wins today, so batten down the hatches. We've got wind advisories in several areas. Will be telling you about that. Here's what's ahead on wake Up Call. The names of one hundred and fifty people associated with Jeffrey Epstein have been released. They include former presidents Trump and Clinton. Other people mentioned in the documents released yesterday include Britton's Prince Andrew,

Michael Jackson, magician David Copperfield, and Alan Dershowitz, the lawyer. Some beaches in La County have been closed because of a more than fifteen thousand gallon sewage spill. Officials say the spill yesterday actually happened miles away at the Rubio Wash in San Gabriel, but the sewage got into the La River and washed down to Long Beach west of Belmont Shore. The Federal Reserve appears to be done with rate hikes. Members of a key FED committee predicted rate cuts in

twenty twenty four. That's according to a new meeting minutes from December that were just released yesterday at six oh five. It's handle on the news. Several state capitol buildings were evacuated because of a mass email threat. We'll tell you about that. Let's get started with some of the stories coming out of the KFI twenty four hour newsroom. La County has started cleaning up beaches that have

been pounded by big waves. Large waves brought on by storms over the last week have left behind trash, debris, and even caused erosion on some of the beaches. LA County Beaches and Harbor's Carol Baker says the surge has also pushed garbage into storm drains, so that will end up on the beach and it just takes a while because we have to use mechanized equipment. We need to take it in pieces, says Lifeguard Towers that were heavily hit during the

swaller also being inspected. The department will be working to address the most vulnerable areas to ensure safety and sanitation. Chris Adler, Keffie News The Laped says a guy's been detained in connection with the hit and run deaths of three members of the same family on New Year's Eve. All three were in a smaller sedan when they were broadsided by Chevy tahoe going close to eighty miles an hour in a residential zone in south central LA. Detective Ryan Moreno says the scene

was one of the worst he's ever witnessed. I think when you see this car, and you see just the destruction as the vehicle. I think the hard thing is looking at these two little car sheets in the back that are covered in blood. Moreno says the father, mother, and five year old daughter were killed. The one year old daughters in critical condition. Moreno says alcohol played a factor in the crash and the driver could be facing murder charges.

Steve Gregor kfin News. Former President Trump has asked the US Supreme Court to overturn a ruling that bars him from the primary ballot in Colorado. Colorado Supreme Court ruled last month that under the Fourteenth Amendment, Trump cannot run because he engaged in insurrection on January sixth. Trump's attorneys yesterday said they disagree.

The attorneys argue it's up to Congress, not the courts or state officials, to determine whether a candidate is eligible to be president, and they claim that office isn't covered by Section three of the Fourteenth Amendment ABC. Stephen Portnoy says courts across the country have been grappling with these questions, but only the Supreme Court can answer them. A man who appeared in court in Las Vegas for

aggravated battery has attacked a judge during his sentencing. Alex Stone says Judge Mary kay Holthis was sitting on the bench when Diebor Redden ran up, jumped over the bench and attacked her. Judge Holthas took cover, appearing to hit her head, and court security jumped in fighting with Reddin. The Clark County Court says Judge Holthas had injuries and her condition is being monitored. Stone says A Marshall was also injured and taken to the hospital yesterday. The guy had just

been sentenced to thirty years in prison. SpaceX has put a cell tower in space. Elon Musk's company launched six STARLINGK satellites yesterday, designed to provide LTE mobile phones with network signals. The billionaire partnered with T Mobile, saying the direct to sell satellites are meant to connect people in areas where it's impossible to get service, like in my apartment. Let's get back to some of the Actually, we're not going to get back to some of the stories just yet,

because we're going to get back to Jordana Miller in Jerusalem. And even though Cono says, I can't say it happy New Year. Jordana, Oh yeah, you can still say that I'm America. Okay, good. So I have my Jewish New Year and my American New Year. It's all good.

Lots of celebrations. So Israel has pulled some troops out of the Gaza Strip, but the chief of Israel's intelligence services basically doubled down, saying they're going to continue to hunt down every single Hamas member involved in the October seventh massacre. That's right, Spy Chief David Barnea, who heads up the Mossad, essentially putting out a warning saying that any and every Humas leader that was involved directly or indirectly in October seventh, what is called a massacre here.

You know, over twelve hundred Israelis killed, over two hundred kidnapped. He said, anyone involved in October seventh, that Israel is going to hunt them down and essentially kill them. That was the implication. He was saying it in his eulogy for former Mosad chiefs vis Amir, and that Masad chief was the first one who kind of went on the offensive after the Munich massacre,

when Palestinian militant murdered eleven members of Israel's Olympic team. That chief the mir decided that he was going to set up a unit that was going to, even if it took years, go out and assassinate everyone involved in that attack. And that's essentially what Barney is saying here, and it's the strongest indication yet that Israel carried out assassination in Beirut two nights ago of atop AMS leader because Sala Aururi is suspected of helping plan and plot the October seventh attack,

and he was killed on Lovanie soil. Barnea making this threat saying you know, no matter where you are, will find you, even if it takes us a long time, Okay. And is there indications Jordana of how many people they may be talking about. They say they're going after every single one, But do we have any idea how many strong Hamas is well. I

think he was primarily making the threat against its top leaders. I mean, many of the actual fighters who carried out the attack were either killed on the day of the attack once the army got down there, or they've been killed on the battlefield. But leaders like Ya Kassinoir, who's the head of Hamas's military wing, he's allegedly hiding somewhere underground under Hanyunis or for example, Mohammed Death their deputies, both of them would be on the list as well.

And if Mohanea is the head of Hamas, he's likely on the list too. So, you know, David Barney is talking about the really the highest ranks of those who plotted, as he called it, you know, plotted, were the envoys to the attack, other people involved in the attack. And there were about three thousand Hamas fighters that came over the Gaza border blowing up, you know, almost twenty different entry points into southern Gaza into southern

Israel. Those a lot of those fighters, you know, they're either still fighting or being killed or were already killed. Now, we haven't talked to you, Jordana since before before the Christmas holiday, but we did get word earlier this week that Israel was planning to pull a lot of troops out of the Gaza strip. But that's not a signal that they're ending their operations there. Correct, Correct, I'm the Prime Minister of the Defense Minister, the

head of the Israeli Army. Everybody has been very clear the war's not ending, but it does seem that there is a shift in strategy. Israel seems to be thinning out its troops in northern Gaza, moving out reserve soldiers, thousands of them, and instead focusing most of its firepower on Conunis, a city in the south that's the last hamastronghold, and some areas in central Gaza.

And as the Defense Minister said, there'll be smaller operations in the north where Israel has what it claims is operational control over most of northern Gaza,

and in the south. It will still be a high intense war. But this is in line with the talks the US and Israel has been having about switching to a kind of lower intensity war, one that might be you know, just as effective going after you know, the strongholds that are left or based on until now, and there's a lot from Hamas fighters that were taken in and interrogated, going after a certainarians rather than a full force ground offensive

in every part of the Gaza Stript. It will also be safer for civilians, God willing, in the Gaza Stript. Some can return home to their homes in northern Gaza because so many about one point eight million, are packed into the south, and it will help get more aid in and distribute that aid quicker when there's less you know, airstrikes and fire power from all sides. Okay, And speaking of the civilians who said that they there may be an ability to go home, do they even have homes to go through,

go back to? I mean from the pictures we've seen, I mean gaz is just decimated. Yeah, I mean there are you know, there's there. I think the as them that to the seventy percent of the homes and the Garsa strip have been damaged or destroyed, that's a lot. So certainly there will be some families that have you know, nothing to go back to.

But certainly, you know, people would rather be back in their familiar surroundings, in their neighborhoods and their neighbors, et cetera, and trying to figure out what Plan B is than them living in a tent and you know, in southern Gaza somewhere with you know, packed in with a lot of people. So it's it's a it's a small improvement. But obviously, you know, rebuilding the Gaza Strip and what the Gods Strip will look like when this war's over, that's a whole nother interview, Okay, and I'm sure

that we will be having that discussion in the very near future. Jordana Miller, thank you so much for your time. Thanks Texans. All right, let's get back to some of the stories coming out of the KFI twenty four hour newsroom. Previously sealed court documents related to convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein are starting to be really as daring, Katursky says. The documents released last night

revealed the names of powerful people who associated with Epstein. These documents have been unsealed on a rolling basis over the last number of years, and finally the judge just decided that there really was no longer a compelling reason to keep them fully sealed any longer. Epstein was accused of abusing young girls and women for years. He killed himself in jail in twenty nineteen while awaiting sex trafficking charges. A thirteen year old girl who turned up missing during a family vacation in

la has been found safe. LAPD says Valentina Magana was located and being reunited with her family. She was last seen Tuesday afternoon after she got into an argument with her mom over some makeup. The teen and her family are visiting La from Mexico. The bill to change Proposition forty seven in California has been

interduced at the state Capitol. Democratic Assemblyman Carlos Villa Pudua has a plan that would adjust the nine hundred and fifty dollars threshold between misdemeanor and felony theft. We need to do more for our constituents, more for our retailers. We need to make sure that we're retaining our businesses here. The bill would also give judges more say and sentencing provide discretion for judges to make a discretion on

what their professional judgment on the different circumstances. Prop forty seven, previously known as the Safe Neighborhoods and Schools Act, has been under intense scrutiny in recent years for perpetuating retail theft by making it harder for law enforcement to prosecute.

Blustery winds expected to continue to blow through southern California. Winter weather advisories have been replaced with wind advisories through early tomorrow for the Santa Clarita Valley, Malibu Coast, La County Beaches, Palace Verdes Hills, Santa Monica Mountains, Recreational Area, Calabasis, Western San Fernando Valley, and the San Gabriel Mountains, along with Kataline Island and the fourteen Freeway corridor. Very blustery Ventre County officials

are looking for a group of burglary suspects who ran down a deputy. The deputy was hit by one of two vehicles involved in the burglary at a market in Casita Springs. Investigators say the driver hit the deputy on purpose. She's been treated and released from the hospital. A thirteen year old from Oklahoma is

reported to be the first person ever to beat Tetris. The teen, who goes by the nickname Blue Scootie, posted a video on YouTube YouTube showing him appearing to defeat Nintendo's famous Falling Block puzzle game by reaching the kill screen. The record was previously held by an AI bot. Humans prevail again. At six oh five, it's handle on the news. A big old sewage spill

in San Gabriel has prompted beach closures miles and miles away. So it's not every day that you get to to talk to a real hero, but with us, this morning is CNN's new Hero of the Year doctor Kwan Stewart from San Diego. He is the street vet and provides veterinary services to homeless dogs. So doctor Stewart, good morning. Can you please tell us what it is you do and why you do it? So I've been a veterinara now for he's going on twenty six years. But about halfway through my career,

I found myself actually wanting to quit my own profession. And there's a longer story behind it, but I was a shelter veterinarian at the time and it was just on a good time to be a shelter at a municipality no less, we had a high youth and Asia eight and it was during the recession, and I felt like exiting, exiting and just finding something else entirely different is that because it was just so heartbreaking to see I. Like you said,

it was during the recession and people were turning in pets and so the shelters were probably flooded and overcrowded. You have no choice at that point, but then to euthanize them, right, It was the eth and Asians that were getting to me, and they were daily and they were by the dozens, and it was it just started to kill a part of my soul. And you know, when you're a little boy dreaming of being a vet one

day, it's not what you envisioned. So yeah, I was, you know, looking back now, and you don't really fully realize it or appreciate the time. I think I was going through some depression doing the work,

and how could you not when you're seeing that daily. And yeah, I just happened to come across this unhoused man and his dog and sort of sort of a random act of helping him of kindness, I rediscovered why I should be in this profession that, over the years, caught the attention of multiple people, but ultimately seeing then Okay, so tell me about the man and his dog. Well, he was sitting there outside of seven eleven, sort

of off to the side, and you sometimes we'll see them panhandling. I went in to get coffee and as I came out, I looked to my left and he was there crossing the corner with his dog. And I, you know, regretably, i'd seen this guy before, and I had ignored him before, but on this day, probably because I was in my own funk in fact, I was in my head just before I went in. I was writing my letter of resignation. I sort of sort of crafting it in my head as I was getting my coffee, and so, for whatever

reason, I know I was in this mental space. I took notice of him and his dog. I stepped over. I could tell his dog had a serious skin issue. It turned out just to be fleezed. And for anyone listening who may or may not own a dog, if a dog has fleas long enough, it can completely destroy the skin. And this dog looked like a burn victim. The hair was gone, the skin was red, and Bumpy was infected. The dog was miserable. The man was miserable.

He was living with his dog and the fleas as well. And I just I leaned over. I introduced myself. I said, I'm a quand Steward, I'm a veterinarian. If you're here tomorrow, I'll return with something that should help. I did as promised. It was all of three dollars out

of my pockets. It was just a basic flea treatment. And I saw the same dog about a week and a half later, and the dog was just transformed, happy, The hair was coming back, and the man sitting in the same spot looking up at me, said, with tears in his eyes, thank you for not ignoring me. And I just had this lightning bolt of feeling. It was so rewarding, and it was so easy. It took so little of my time to just pull this dog out of suffering,

a dog that probably otherwise never would have gotten help. Just the man just didn't have resources, obviously, and I just told myself, I'm going to do more of this. And that was twelve years ago and I haven't stopped since. Okay, so now what do you do, because now we know that you are the street vent, so tell us about what you're out and about doing. I pack a bag of medical supplies. This is pretty simple, and in it are vaccines at inflammatories, and I bought Tonyl trimmer,

is just a basic kit. And I hit impoverised areas of the cities, mainly southern California where I live. I live in San Diego, but I go to La a lot at skid row, and I just walk through these encampments and I look for people in pets. Our census tells us that about twenty percent of our homeless own the pets that's been my observation as well. It's about one out of five. And so if you just walk through

these areas, you're going to come across people in pets. And when I do, I introduce myself just like I did a day at seven to eleven and ask them if I can help their dog in any way. Usually I say yes, and I just get to work and I can treat about eighty percent of the dogs I see the cases I see out of that bag about eighty percent, so I can do a lot out of a pretty small bag.

For the other twenty percent, I need to get them into hospital care for further care, could be an anesthetic procedure to remove a tumor or extract a tooth or what have you. But we will and we cover all the costs. And who you say we cover the cost who pays for this? Well, my charity. It's it's a Project Street Vet and we officially formed in twenty twenty and five to one, and yeah, through that, through donations and and we have This is the part of blows me away. Yeah,

I know we're a pet loving nation and we are. There is something about pets and our connection to them, and it just plays out over and over. They're more popular than they've ever been. This younger generation are replacing kids with pets. It's just it's a part of who we are. And I just never imagine when I started this charity that people would would be as generous as they are, and they are so giving, and the whole mission runs entirely on donations. But people have been so generous, and and we

do. We have good resources. We're well resourced, and so I never have to turn an animal away. If family to go in for a five thousand dollars procedure, then we can cover it. If it's something lest we covered, if it's fall up care reach outs and so forth, then we have the resources that take care of these animals the way they can be cared for. Now, doctor Stewart not only takes care of hundreds of homeless pets by providing those veterinary services for free, he's taken it a step further.

And tomorrow we're going to continue our conversation to find out how about his new program to feed homeless pets has been launched. He'll also tell us more about how he got the attention of CNN and became their hero of the year. Amazing Man, amazing organization. Be sure to join us tomorrow, same time tomorrow. Also, you can donate money and find out how you can volunteer to help with projects street Vet at projectstreetvet dot org. Talk about an impressive

person. Let's get back to some of the stories coming out of the KFI twenty four hour newsroom. Orange County we'll spend one hundred and nine million dollars to remodel its juvenile detention center to a rehabilitation, treatment and training campus,

modernizing our juvenile justice system. Mostly Supervisor Katrina Foley says the new campus will have sixty beds for detention, but also dozens of transitional beds with wrap around services for people who are about to be released to reduce re entry into our criminal justice system. We want people to do their time and leave better than they came in, healthier, stronger, better trained, and able to become good citizens and have good stable wives. Demolition is expected to start early this

year in Orange County. Corbin Carson kf I news Police in Pomona have arrested two teenagers seen on camera attacking a couple at gunpoint as they tried to sell an iPad video from the seller's tesla captured the attack last month. He says he sold fifty items from an online market place and never had any problems until now. The arrests were announced yesterday. Police say people should always meet in a well lit, busy location and to share that location with someone they trust.

The Biden administration says it is likely Isis is behind the twin bombings in Iran that killed at least eighty four people. ABC's aik Ajaji says the bombs detonated yesterday from backpacks during a ceremony marking the death of Iran's former talk General Cause Solomoni, who was killed four years ago by the US. US officials denying involvement. The attack comes just one day after officials say and Israeli drone

targeted and killed a top Hamas official. Jaji says Sulimani was the mastermind behind militia groups that included Hamas and Hesbalah. Iranian officials blamed Israel and the US, saying Israel will pay the price. Nets have been installed under the Golden Gate Bridge. Officials in San Francisco approved the project more than a decade ago, but work didn't start on the twenty foot wide stainless steel mesh nets.

Until twenty eighteen, the project was repeatedly delayed, but officially was completed yesterday. Nearly two thousand people have died from jump off the bridge since it opened in nineteen thirty seven. I want to tell you about something that's very cool. It's going on at the ocean right now. Orange County beaches are lighting up thanks to bioluminescent waves. If you've never seen this, it is so spectacular, and the bioluminess is now gracing the waves of Huntington Beach, Newport

Beach, and Laguna Beach. And so what it is. It's algae that creates glowing neon blue waves, and so when the waves break, instead of seeing the white, glows blue. And then there's even a tour operator that's taking people out in boats at night, so when you go through the waves, even the wake from the boat lights up. And they've said they've seen some pretty spectacular things like dolphins diving in and out of the waves and the

waves lighting up. I haven't seen it for years, but if you get a chance and find yourself at the ocean, bioluminescence and it reminds me of something from Avatar from Pandora because it's just so otherworldly but very cool. Bioluminescence at Orange County going on now through until it runs out. The names of one hundred and fifty people associated with Jeffrey E. Fstein have been released.

They include former presidents Trump and Clinton. Other people mentioned in the documents released yesterday include Britain's Prince Andrew Michael Jackson, magician David Copperfield, and lawyer Alan Dershowitz. Downtown LA is the most dangerous neighborhood in Los Angeles. A new top ten list from the website Property Club says Downtown is followed by West Adams,

the wholesale district in skid Row, Hollywood, and South LA. Property Club reports Downtown LA's crime rate is five hundred and thirty percent higher than the national average. Some beaches in La County have been closed because of a more than fifteen thousand gallon sewage spill. Officials say this bill yesterday actually happened miles away at the Rubio Wash in San Gabriel, but the sewage went into the La River and washed is washing down toward Long Beach west of Belmont Shore at

six oh five, it's handled on the news. Former President Trump has asked the Supreme Court to let him back on the ballot in Colorado. At five point fifty, we're going to get the latest on that plane collision in Japan and what may have contributed to the two planes crashing into each other on the runway one of Japan's busiest airports. Right now, though, let's say good morning to ABC's Jim Ryan. Jim as Billy Joel says, I'm moving out.

Yeah, a lot of folks are, and it's appropriate. I suppose that people are moving out of New Jersey and New York hometown to Billy Joel. Right, but if you look at this, and this is a really fascinating way to look at this, I think, Amy, what U haul does? You haul rented something like two and a half million moving trucks and

trailers last year. So if you look at the number of that are rented one way, right, So you're moving from Las Vegas, for example, Or you rent a truck in Las Vegas and you turn it in in Scottsdale, Arizona, and you don't return that. The assumption is that you've moved to scotts Stale, Arizona from Las Vegas. Right, So they put together this big data set to looking at the places that people are moving from and the places they're going too. Sorry to end with that preposition there, but

and we'll give you a pass on this. Sorry anyway. So the top growth state for twenty twenty three, at least according to u HAUL and this big data set, Texas comes out on top and has been there for the last few years. Florida is in second place. North Carolina is in third. South Carolina is in fourth place. So those states in the south, the southwest, and southeast still remain popular places for relocations. But it's interested to see that in sixth place Idaho. Really Idaho, well you know that.

I think that it's become kind of the new destination where people used to like leave California and go to Oregon. I think they don't want anything to do with Oregon because it's my home state and frankly, it's a mess. So they're going to Idaho. Idaho, it's my home state, and people seem to like it there. I guess. You know. It's not the winters, I can tell you they get cold up there, but it's a nice place. The fairly diverse economy, and so Idaho comes out pretty strongly

on this list. Then that's not to say that people may So that's the breakdown by state, State by state, Texas, Florida, North Carolina, South Carolina. But if you look at the city breakdown, Texas doesn't come in until fifth place. Who does Florida, Palm Bay, Melbourne, That metropolitan area is the top growth city according to U haul one way rentals. Oh, Califlorida is in second place. And where are people most leaving?

Did we say California? California? Yeah, for the it's the it's showing in that decrease, fourth year in a row that California had the largest loss net loss of one way movers. And also down at that in that category Michigan, New Jersey, Illinois, Massachusetts, and New York State. No big surprise is there for the other ones? Yeah? Yeah, So people kind of stopped moving during the pandemic because everybody was sort of frozen. But now are those are those moving levels back up again? Well? Yeah,

they went back up after the pandemic. So in twenty twenty one, you saw a lot of people renting trucks and moving away. The number went down just a little last year twenty twenty three, and was twenty twenty two,

and then down a little from that in twenty twenty three. So I think there was a big spike in twenty twenty one right after the pandemic people who maybe decided they were going to move before COVID came along, they put it off until after the pandemic had kind of eased a bit, and then they

rented their trucks and moved away. The other thing to consider is this, so U haul has a specific kind of audience, right, maybe a younger audience, people who are just setting out on their own so they can't afford to hire movers. Yeah, exactly right. They rent the truck, they drive the truck, they load the truck, and then unload it. On the other end, United Moving, United Van Lines, which is your higher end moving company. I suppose you're hiring a crew to load up your house

and the crew to drive it somewhere and then to unload it. It shows that the Northeast is the most popular place to move into. Oh that surprises me, Yeah, because well it's wintertime. So does you all of any predictions for twenty twenty four? Do they just look back. They just throw out these wrong numbers. They don't really look at anything. They don't try to analyze that. They just throw out the numbers and say, here, here's what we have. Do with it what you will. So they're there.

Don't make any predictions about what's going to happen next. And the numbers do fluctuate somewhat, you know, especially when you get down toward so tax has been number one for a while. Florida number two. The Carolinas are a fairly newcomer to the top five or six. It's pretty there, Oh, it is absolutely Carolinas. I mean, Idaho is nice too. It was number ten in twenty twenty two, up to number six last year.

Washington State does pretty well. Okay, Well, the good news for us is that a lot of people are leaving California, so there's a little more elbow room. That's right, all right, Jim Ryan, thank you so much. Seamy. All right, let's get back to some of the stories coming out of the KFI twenty four hour newsroom. Some parents and relatives of young people killed by fentanyl in southern California have been allowed to sue the parent

company of Snapchats. A judge in LA ruled the group can sue Snap over allegations the social media platform facilitated the sale of illegal drugs to minors. The company said it was immune from certain lawsuits because of a federal code, but

the judge said the group can still pursue other claims. Bill Bodner is the former head of the DEEA in LA and says this case has the potential of changing the way social media operates, the way social media companies do business, how they do age verification, basically, how their artificial intelligence or algorithm work. The group represents more than sixty young people who died from a fentanyl overdose. Steve Gregory kf I News. A highly invasive pest is causing disease in

citrus fruits across southern California. The California Department of Food and Agri Culture has issued a warning about HLB, a pathogen found mostly in a pest from Asia. It's also been reported in several states over the past twenty years. The CDFA says the most devastating disease of citrus in the world was first detected in California in twenty twelve. Officials say there are several quarantine areas in La Riverside, Orange, Ventura, and San Diego counties where people are being asked to

avoid sharing homegrown fruit. The Justice Department is suing Texas over a new law that would allow police in the state to arrest migrants who come into the US illegally. The federal lawsuit claims only one entity, the federal government, can make and enforce immigration laws. Abc'sandyfield says the DOJ is asking the court to

declare the new Texas immigration law unconstitutional. Lawmakers in Texas gave the state the power to arrest migrants because they said the FEDS were not doing their job protecting the southern border. The law is set to go into effect in March. The former West Side Pavilion Mall is going to be turned into a UCLA research hub. UCLA Chancellor Gene Block says the mall will be home to a quantum

research center. The UCLA Research Park will also become the home of the UCLA's Center for Quantum Science and Engineering. The center brings together scholars and industry partners to advance one of the most important breakthrough technologies. Block says the seven hundred thousand square foot institute will solidify LA as the epicenter for scientific achievements. California is allocated two hundred million dollars for the hub. That's part of a five

hundred million dollar investment to establish the Institute for Immunology m Immunotherapy. It's set to open in about three and a half years. Blustery winds are expected to

continue blowing through southern California. Winter weather advisories have expired and have been replaced with wind advisories through early tomorrow for the Santa Clarita Valley, Malibu Coast, Los Angeles County Beaches, Palace Verte Hills, Santa Monica Mountain, Recreational Area, Calabasas, Western San Fernandez, the San Gabriel Mountains, Catalina Island,

and the fourteen Freeway corridor. And I don't know about it your house, but last night at my place, I thought the roof was going to come off. The winds were howling. Venturrey County officials are looking for a group of burglary suspects who ran down a deputy. The deputy was hit by one of two vehicles involved in a burglary at a market in Casitas Springs. Investigators say the driver hit the deputy intentionally. She was injured but has been treated

and released from the hospital. Elvis is going to make his debut on the London stage thanks to AI. The British company Layered Reality says their new Elvis Evolution show will use artificial intelligence and groundbreaking technology to make a holog a holograph, recreating the what they call seismic impact of seeing Elvis live for a whole new generation of fans. We're just minutes away from handle on the news this

morning, and the core documents have been released tied to Jeffrey Epstein. One hundred and fifty names if people associated with Epstein have been released, including those former presidents Trump and Clinton. Right now, let's say good morning to ABC's Tom Rivers. Tom, we have some new clues into what went wrong that may have led to that crash between the passenger jet and the Coastguard plane at

one of the busiest airports in Japan. Yeah, it's interesting. One aspect that may have impacted this or not warning lights until pilots whether runway is clear or not. We're not working the day of the collision, but I guess was reported that they were not working. Going back to the twenty seventh of December, how do they go, how are they able to have that airport

up and running if the lights aren't working? Well, then you have to rely, you know, you have to you have to have your headphones, you know, so tightened up because you have to listen to every little instruction from the control tower. So it's kind of a secondary, if you will,

warning thing. But yeah, you would think something that would be, you know, deemed to be pretty important that yes, they can, you know, break, but you get maintenance out there and get them fixed within the day, not as I say, in this case, at least five days down the road. That's just crazy. And as you mentioned, I'm sure that that's a redundant or a backup system. But the passenger jet that landed that hit the Coastguard plane said it had clearance to land. Yeah,

exactly. And as part of two probes, one is police probe looking in the possible professional negligence. The other side of the coin is a transportation ministry They've been looking in depth at the transcripts and the communications between the recordings between the tower and the two planes. Now, according to them, they say that the JLA three point fifty had been cleared to land okay, kind of a bog standard, you know, average, kind of if you will landing.

They also say that they instructed the smaller DASH eight Coast Guard plane to move to a quote unquote stop line right before the runway. Now, it's interesting to note that NHK Television is reporting that the Coast Guard pilot who survived says that he was given permission to take off. So those are two very different takes on what might have happened. But again, they've got the information.

They've got the two boxes from what remains of the Coast Guard plane, so we expect they're going to get to the bottom of this pretty darn quick. So you mentioned that they have the black box, and they also have the cockpit voice recorder right from Yes, certainly from the Coast Guard plane smaller one. They have at least one box the latest I have one box. I'm not sure which one it is from JL. You know, we always hear, oh, they found the black box, but it seems like maybe

the news cycle has just moved on. It doesn't seem like we hear what actually happened. Like they go Okay, we found it, so they know, but we never really hear exactly what happens, so it'll be interesting to see if we get more details. Yeah, it takes time. And again, you know, in the past, when it involves an airbus, generally, not always, but generally those boxes are sent off to Toulouse in France

where the manufacturers are, and they go through them meticulously. That may or may not happen in this case, but certainly representatives from Airbus in France have flown to Japan to help in the investigation. You know, just hearing about this, it just makes me think of in the last year or so, all of the near misses that we've been here it back. Yeah, we hear, and we hear about them more in the US. But here's one that came to pass where you know, the warning systems and the backup systems

didn't prevent this, and the two planes literally clide it. I mean we've heard of planes like clipping wings and that kind of stuff, but not full on impact like this. Yeah. Oh, you're absolutely right. I mean he kind of takes your breath away thinking about it. Close calls very crowded

skies becoming crowded again after the after the pandemic. But you're absolutely right, and you know, sometimes it's just sheer luck that if there is even a minor bump that you know, the fuel isn't set off, et cetera, et cetera. And in this case, catastrophic, catastrophic, and some amazing stories of the passengers getting off very very quickly, indeed, And yeah, thank your lucky stars. And like I say, very very good work by

the crew on the JL plane. Absolutely, And you mentioned the surviving pilot from the Coast Guard plane. What kind of condition is he in? That's a good question. I don't know. But again he's been voted as saying that he was cleared to take off, so I assume that he's in a state at least to communicate at this stage. But yeah, I guess more will be coming forthcoming in the days on that, Okay, And let's hope they fix those warning lights, yeah, exactly, maybe fix them yesterday.

But yeah, it's one of the anomalies in the story and something that I guess maybe there'll be recommendations coming out of this saying have backup systems, you know, in a hangar somewhere, so if something goes down, you turn it around and fix them, you know, Johnny on the spot within an hour or so. Yeah, And as tragic as it was, we're so lucky that it wasn't so much worse. ABC's Tom Rivers. You can follow

Tom at Tom Rivers ABC. Thanks so much for your information. Appreciate it, Tay care Well, let's get back to some of the stories coming out of the KFI twenty four hour news room. Former President Bill Clinton is among the high profile names listed in newly unsealed court documents pertaining to sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. ABC's Andrew Dimbert says the documents include arguments by attorneys for an alleged victim of Epstein who wanted to depose Clinton, who's not accused of any wrongdoing,

as part of her defamation suit. After Epstein's arrest in twenty nineteen, a Clinton spokesperson denied the former president knew about Epstein's crimes, denied Clinton was ever on Epstein's island, and said Clinton had not communicated with Epstein in more than a decade. Dimbert says, deposition from a witness who said she met Michael Jackson, a Jackson and magician David Copperfield during her time with Epstein,

was also listed in the forty documents released. Epstein killed himself in jail while awaiting trial on sex trafficking charges. One of the country's largest police units, Unions RATHER, says nearly three hundred and eighty PLIT police officers were shot in the line of duty last year. The Fraternal Order of Police released statistics Tuesday

showing a fourteen percent increase from twenty twenty two to twenty three. Former Department of Homeland Security official John Cohen says the increase coincides with calls for violence against police. The overwhelming majority of this content is being posted on anti government on white supremacist forums, and this content isn't subtle. Cohen says. It includes

a graphic video of shootings, stabbings, and other attacks on officers. Police are hunting for the person who's shot and killed in a mom outside of mosque in Newark. Officials say so far they haven't found any evidence the shooting was part of an anti Muslim bias. There are many in New Jersey right now who are feeling a heightened sense of fear or anxiety at the news of this slain. New Jersey Attorney General Matthew Platkin says he's bringing all of the state's

resources together to keep Muslims in the community safe. Platkins said yesterday police have stepped up out each to houses of worship in the area since the start of the Israel Hamas War. So it's just after the holidays, and for Disneyland, that means it's time to shut things down, not a lot, but

some. So they do this every year, and if you're a Disney officionado and or you're planning on making a trip to Disneyland, just be aware that some of the rides and attractions are going to be closed down for a little bit. It's a small world is closing down, but only for a couple of weeks, starting this weekend. Grizzly River run over at California Adventure,

which is one of my favorite summertime rides, is closing down. Now's a good time because it's colder and you get soaked on that ride a lot of times, so it makes sense to do its refurbishment during the winter. The sailing ship Columbia is closing down just for a little bit, and then the Mark Twain Riverboat is already down on the Rivers of America, and if you haven't been on those for a while, when you go and make your next

trip to Disneyland once they reopen, they are really kind of fun. I mean, that's one of the great things I think about Disneyland is there's the thrill rides, but then there's also these really cool experiences, and so highly recommend that one. The astro Orbiter is closed. And also the World of Color Show over at California Adventure, which is the light show, is closing down for refurbishment pretty soon, and that's going to reopen, I think at

the end of February, so just be aware. But there's still lots and lots of other rides and fun things to do. I think I better make a trip. I haven't been to Disneyland in twenty twenty four. It's time. This is KFI and kost HD two Los Angeles, Orange County. We lead local live from the KFI twenty four hour newsroom. I'm Amy King. This has been your Thursday wake up Call, and if you missed any of wake Up Call, you can listen anytime on the iHeart radio app. You've

been listening to wake Up Call with me Amy King. You can always hear wake Up Call five to six am Monday through Friday on KFI Am six forty and anytime on demand on the iHeartRadio app

Transcript source: Provided by creator in RSS feed: download file
For the best experience, listen in Metacast app for iOS or Android