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(KGTV) - Want to take your Oscars engagement to a new level? Play the 10News Oscars Bingo game!The cards feature key moments likely to happen, including musical numbers, first-time winners, and wardrobe malfunctions.Click the image below to print out the attached cards to play bingo with your family and friends.The Academy Awards air Sunday, March 4 on ABC10.See our Oscars section HERE. 402
(KGTV) — President Trump is stepping in on behalf of a Navy SEAL charged with murder, now being held in a MCAS Miramar brig.Special Operations Chief Edward "Eddie" Gallagher is accused of fatally stabbing a wounded Islamic State fighter in Mosul, Iraq, in May 2017, posing for a photo next to the body, and completing his enlistment ceremony next to the corpse.Prosecutors also accuse Gallagher of shooting two non-combatants in Iraq and firing at crowds. He has pleaded not guilty to all charges.RELATED:Two San Diego-based Navy SEALs charged in death of detainee in IraqArraignment for Navy SEAL accused of killing detained ISIS fighterHe was arrested on Sept. 11, 2018, and has since been held at the Naval Consolidated Brig Miramar at the Marine Corps Air Station Miramar.Saturday, President Trump promised Gallagher would be moved to "less restrictive confinement.""In honor of his past service to our Country, Navy Seal [Eddie Gallagher] will soon be moved to less restrictive confinement while he awaits his day in court. Process should move quickly!" the President tweeted Saturday. 1098

A big winner in this year's election was the marijuana industry, as five states approved some form of legalization.Mississippi approved it for medicinal use. Arizona, Montana and New Jersey approved it for recreational use. South Dakota approved it for both and became the first state to approve both forms of marijuana in the same election.The Drug Policy Alliance says it never expected the support in some states, but hopes it sends a message to lawmakers in Washington D.C.“It doesn’t just stop at marijuana reform,” said Matt Sutton with the Drug Policy Alliance. “People are really seeing drugs as being something that shouldn’t be criminalized in the U.S. and they definitely took that with them to the ballot box.”Changes could happen on the federal level. Congress was supposed to vote on the MORE Act in September. The bill would decriminalize marijuana by removing it from the list of controlled substances and expunge many previous convictions.The Drug Policy Alliance says the bill is now expected to go to a vote by the end of the year and hopes the momentum at the state level translates to a victory at the federal level.“I am hoping that this wave of victories across the country will definitely send a message to Congress and really light a fire under them to pass the MORE Act,” said Sutton.It wasn't just marijuana that won on election night. Oregon voters overwhelmingly approved a proposal to decriminalize possession of all drugs.People caught possessing hard drugs would have the option to pay a 0 fine or attend an addiction recovery center. Those centers are funded by the money generated by the tax revenue from Oregon’s legalized marijuana industry. 1688
(KGTV) - Does a picture being sent around online show a real 2-headed shark?No, but they do exist in nature.Marine biologists have discovered a number of 2-headed shark embryos.Possible causes include pollution, viral infections, and inbreeding caused by overfishing. 280
(KGTV) -- Wet winters are no longer a sign that California will have a reduced risk of wildfires, according to a new study. The study claims that from 1600 and 1903, the position of the North Pacific jet stream over California was linked to the amount of precipitation and the severity of the following wildfire season. After 1904, the connection between winter moisture brought by the jet stream and the severity of wildfire season weakened. RELATED: Devastating 'ARk' storm envisioned for California by U.S. Geological SurveyAccording to the study, the connection between added moisture and wildfire risk disappeared altogether after 1977. Now, fuel buildup from decades of fire suppression and rising temperatures from climate change means any year could see large wildfires, the report states. "The moisture availability over California is still strongly linked to the position of the jet stream, but fire no longer is," said co-author Valerie Trouet, an associate professor of dendrochronology at the University of Arizona Laboratory of Tree-Ring Research. RELATED: Mega storm could cause billions in damage to California, report showsTrouet says the wet 2016-2017 winter is proof of the claim. The added moisture that winter was followed by many large fires in 2017 including the Tubbs and Thomas fires. In 2017, 24 people died and nearly 7,000 structures were destroyed by fires. "It's not either climate change or historical fire management--it's really a combination of the two that's creating a perfect storm for catastrophic fires in California," Trouet said. 1578
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