B8
WEATHER
Washington area today
The Capital Weather Gang’s forecast
Dampness is the rule with dense clouds
supporting drizzle and occasional showers (80 percent probability). Light winds from the east keep the moisture flowing in from the Atlantic. Temperatures will be lucky to gain a degree an hour to peak in the low to mid-70s.
For the latest updates, visit the Capital Weather Gang blog:
washingtonpost.com/capitalweathergang
The Region Today
Today’s Pollen Index
Mold Trees Weeds Grass
Moderate Moderate
Low
Harrisburg Hagerstown
72/59 73/60
Baltimore
72/59
Washington
73/63
Richmond Charlottesville
79/58 78/63
Norfolk
75/64
Blue Ridge
•Today, variably cloudy, showers, thunderstorm. High 72-80. Wind east 5- 10 mph. •Tonight, show- ers. Low 55-59. Wind light, variable. •Saturday, partly sunny. High 68-80. Wind southeast 5-10 mph. •Sunday, partly sunny. High 74-86. Wind southwest 6-12 mph.
Boating Forecast »
Virginia Beach
76/64
Recreational Forecast
Atlantic beaches
•Today, mostly cloudy, showers, thunderstorm. High 68-75. Wind east 10-20 mph. •Tonight, a shower. Low 56-64. Wind southeast 6-12 mph. •Saturday, partly sunny. High 74-80. Wind south 6- 12 mph. •Sunday, mostly sunny. High 74-80.
Upper Potomac River: Today, a show-
er, a thunderstorm. Wind east 6-12 knots. Waves less than 1 foot. Visibility reduced in any shower. Lower Potomac and Chesapeake Bay: Today, a shower, a thunderstorm. Wind east 7-14 knots. Waves 1 foot on the lower Potomac. Waves 1 foot on the Chesapeake Bay. River Stages: The river stage at Little Falls will be 4.1 feet today, falling to 4.0 feet Saturday. Flood stage at Little Falls is 10 feet.
ON YOUR MOBILE DEVICE
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Annapolis
72/62
Ocean City
73/59
Dover
73/58
High
Ultra-Violet Index Air Quality Index
2 out of 11+, Low
Yesterday’s main offender:
Today: Good
Ozone, 132
The higher the UV Index number, the greater the need for eye and skin protection.
Philadelphia
70/58
North
KEY»
Temperature
100s°+ 90s° 80s° 70s° 60s° 50s° 40s° 30s° 20s° 10s° 0s° -0s°
-10s°+
Precipitation
Showers Rain T-Storms Flurries Snow Ice
Nation
City Today
Albany, NY
Albuquerque 86/61/t Anchorage 69/48/s Atlanta 90/69/t
79/59/pc 76/61/t 86/55/s 70/49/s 87/66/t
Austin 92/67/pc 96/67/s Baltimore 72/59/t Billings, MT
Birmingham 88/69/t
Tomorrow City Today
Little Rock
Los Angeles
Tomorrow
79/58/pc
62/44/pc 48/38/sh 89/69/t
Bismarck, ND 88/57/pc 60/46/t Boise 65/43/sh 63/42/c Boston 71/57/s Buffalo 76/59/t
75/63/pc 78/62/s
Burlington, VT 80/57/s 78/59/pc Charleston, SC 92/67/pc 87/67/t Charleston, WV 86/63/t 87/63/pc Charlotte 90/65/t
81/63/t
Cheyenne, WY 92/54/t 73/38/t Chicago 78/56/s Cincinnati 82/62/t Cleveland 80/57/pc
83/60/s 86/64/s 83/62/s
Dallas 90/65/pc 94/71/s Denver 90/59/pc 87/42/s Des Moines
Detroit 80/59/s El Paso
82/58/s 82/63/s 84/63/s
92/67/pc 91/67/s
Fairbanks, AK 80/52/t 82/55/pc Fargo, ND
86/72/s 85/66/s
Houston 95/72/pc 95/72/s Indianapolis 82/63/s Jackson, MS
90/67/t 88/65/t
Jacksonville, FL 92/68/pc 87/69/t Kansas City, MO 85/59/pc 82/64/s Las Vegas
82/58/pc 84/67/s 86/65/pc 86/55/pc
Hartford, CT 78/57/pc 79/59/pc Honolulu 86/71/s
Louisville 84/66/t Memphis 86/68/t Miami 90/75/t Milwaukee 70/53/s Minneapolis 86/58/s Nashville 87/66/t
88/64/pc 88/65/s 72/56/pc 82/60/s 87/68/s 87/70/t 88/75/t 76/58/s 86/64/s 88/67/t
New Orleans 90/72/t 91/71/t New York City 73/58/pc 76/64/pc Norfolk 75/64/t
79/66/c
Oklahoma City 90/64/pc 93/68/s Omaha 84/59/pc 84/61/s Orlando 92/69/t Philadelphia 70/58/c Phoenix 99/69/s Pittsburgh 80/59/t
92/70/t
77/58/pc 96/68/s 82/61/pc
Portland, ME 71/49/s 73/56/pc Portland, OR
61/47/sh 66/50/pc
Providence, RI 73/55/s 75/60/pc Raleigh, NC Reno, NV
Richmond 78/63/t Sacramento 71/50/pc St. Louis
88/65/t 81/65/t 56/38/c 68/44/s 78/65/c 82/52/s
84/59/pc 84/68/s
St. Thomas, VI 88/79/t 87/79/r Salt Lake City 70/43/pc 57/42/t San Diego
66/58/pc 72/60/s
San Francisco 64/51/pc 69/51/s San Juan, PR 86/75/t 89/77/sh Seattle 57/48/r
Spokane, WA 57/41/c 58/43/c Syracuse 76/59/pc Tampa 90/73/t
Wichita 86/64/pc 86/65/s
NOTE: These are the predicted high/low temperatures and forecasts, through 5 p.m. Eastern time.
61/48/pc
76/60/pc 90/72/t
S
KLMNO
Today
Thundershower
73°
63°
Wind east 7-14 mph
American Forecast
FOR NOON TODAY
Seattle
Portlan
SeattlSeattle Portland
San Francisco
Los Angele
San Francisc Los Angeles
Fronts
Cold
Warm Stationary
Pressure Centers
High Low
Key » s-Sunny, pc-Partly Cloudy, c-Cloudy, r-Rain, sh-Showers, t-Thunderstorms, sf-Snow Flurries, sn-Snow, i-Ice.
World
City Today
Addis Ababa 78/59/pc 78/58/pc Amsterdam 61/49/pc Athens 83/69/pc Auckland 60/50/sh Baghdad 109/81/s Bangkok 91/79/t Beijing 82/63/t Berlin 66/44/sh Bogota 66/48/t Brussels 64/42/pc
64/52/pc 87/72/s 57/48/pc 113/72/s 93/79/t 86/68/s 66/49/pc 65/49/r
65/49/pc
Buenos Aires 63/57/sh 61/46/r Cairo 92/68/s Caracas 83/74/t Copenhagen 57/47/r
93/70/s 84/73/t
60/54/pc
Dakar 84/71/pc 85/72/s Dublin 57/43/sh Edinburgh 61/47/sh Frankfurt 65/47/sh Geneva
63/54/r
Ho Chi Minh City 95/79/t 97/81/t Hong Kong
86/79/t 86/81/t
Islamabad 102/69/pc 106/72/s Istanbul 84/70/s Jerusalem 76/55/s Johannesburg 64/36/pc Kabul 79/52/s Kolkata
99/81/s
Kingston, Jam. 85/80/sh 84/78/r Lagos 85/76/t
Yesterday’s extremes
(Continental U.S. only)
High: 97° Pecos, Texas Low: 14° Bodie State Park, Calif.
SOURCES:
AccuWeather.com; Walter Reed Army Medical Center (pollen data) ; Metropolitan Washington Council of Governments; American Lung Association; National Weather Service.
86/70/pc 74/59/s 61/33/s 84/57/s 102/82/s
89/76/pc Lima 71/59/pc 73/59/pc
55/41/sh 60/42/r
71/51/pc 74/58/t
Ham., Bermuda 78/65/t 74/65/s Helsinki 63/45/r
55/41/sh
Tomorrow City Today
Lisbon 72/59/pc
London 65/46/pc Madrid 71/49/t Manila 93/84/t Mexico City
Montreal 75/59/s Moscow 63/48/c Mumbai 94/86/s Nairobi 83/61/t New Delhi
Tomorrow
72/63/pc
64/48/sh 77/53/s 95/84/t
82/55/t 82/55/t
77/61/pc 70/54/s 95/86/s 81/59/t
108/86/s 109/82/s
Oslo 54/41/pc 59/45/r Ottawa
75/59/pc
Paris 66/49/s Prague 66/47/sh
77/62/pc 70/54/pc 68/53/sh
Rio de Janeiro 75/68/r 77/68/pc Riyadh 106/82/s 105/80/s Rome 73/60/c Santiago 55/45/r
73/60/sh 55/36/r
San Salvador 80/71/t 81/73/t Sarajevo
72/51/r
Seoul 68/57/c Shanghai 77/66/t Singapore 91/81/t Stockholm 56/45/sh
69/52/t
72/55/sh 79/64/pc 91/81/t 59/45/r
Sydney 66/55/sh 64/52/r Taipei 85/76/sh Tehran 93/72/s
78/71/r 91/72/s
Tokyo 70/57/pc 66/55/c Toronto 74/59/pc Vienna 74/62/sh
79/61/s 70/59/t
Warsaw 65/54/pc 67/44/pc Yerevan 90/57/pc 86/55/pc
The world (excluding Antarctica)
High: 124° Jacobabad, Pakistan Low: -10° Summit Station, Greenland
Rise Set
Los Angeles
Charleston Charlesto Phoenix Phoenix Dalla
Houston
Mo
HoustoHouston Monterre
Monterrey
nterrey Dallas
Dallas
Atlant New
Orleans New
OrleanOrleans ew Atlanta
Atlanta
Tamp Miami
Miami
Tampa
Tampa Charleston
San Francisco
Portland
Calga Calgary Helena
Salt
City
Salt La
Lake City
Lake Ci
ke
Denver
Denve Denver Columbus
Columbus
St. LouiSt. Louis
St. Louis
Helena
Rapid Ci
Rapid City
City
Mpls.-Mpls.- St. Pau
St. Paul
Mpls.-
St. Paul
ChiChicag
Chicago
cago
Calgary
Winnipeg Winnipe
Winnipeg
Ottaw
Ottawa
ttawa Bosto Boston
Boston
New Yor
Washingto
New York
ew York Philadelphia
Washington
Washington
Philadelphia
Saturday
Partly sunny
78°
65°
Wind south-southeast 6-12 mph
Sunday
Mostly sunny
84°
69°
Wind south-southwest 6-12 mph
Monday
Partly sunny
91°
69°
Wind south-southwest 7-14 mph
Tuesday
Storm possible
85°
65°
Wind west 8-16 mph
Official weather data
Reagan
Temperature
High Low
Normal Record high Record low
93° at 3:30 p.m. 71° at 6:00 a.m. 79°/59°
95° in 1965 42° in 1915
Precipitation
Past 24 hours Total this month
Normal month to date
Total this year Normal to date
Relative humidity
Max. Min.
None 1.81” 3.34” 11.14” 15.55”
80% at 2:00 a.m. 39% at 3:00 p.m.
Barometric pressure
High Low
Temperature trend
20° 40° 60° 80° 100°
PAST TEN DAYS
Actual Normal
TODAY
TEN-DAY FORECAST
Precipitation almanac, 2009 - 2010
10"
0" 2" 4" 6" 8"
29.81” 29.74”
Actual and f or ecast
THROUGH 5 P.M. YESTERDAY
BWI
Dulles
92° at 3:45 p.m. 65° at 4:27 a.m. 78°/53°
92° in 2010 37° in 1972
None 4.33” 3.66” 15.62” 16.25”
93% at 2:00 a.m. 40% at 5:00 p.m.
29.83” 29.76”
Normal Record
92° at 12:07 p.m. 70° at 5:19 a.m. 77°/55°
95° in 1965 43° in 1961
None 2.01” 3.39” 16.13” 16.81”
78% at 6:00 a.m. 37% at 1:00 p.m.
29.80” 29.75”
Apparent Temperature:
95°
(Comfort index com- bines temperature and humidity.)
Cooling
M J J A S O N D J F M A
Today’s tides High tides are in bold face
Washington Annapolis Ocean City Norfolk
degree days
An index of fuel con- sumption indicating how many degrees the average tempera- ture rose above 65 for the day. If a day’s average temperature were 75, there would be 10 ‘degree days’ for the date. Thursday ............ 17 This month....... 158 This season ...... 198 Normal to yesterday .......... 88 Last season ...... 104
FRIDAY,MAY 28, 2010
3:21 a.m. 8:49 a.m. 4:17 p.m. 9:26 p.m. 6:08 a.m. 1:21 p.m. 6:18 p.m. 11:41 p.m. 2:35 a.m. 8:18 a.m. 2:20 p.m. 8:46 p.m. 4:25 a.m. 10:24 a.m. 4:19 p.m. 10:49 p.m.
Point Lookout 2:12 a.m. 9:29 a.m. 2:22 p.m. 7:49 p.m.
Moon phases
June 4 Last Quarter
June 12 New
June 19 First Quarter
Solar system
Sun Moon Mercury Venus Mars Jupiter Saturn Uranus
5:46 a.m.
8:24 p.m.
9:31 p.m. 5:59 a.m.
4:44 a.m. 6:12 p.m.
7:58 a.m. 11:00 p.m.
11:43 a.m. 1:26 a.m.
2:43 a.m. 2:39 p.m.
2:30 p.m. 2:56 a.m.
2:45 a.m. 2:46 p.m.
June 26 Full
Firefighters and police back Gray for mayor
Unions say chairman is better public safety proponent than Fenty
by Tim Craig
District firefighters and police
officers were emphatic Thursday: They support Vincent C. Gray in the mayor’s race because incum- bent Adrian M. Fenty has poi- soned relations between the city and its first responders. In a move that further solidifies organized labor behind the coun- cil chairman, the leaders of the lo- cal Fraternal Order of Police and the D.C. Firefighters Association said Fenty disrespects city work- ers and lacks the temperament to effectively oversee public safety. “Mayor Fenty has done nothing
to warrant the endorsement and support of D.C. firefighters,” said Ray Sneed, president of the fire- fighters’ Local 36. “From a labor standpoint, he is unreachable, un- approachable and our correspon- dence goes unanswered.” A Fenty spokesman did not re-
spond to requests for comment. Although unions had limited
impact in the 2006 mayoral race, Gray’s success in securing support from firefighters and police offi- cers could help him go toe-to-toe with Fenty on public safety. Sneed, who represents 1,800
city firefighters, and Kristopher Baumann, chairman of the 3,600- member city Fraternal Order of Police lodge, vowed their organi- zations will work hard through the Sept. 14 Democratic primary to deny Fenty a second term. “Vince can see all needs of the
city and how they interconnect,” Baumann said. “He understands there are a million moving parts to the District of Columbia, and, if you go in and solely focus on one part, and ignore the other parts, it’s going to fall apart. And once it falls apart, we are all going to fall apart.”
Since Fenty took office in 2007, he has battled the police and fire unions over contract provisions, overtime pay and the composition of the city’s Public Employee Rela- tions Board.
Baumann and other union offi- cials have also criticized Fenty
and Police Chief Cathy L. Lanier’s crime-fighting strategies, includ- ing their well-publicized “all hands on deck” program that many officers view as ineffective. Police and fire union officials also questioned Fenty’s leadership in the aftermath of the twin Febru- ary snowstorms, saying he failed to treat them as a security threat. Labor leaders, most of whom
supported former council chair- man Linda W. Cropp (D) in the 2006 mayor’s race, added that Fenty hasn’t made city employees feel like partners. Sneed said he has tried unsuccessfully for 18 months to meet with the mayor. Gray, who attended the en- dorsement ceremony, said he will embrace “an approach in which we all work together.” He also has been endorsed by the AFL-CIO and the American Federation of Government Employees. Some observers said Gray’s union support could backfire by sending a signal that he would be less likely to trim the government or stand up against lucrative labor contracts. But city police and fire- fighters will likely help Gray counter Fenty on the campaign
trail on public safety and crime. On Monday, the FBI released preliminary figures showing vio- lent crime in the District was down by 7.2 percent last year. The city also logged 143 homicides last year, the lowest one-year tally since the 1960s. Gray acknowl- edged Thursday that homicides in the District are down but said this is part of a nationwide trend. As for other violent crimes, Baumann said the Fenty adminis- tration “cannot be trusted” to sup- ply accurate statistics. He said Lanier was unable to tell the D.C. Council in Decem- ber 2007 whether crime was “up or down” due to inconsistent rec- ord-keeping. Last year, the Wash- ington Examiner reported that fi- nal FBI statistics for 2008 showed a 2.3 percent increase in violent crime, even though Lanier had told the council there had been a 5 percent reduction in crime. “The police department has no credibility when it comes to crime numbers,” Baumann said. “We probably won’t know the real numbers [for 2009] until after the election.”
craigt@washpost.com
D.C. panel won’t allow Gray’s too-tall fence to stand
fence from B1
Gray, who has been in budget talks this week, did not appear at the hearing and was identified only as the “homeowner.” He was represented by former attorney general Robert J. Spagnoletti, who said he was “very surprised” by the committee’s decision. “Given the political dynamics,
I’ll consult with Mr. Gray and we’ll determine how to move for- ward,” he said. “It appears the committee had made up its mind before we walked in.” Last week, Gray’s Advisory
Neighborhood Commission was given an opportunity by the De- partment of Transportation to comment on the fence and voted not to oppose it, which Ricks said was different from advocating in its favor. Technically, the committee
granted approval Thursday con- tingent on the changes to Gray’s fence, but Ricks said that with those conditions, “in essence, it
was denied.” Committee deci- sions are final, according to panel documents. To meet the city’s 31
⁄2 -foot
height limit, Gray would have to lower the fence by at least two feet or move it back from the property line. Cutting down or digging up an aluminum fence is possible but tricky, industry ex- perts said, and the price of labor might make it prohibitive. The Public Space Committee was established in 1939 to protect the character of neighborhoods by encouraging natural light and broad views in public spaces, which include sidewalks and landscaped areas. The five mem- bers, primarily agency officials overseen by Fenty, also regulate permits for installations such as sidewalk seating, benches and public art.
Ricks pressed Spagnoletti to
explain why Gray was seeking an exception to the height limit. Ini- tially, he said Gray was upgrading from a chain-link fence of similar
height to enhance a landscaping project, which Ricks said “was not a justification.” When asked a second time, Spagnoletti said Gray also had safety concerns that he hoped the tall fence would mitigate. The council chairman’s home was burglarized in May 2008 while he was asleep. “We strenuously resist using public space to satisfy those secu- rity objectives,” Ricks said. “We don’t want to see barricades all around the city that dramatically change the character of the city.” Gray’s path to getting a permit began in December, when the De- partment of Consumer and Reg- ulatory Affairs took notice of re- ports in the Washington Times that described the fence and raised questions about his rela- tionship with real estate devel- oper W. Christopher Smith Jr. Gray had hired Smith’s company, which has partnered with the city on projects voted on by the coun- cil, to explore home renovations
and oversee minor repairs. Gray said he assumed that his
contractor on the fence project would file the necessary permit paperwork. Instead, two years af- ter the fence was installed, it would take months of e-mail ex- changes and meetings between city officials and Gray’s represen- tatives to complete the applica- tion. As Gray sought to finalize the permit, DDOT began issuing a se- ries of eight fines totaling $2,400. Gray has appealed the citations, asking the Office of Administra- tive Hearings to remove them be- cause he was engaged in “good- faith negotiations,” Spagnoletti said. Gray will pay the fines, Spagno-
letti said, if the hearings office concludes they are “appropriate.” But, he said, “if you start fining
everyone who is working in good faith with DDOT, you will scare away everyone from working with the city.”
marimowa@washpost.com
Alleged killer owned up to feud but nothing more
by Maria Glod
The man accused of fatally shooting D.C. Council intern Alonte Sutton admitted to police that he feuded with Sutton in the days before the slaying, even slashing his tires and chasing him, but denied pulling the trig- ger, a District police detective testified Thursday. Omare I. Cotton, 28, who is
charged with first-degree mur- der in the May 8 shooting, was ordered held without bond after the preliminary hearing in D.C. Superior Court. Assistant U.S. Attorney Mi- chael Truscott said the slaying was the culmination of an “on- going beef” that started May 6, when Sutton would not give Cot- ton or Cotton’s girlfriend a ride in his car. Over the next two days, the pair exchanged words and physically fought, and Cotton slashed the tires on Sutton’s car, according to testimony. “What you see is an escalation
that is all too common on the streets,” Truscott said. Sutton, an 18-year-old senior
at Ballou Senior High School in Southeast Washington who had landed a year-long internship with the D.C. Council, was a strong student with a promising future. His body was found in a wooded ravine in the 200 block of Newcomb Street SE on Moth- er’s Day, and nine handgun car- tridge casings were found near- by, according to testimony. Defense attorney Anthony
Matthews said in court that the police may have a case against Cotton for assault or destruction of property, but he questioned the evidence for murder. Wit- nesses who saw a man chase an- other into the woods and heard gunshots were not able to identi- fy the shooter, he said. Also, he said, their descriptions of the man varied. During Thursday’s hearing,
D.C. Detective John Bolden, re- lating witnesses’ accounts, laid out the series of encounters be- tween Sutton and Cotton as the tension between them grew. It started May 6, when Cotton
admitted he was upset when Sut- ton denied the ride, Bolden testi- fied. The next day, Cotton slashed
COURTESY OF THE D.C. COUNCIL
Alonte Sutton had run-ins with his alleged killer over several days, according to testimony.
tires on Sutton’s car, the two fought and Cotton chased Sutton with a knife, Bolden said. Sutton then got into someone else’s car and rode off. The detective said that later
that day, the two men clashed again when Cotton returned and, for a second time, slashed tires on Sutton’s car. Bolden testified that Sutton tried to flag down a police officer who was driving down the street but that Cotton fled. Cotton is on probation in Maryland for robbery and as- sault convictions. Cotton was overheard threat- ening to kill Sutton for trying to catch the attention of police, ac- cording to court records. “He was quite angered that Mr. Sutton was trying to get him, in his words, ‘locked up,’ ” Truscott said. The next day, a Saturday, a wit- ness reported that Sutton was trying to fix the tires on his car when Cotton came up and began to threaten him, Bolden said. Witnesses told police that they
saw a man working on a car and then saw that person being chased into woods by another man, court records said. One per- son saw the second man fire a gun as he ran into the woods; others said they heard gunshots. One witness told police that one of the men returned holding a semiautomatic handgun. The other man never emerged.
glodm@washpost.com
Staff writer Keith L. Alexander contributed to this report.
LOCAL NEWS, TRAFFIC & WEATHER.
washingtonpost.com/
local
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