Good morning, D.C. The big news from the weekend was that water fell from the sky for an extended period of time. More than three inches of rain has fallen in the District since Sunday, with more than four inches in the Dulles area, causing thousands of twee Radiohead fans at Nissan Pavilion to send out endless twitter updates about the relative sogginess of their skinny jeans overnight. Of course, the weekend also saw the wedding of one of D.C.’s most famous party girls. We have to give Jenna Bush some credit for having a pretty spectacular dress.

Officers in Rawlings Killing Return to Work: The Post reports that James Haskel and Anthony Clay, the two D.C. police officers involved in the fatal shooting of 14-year-old DeOnté Rawlings, will return to work next week while an MPD investigation continues into their conduct. The two officers have been on administrative leave since Sept. 17, and were recently cleared of any criminal wrongdoing in the incident.

Lead Fire Investigators’ Qualifications Questioned: The Examiner is questioning the qualifications of the investigators assigned to some of the city’s major fires from the last couple of years, including the Eastern Market fire, the Georgetown Library fire and the Mt. Pleasant apartment fire. In six major fires, the fire department assigned firefighters as lead investigators who had been detailed from rescue or engine companies, and were not certified as fire investigators. There’s some concern these investigators will be easy to discredit in court, but the department says all the investigators are fully qualified.

Briefly Noted: National Zoo seeks additional fire protectionLanes reopen on New York Ave. after partial road collapse … Capitol Heights woman charged with drowning her 4-year-old son in a bathtubOne person dead in an apartment fire in Southeast … Developmentally disabled man dies after falling into Anacostia river.

Photo by brownpau