Tag Archives: West Palm Beach

Police say Florida woman at Lil Wayne concert left toddlers in car

A Florida woman was arrested for reportedly leaving her children, ages 3 and 5, alone in a car while she attended a Lil Wayne concert, ClickOrlando.com reported.

Brittany Harris, 25, of West Palm Beach, was arrested July 14 on two counts of child neglect.

According to the Palm Beach County Sheriff’s Office, an employee of the venue brought the kids to a deputy, who said the children were left unattended for hours in a parking lot with approximately 9,000 people, including “intoxicated persons,” ClickOrlando.com reported.

Officials said Harris confessed to leaving the kids in the car.

The Florida Department of Child and Families was alerted to take custody of the children, the report said.

Click for more from ClickOrlando.com.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Hawthorn Suites by Wyndham in West Palm Beach, Florida Selects Comcast Business Hospitality

By Business Wirevia The Motley Fool

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Hawthorn Suites by Wyndham in West Palm Beach, Florida Selects Comcast Business Hospitality

Top-ranking hotel upgrades to Comcast Ethernet, TV and voice services to boost performance and improve the guest experience

WEST PALM BEACH, Fla.–(BUSINESS WIRE)– Comcast Business, a unit of Comcast Cable, the nation’s largest video, high-speed Internet and phone provider to business and residential customers, today announced that Hawthorn Suites by Wyndham in West Palm Beach, Florida, has selected Comcast Business Hospitality for data, phone and TV services for its 112-suite property. The new Comcast services will increase Internet speeds to 100 Megabits per second (Mbps) using Comcast Ethernet, giving guests faster Internet access for business or personal use while staying at the hotel. The increased speeds will also help the hotel staff to conduct their daily operations more efficiently, and provide the convenience of a single provider for data, voice and video service.

“Our guests expect to check into our property and conduct business day or night,” said William Murray, general manager of the Hawthorn SuitesWest Palm Beach. “Because we are an extended-stay hotel, our suites are often used as a remote office for traveling executives. The increased speed from the Comcast service allows our guests to work in their rooms with connection speeds that are the same as what they would have back at their office.”

Hawthorn Suites by Wyndham – West Palm Beach is an extended stay hotel that is located a short distance from Palm Beach International Airport and is conveniently located near many businesses and attractions. It caters to business travelers that are staying in the area for multiple days and people relocating to the area who are looking for temporary housing. The hotel has a top ranking by Trip Advisor – it is currently ranked #1 out of 34 hotels in the Palm Beach area.

Prior to working with Comcast, the hotel had a 3 Mbps service for all of its guests, and 3 Mbps for back office operations, both from another provider. With slow Internet connectivity, they decided to make a change in order to upgrade their technology and remain a top-ranking hotel. After an extensive review of available service providers, Hawthorn Suites selected Comcast Business to provide Ethernet, voice and TV services, which are all part of the Comcast Business Hospitality suite that is designed specifically for the needs of hotels and motels. The additional bandwidth not only gives guests faster Internet speeds, but the staff is able to process credit cards …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Fashion designer Lilly Pulitzer dies at 81

Fashion designer Lilly Pulitzer, known in part for starting her own line of tropical print dresses by accident, has died. She was 81.

Gale Schiffman of Quattlebaum Funeral and Cremation Services in West Palm Beach says Pulitzer died Sunday. She did not know her cause of death.

Pulitzer’s tropical print dresses became a sensation in the 1960s and eventually became a fashion classic.

Pulitzer got her start in fashion by spilling orange juice on her clothes. The Palm Beach socialite had a husband who owned orange groves, and after she opened a juice stand in 1959, she asked her seamstress to make dresses in colorful prints that would camouflage fruit stains.

The dresses hung on a pipe behind her and soon outsold her juice.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Young Reporter Bails Out—Says Newspapers Killed Newspapers

By Don Irvine

Newspapers have been in decline for a number of years now, and the general assumption is that among the reasons for this decline are the growth of online news coupled with a broad decline in advertising revenue.

But according to one young reporter who recently quit the newspaper business, it’s really the newspapers that killed newspapers.

Allyson Bird, 28, who started writing stories for her local newspaper when she was 16, had planned to make journalism her career. She began by working in West Palm Beach and survived several rounds of layoffs as the business model deteriorated. When her father was stricken with cancer, she took a cut in pay to move to South Carolina to be with him and work for the local paper.

But Bird’s enthusiasm, as a 21-year old, soon faded:

The flip side to the excitement is the burnout. You’re exhausted, and you’re never really ‘off.’ You get called out of a sound sleep to drive out to a crime scene and try to talk with surviving relatives. You wake up at 3 a.m. in a cold sweat, realizing you’ve misspelled a city councilman’s name. You spend nights and weekends chipping away at the enterprise stories that you never have time to write on the clock.

Everyone works so hard for so long and for such little compensation.

It was those long hours and low pay that Bird said left her “supremely unsatisfied.”

Apparently, Bird isn’t alone in her sentiments.

I spoke with a former AIM (Accuracy In Media) intern who had been working for a local television station in Virginia. She recently quit her job to sell luxury cars because she wasn’t making enough money to take care of rent, student loans, etc.; and she was doing the job of two people (reporter and videographer) while getting paid for just one.

Did newspapers kill newspapers? For the most part, the answer is yes. They failed to accurately predict how technology would affect their business, and they were too wedded to their hidebound ways to make the necessary adjustments to remain relevant. That, combined with the recession, was more than enough to drive many of them into bankruptcy and out of business.

The future of newspapers is bleak. Only the strongest will survive over the next decade, and even then in a vastly different form than today, as technology marches on and their cheap labor supply evaporates.

This article originally appeared at AccuracyInMedia.com and is reprinted here with permission. 

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Western Journalism

Living Without Credit Cards: She Made It Work, and You Can Too

By Michele Lerner

living without credit cards

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(Photo Courtesy Liz Smiley)
Every time you make a plane reservation or rent a car or pay for concert tickets, you’re asked to provide a credit card number. Liz Smiley, a social worker in Florida, provides a debit card number instead.

Smiley has lived without a credit card for more than four years, and she doesn’t miss it a bit.

“I got my first credit card when I turned 18, and I just got used to using credit to pay for things,” says Smiley, a single parent who was also the caretaker for her mother when she decided it was time to eliminate her debt.

Smiley had accumulated about $38,000 in credit card debt and was tired of spending all her income on credit card payments. She arranged a debt management plan through CredAbility, a credit counseling service in West Palm Beach, Fla., and repaid her debt in four years.

As part of her debt management plan, all of her credit card accounts were immediately closed. “I have to admit it was hell in the beginning, like going from eating lobster and caviar to a starvation diet,” says Smiley. “It was really hard to say that I couldn’t afford something and that I had to save for it.”

Not Accepted Everywhere

Smiley got around the need for a credit card for flights and online shopping by using her debit card. But it wasn’t always easy.

Some retailers won’t accept a debit card unless it has a Visa or MasterCard logo. And many hotels and rental car companies only accept credit cards, or will place a hold for hundreds of dollars on a debit card until the customer vacates the room or returns the car.

That means you need to make sure you have enough money in your bank account to cover the bill. “I always had to make sure I had at least $150 or more extra in my checking account when I rented a car,” says Smiley.

In spite of her $970 per month payments on her debt management plan, Smiley managed to save an emergency fund of $3,000 that she uses as a back-up to her checking account.

How to Make It Work

If you decide to live without a credit card, you’ll need to develop plans to pay for everything beyond your normal expenditures, such as vacations, gifts, car repairs and unexpected health care needs.

First, establish your emergency fund with three to six months of living expenses. Most financial experts suggest that you have a set amount transferred from each paycheck to build up your savings painlessly.

For health care costs, Smiley set up a health savings account at work where she saves pre-tax money for out-of-pocket health care …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

2 jets bump on taxiway at New York's JFK airport

Two commercial jets have been damaged in the aviation equivalent of a fender-bender at New York‘s Kennedy airport.

Nobody was reported injured in the accident, which happened at around 6:15 a.m. Saturday.

A JetBlue spokesman says a plane carrying around 150 passengers bound for West Palm Beach, Fla., had become temporarily disabled due to a problem with its tow bar and was sitting near a gate when it was bumped by an Air India aircraft.

The JetBlue plane suffered some damage to its rudder.

Airline spokesman Alex Headrick says the passengers were loaded on to another plane. The departure was delayed at least 3 1/2 hours.

Messages left for Air India officials in New York weren’t immediately returned.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Democrat Denies Involvement With Underage Prostitutes

By Breaking News

Bob Menendez SC Democrat Denies Involvement With Underage Prostitutes

WASHINGTON (OfficialWire) — Sen. Robert Menendez’s office said Wednesday that he traveled three times on a plane owned by a prominent Florida political donor but that the trips were paid for and reported appropriately. At the same time, Menendez’s office said unsubstantiated allegations the senator engaged in sex with prostitutes in the Dominican Republic are false.

The FBI searched the West Palm Beach, Fla., office of the donor — eye doctor Salomon Melgen — on Tuesday night and early Wednesday, but it was unclear if the raid was related to Menendez, a New Jersey Democrat.

Records filed in Palm Beach County show an Internal Revenue Service lien against Melgen of more than $11.1 million for unpaid taxes from 2006 through 2009. Prior liens for taxes from 1998 to 2002 were subsequently withdrawn, records show.

The Daily Caller, a conservative website, reported shortly before the November election that Menendez traveled on Melgen’s private plane to the Dominican Republic to engage in sex with prostitutes.

Menendez’s office said that any accusations of engaging with prostitutes “are manufactured by a politically motivated right-wing blog and are false.”

At FBI headquarters in Washington, spokesman Jason Pack said the bureau “cannot comment on the existence or status of an investigation.” Justice Department spokeswoman Tracy Schmaler also declined to comment.

Read More at OfficialWire .

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Western Journalism

California couple sues Church of Scientology over donations

Two former members of the Church of Scientology claimed in a lawsuit filed Wednesday that the church and its affiliates deceived members into donating millions of dollars to misrepresented causes.

Luis and Maria Garcia of Irvine, Calif., filed the complaint in federal court in Tampa, near the church’s national headquarters in Clearwater. The couple claims they were duped into giving more than $420,000 for a building campaign, disaster relief efforts and other Scientology causes, only to find the bulk of the money went to inflate the church coffers and line the pockets of its leader, David Miscavige.

“The church, under the leadership of David Miscavige, has strayed from its founding principles,” the lawsuit claims, “and morphed into a secular enterprise whose primary purpose is taking people’s money.”

In an emailed statement, Scientology spokeswoman Pat Harney said the church had not yet been served with the lawsuit, but challenged any contention that money was misappropriated.

“We understand from media inquiries this has something to do with fundraising and we can unequivocally state all funds solicited are used for the charitable and religious purposes for which they were donated,” Harney said.

The Garcias were 28-year members of the church, rising to upper levels of Scientology. They left in November 2010 over their disenchantment with its direction under Miscavige, who has led the church since founder L. Ron Hubbard‘s death in 1986.

The lawsuit names various trusts and nonprofits linked to Scientology as defendants and says they collectively engage in fraud, unfair and deceptive trade practices and breach of contract in their fundraising.

Attorney Theodore Babbitt of West Palm Beach, who is among those handling the suit, said it would be followed by other similar claims from former Scientologists. He said the Garcias still believe in the precepts of Scientology and that the litigation is not a commentary on whether it is a true religion, a question that has dogged it across the world since it was founded in the 1950s. Babbitt said, ultimately, that question is irrelevant when considering its members’ donations.

“Whether you’re a church or not a church, you can’t defraud people,” he said.

Harney called the lawsuit “frivolous.”

“The statements to the media made today about the church and its ecclesiastical leader by these bitter individuals are blatantly false,” she said.

Among the accusations made in the lawsuit is that the Garcias and others were repeatedly approached with urgent requests for funding of Scientology work around the globe, such as disaster relief or campaigns for causes such as ending child pornography. Babbitt said high-ranking former Scientologists would testify that the church knowingly rerouted such collections for other spending, including financing a “lavish lifestyle” for Miscavige, stifling inquiries into church activities and finances, and intimidating members and ex-members.

A common tactic, Babbitt said, when a disaster unfolded somewhere in the world, would be to send a small group of Scientologists with a camera crew that would pay locals in the affected area to appear on camera. A scene would essentially be staged, he claims, in which people would be begging or appear to be starving, even if it weren’t the case.

A cornerstone of church practice is personal counseling sessions, known as auditing, in which members disclose many facets of their personal lives. Babbitt says members’ own financial status and the accounts they hold would be known from those sessions and then be used in tandem with footage from disaster sites in desperate and urgent pleas for money.

“There’s an emergency, we need your money right now, we know that you have X dollars in the bank in Los Angeles,” Babbitt said, offering a paraphrase of how a member might be approached.

In the end, little if any of the money collected for such causes reached its intended place, he said. Those contributions, the lawsuit claims, were collected by a Scientology-linked group called IAS Administrations, which Babbitt says former church members will testify accumulated more than $1 billion in contributions.

The Garcias also claim to have prepaid for auditing and training services that were never provided and for which a refund has never been received, and to have given about $340,000 for the church’s planned Super Power building for high-level coursework.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Federal charges announced in Philly basement case

Prosecutors have announced federal charges against five people in a case in which authorities say mentally disabled adults were held in the basement of a Philadelphia home as part of an alleged Social Security fraud scheme.

Federal prosecutors unsealed an indictment Wednesday against 52-year-old Linda Weston, the alleged ringleader, and four others. It alleges Weston and her associates carried out a racketeering enterprise that targeted mentally disabled victims as part of a scheme to steal their Social Security disability payments. It also alleges Weston’s scheme of confinement and abuse caused the deaths of two victims.

Charges include hate crimes, kidnapping, murder in aid of racketeering, theft from government and other counts. The indictment names Weston, her daughter and two others. It also names a fifth defendant, 26-year-old West Palm Beach, Fla., resident Nicklaus Woodard.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Man Needing Health Care Threatens to Kill Obama

By Neal Colgrass A homeless Florida man says he only threatened to kill President Obama and his family in order to get better health care, the Sun-Sentinel reports. Stephen Espalin, 57, told a judge in West Palm Beach yesterday that he made the threat because he had chest pains and had been kicked…
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Newser – Great Finds