Showing posts with label Atlantic. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Atlantic. Show all posts

Thursday, May 24, 2012

Aunt: Suspect in Atlantic City killings mentally ill

AP  by WAYNE PARRYATLANTIC CITY -- A woman arrested in the daytime stabbing deaths of two Canadian tourists laughed, frowned, grimaced and repeatedly asked where her lawyer was during a court appearance on Tuesday.

Antoinette Pelzer is accused of stabbing two Canadian women, ages 80 and 47, on Monday morning as they were walking in an area where most of the city's casinos have their entranceways and parking garages.

Her aunt says Pelzer has long suffered from mental illness.

Superior Court Judge Michael Donio read from a criminal complaint that said Pelzer, 44, stabbed one of the women and then tried to steal her pocketbook. "When the victim would not relinquish, the suspect stabbed her additional times," he said, reading from the complaint.

The judge said the woman was stabbed numerous times in different parts of her body with a 12-inch butcher knife, and that the other was stabbed in her lower body, hands and shoulder when she tried to lend assistance.

Authorities still have not reached relatives of the victims, and Donio agreed to seal their identities in court papers for at least 72 hours to enable the identification effort to continue. The nature of their relationship, if any, wasn't revealed.

Atlantic County Prosecutor Ted Housel could not immediately say whether the woman whose pocketbook was targeted was the older or younger victim.

Donio had difficulty getting the defendant to focus and respond to his questions. Pelzer laughed out loud when the judge asked her if she had applied for a public defender.

"I done trying to find out where my public defender's at," she said. "Whatever you call it, whatever. I don't know."

As the judge read parts of the criminal complaint charging her with murder and robbery, Pelzer silently shook her head "no." At other times, she made odd faces, frowned and narrowed her eyes while looking at the judge and the prosecutor.

Public defender Eric Shenkus said his office had not yet received an application to represent Pelzer, but predicted they would begin representing her shortly.

Donio set her bail at $1.5 million cash.

Monday's killings took place in the heart of Atlantic City's new tourism district, a state-designated jurisdiction encompassing the casinos, boardwalk and shopping districts. The district is the centerpiece of Gov. Chris Christie's efforts to make the nation's third-largest gambling market clean and safe, and thereby more attracting to tourists.

Authorities say Pelzer approached the women on the sidewalk on Pacific Avenue, across the street from Bally's Atlantic City and a half-block from the hospital trauma center where they were pronounced dead.

A police officer on patrol intervened when he spotted the attack, subduing Pelzer at gunpoint.

Pelzer had been living in an Ohio shelter until December, when her mother brought her back to Philadelphia, said Pelzer's aunt Nadine King, also of Philadelphia.

Pelzer has long suffered from schizophrenia and had been homeless since January, said King, who said she had seen her niece out "begging for money."

She did not know how long she had been in Atlantic City, which has long been a magnet for the homeless, some of whom are bused here by welfare agencies from other counties and cities.

King said her niece, a mother of three, did not have a criminal record. She blamed her mental illness for what happened.

Gladys Pelzer, the defendant's mother, told WPVI-TV in Philadelphia that the stabbings apparently occurred while her daughter was trying to get money to buy cigarettes.

"I feel sorry about the people she hurt all because she wanted a cigarette. That's what this was all about," she told the TV station.

In addition to murder, she is charged with assault and weapons charges.

The killings marked the third and fourth homicides involving visitors to Atlantic City in the past two years.

Exactly two years before the women were attacked, a casino patron from northern New Jersey was carjacked inside the Taj Mahal casino parking garage and later killed. A man convicted in that case is to be sentenced on Thursday.

In September, another casino patron, also from northern New Jersey, was carjacked from the same garage and later fatally shot. Three young men are awaiting trial in that case.

Jack Allton, a Bally's customer from Jacobus, Pa., said the attack left him shaken but that he and his wife, Peg, will continue to come to the resort he has been visiting for nearly 60 years.

"It's not a positive thing for Atlantic City's image, is it?" he said. "But people who come down here all the time know there's crime here and there always has been. It's a real tragedy, but it happens."

Housel, the prosecutor, voiced similar sentiments after the court hearing. In response to a question from a Canadian broadcaster, Housel said the killings could have happened anywhere.

"It could have happened in Philadelphia. It could have happened in Las Vegas," he said. "Don't think this is something negatively special about Atlantic City that doesn't exist anywhere else. There's actually crime in Canada too, I hear."

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Associated Press writer Andrew Duffelmeyer in Trenton contributed to this report.

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Tuesday, May 22, 2012

2 Canadian tourists fatally stabbed in Atlantic City

AP  ATLANTIC CITY -- A Pennsylvania woman fatally stabbed two Canadian tourists, one of them an 80-year-old woman, during a botched robbery Monday in what apparently was a chance meeting on an Atlantic City street, authorities said.

Sgt. Monica McMenamin, a city police spokeswoman, said Antoinette Pelzer, 44, was arrested around 10 a.m., just moments after the robbery occurred in the southern New Jersey resort community. Pelzer's hometown was not immediately disclosed, but authorities said she may have recently moved to the Atlantic City area.

Pelzer initially was charged with two counts of aggravated assault and weapons offenses. But Atlantic County Prosecutor Ted Housel said she would likely face more serious charges following the victims' deaths.

Pelzer remained jailed without bail Monday night, and it was not known if she had retained a lawyer.

Housel said a city police officer who happened to be patrolling in the area witnessed the robbery and stabbing, which occurred not far from the city's casino district, and quickly subdued Pelzer at gunpoint. A motive for the robbery or why Pelzer stabbed the women was not immediately known, and both police and Housel declined further comment.

Authorities identified the victims only as women ages 47 and 80 and declined to give their hometowns or provinces. Both were both stabbed multiple times in the upper body and died a short time later at a hospital.

Investigators were working Monday night to determine how long the victims had been in the Atlantic City area and where they had been staying.

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Thursday, May 17, 2012

Plans for new hotel, water park in Atlantic City

See it on TV? Check here. AP  ATLANTIC CITY -- Plans have been announced in Atlantic City for a new resort complex that will include a 31-story hotel and a year-round water park.

Developer Tom Sherwood said Wednesday he hopes to have the $123 million project completed within two years. The 350-feet-tall, 183-room hotel will be built to look like a ship's sail to help highlight the neighborhood's nautical theme, and also could serve as a gateway to the resort city's Marina District.

The developers originally planned to build a casino which would have joined the Borgata, Harrah's and Golden Nugget in that section of the city, The Press of Atlantic City (http://bit.ly/Lc2Zkm) reported. But Sherwood said the new project better reflects the push for more family attractions in Atlantic City, as well as the decline of the gambling market.

The project, being built on land Sherwood bought for $4.4 million five years ago, will be known as the Diving Horse Resort and Water Park. Sherwood says it will have no connection to the Diving Horse Gentlemen's Club he opened across town.

Sherwood said it's not sure yet when the project will be brought before the city's Planning Board. The property where the project is planned sits outside the Atlantic City Tourism District, where the New Jersey Casino Reinvestment Development Authority now handles planning and development issues.

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Thursday, July 14, 2011

Atlantic City's first casino gay bar

AP  Eyewitness NewsATLANTIC CITY, N.J. -- The new owners of Resorts Casino Hotel rescued it from near-death, slashed everyone's pay, got sued twice by older female employees, opened Atlantic City's first casino gay bar, and announced plans for a Naked Circus.

It's been a dizzying six months for the nation's first casino to open outside Nevada. Now it has culminated in a permanent casino license for the new regime.

The New Jersey Casino Control Commission on Wednesday granted the license to Resorts and its co-owners, Dennis Gomes, a former Nevada casino regulator credited with helping drive the mob out of Las Vegas, and Morris Bailey, a deep-pocketed New York real estate investor.

"I'm just excited and really happy," Gomes said. "I can't wait to get back to the casino and kick some butt."

Resorts was within days of having to close last December when Gomes and Bailey took it over. Gomes said the casino was in such a big hole it rivaled "the Grand Canyon."

When it opened its doors on May 26, 1978, Resorts became the nation's first casino outside Nevada. For years, it was fantastically profitable. But as more casinos opened in Atlantic City - there are now 11 - Resorts' share of the market fell. By the time casinos started opening in the Philadelphia suburbs in late 2006, Resorts already was in a steep decline, an afterthought for all but the bus-riding senior citizen slots player who remains its typical customer.

Gomes has a long career in the casino industry, with management jobs at the Tropicana Casino and Resort (where he famously made a tic-tac-toe-playing chicken into a top draw), Trump Taj Mahal Casino and Resort, the Golden Nugget in Las Vegas, and Hilton Nevada's properties. And his tenure as Nevada's top casino corruption investigator was chronicled in the 1995 Martin Scorsese film "Casino."

So when Resorts' previous owners, the Los Angeles hedge fund Colony Capital LLC stopped paying their mortgage and turned the casino's keys over to their lenders in 2009, Gomes saw an opportunity where others saw a money pit caught in a death spiral. He and Bailey, who had tried to open a casino in Pennsylvania, bought Resorts for $31.5 million, a fraction of the $140 million Colony paid for it in 2001.

The first thing he did was slash expenses, mostly payroll. The 2,000 workers on the payroll were all made to re-apply for their jobs. Ultimately, more than 200 were laid off, and nearly 500 others had their pay slashed by as much as 52 percent.

When Gomes took over, it soon became clear just how far things had fallen at Resorts. The casino's revenue from slot machines and table games was down 19 percent since the beginning of the year; it was taking in less than $436,000 a day, compared with $538,000 a day a year earlier, ranking it 10th out of Atlantic City's 11 casinos.

Resorts posted a gross operating loss of $18.5 million last year, a worsening of nearly 41 percent from 2009.

The first step was dreaming up a new identity for Resorts, taking what was widely considered a liability - its 90-year-old building that's smaller than the most successful casinos - and trying to turn it into a plus. Gomes and his staff rebranded Resorts in a roaring '20s theme, in part to capitalize on the success of the hit HBO series "Boardwalk Empire" about Prohibition-era Atlantic City. Because the place was built in the 1920s, it didn't need a makeover to fit in perfectly with the new theme: the marble floors and polished brass fixtures are luxurious reminders of that bygone era.

It didn't go completely smoothly; two groups of female cocktail servers sued the casino after they were let go, allegedly for not looking sexy enough in the new skimpy costumes. Celebrity lawyer Gloria Allred is representing some of them.

And six other workers who lost their jobs also sued, alleging age discrimination, among other things.

The casino still is losing money, though Gomes says he expects to reach the break-even point soon. In June, it was one of only four Atlantic City casinos to post an increase in monthly revenue compared to June 2010. It was up nearly 1 percent.

Timothy Ebling, Resorts chief financial officer, said the casino expects to have a positive cash flow in July and August.

Gomes said the casino hopes to add new restaurants, fix its aging roof, and possibly build a year-round glass-enclosed beach bar.

Under new rules New Jersey adopted earlier this year, Resorts' new license is considered permanent. It will be reviewed every five years by the state Division of Gaming Enforcement, but will only need to be renewed if major problems crop up.

(Copyright ©2011 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.) Get more New Jersey News »


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Friday, July 8, 2011

Senior saves two kids from drowning in Atlantic City

See it on TV? Check here.  Eyewitness NewsATLANTIC CITY (WABC) -- An elderly man is being hailed as a hero after he saved two children from drowning off the coast of Atlantic City.

Lou Rosso, 70, jumped into the surf to rescue a 10-year-old girl and a 12-year-old boy who were struggling in the water on Monday.

It happened as people were gathering for a Fourth of July fireworks show.

Rescuers eventually used floats and a jet ski to help the three back to shore. (Copyright ©2011 WABC-TV/DT. All Rights Reserved.)
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Tuesday, July 5, 2011

Atlantic City Boardwalk shooting wounds two

See it on TV? Check here.The search is on for the gunman who shot two people on the Atlantic City Boardwalk Police are looking for the gunman who wounded two people on a crowded Atlantic City Boardwalk early Tuesday morning.

AP  Eyewitness NewsATLANTIC CITY, N.J. -- Atlantic City police say a teenager and a man were injured when shooting broke out early Tuesday morning on Atlantic City's Boardwalk.

The wounds to a 17-year-old boy from Vineland and a 22-year-old man from Bridgeton were not considered life-threatening.

The fight broke out near Bally's Park Place casino around 1 a.m.

- hours after some 150,000 people were in the city for its Independence Day fireworks.

Police say the shooter fled on foot. A handgun was found at the bus terminal at Bally's.

(Copyright ©2011 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)
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