Tag Archives: money

Caterers get creative to cook without gas for dozens of events

COLLIER COUNTY, Fla. – A wedding, a party, a big event. Just because the gas is out doesn’t mean these events stop. Caterers all over Lee and Collier County are scrambling to improvise how to keep these parties going, or loose out on the money.

“Literally didn’t think about it, flipped the valve and no gas, we really have no gas.”

Tastebuds of Naples owner Greg Shapiro didn’t have time to get heated over the situation. Instead, he had to start thinking quickly because he has a party tomorrow with more than 50 people waiting to be fed.

Shapiro tells WINK News he’s going to have to move his whole operation to his client’s house.

“Salt, pepper, garlic, all your vegetables. I’m going to bring a blender and different appliances and things.”

Everything from tongs and spatulas, to pots and pans must go. It wasn’t until Shapiro started rattling off everything he needs that it struck him as a lot of work.

“I think it’s going to be pretty heavy now that I’m thinking about it. It’s a little nuts.”

He also will have to switch from cooking in a speedy convection oven, to using his smoker, nearly doubling the time.

Although Shapiro believes it will cut into this bottom line he says the party must go on.

“You just jump in and you do what you have to do.”

Caterers get creative to cook without gas for dozens of events

Construction manager reports cash stolen from truck

The manager of a San Carlos Park construction company said someone stole several thousand dollars from his truck Friday.

Juan Hernandez, 55, of Naples, the construction manager for Pavon Construction Co., 7513 Morgan Road, told Lee deputies he cashed a check at a Western Union check cashing kiosk inside the Sunoco convenience store, 10351 Corkscrew Road, Estero. He drove to a nearby Publix store at 20311 Ben Hill Griffin Parkway to purchase envelopes, according to a Lee County Sheriff’s Office report.

He left the cash in the envelope inside his 2000 Ford truck and when he came out 15 minutes later, the door lock was tampered with and the money was missing, according to the Sheriff’s Office report.

The deputy verified Hernandez had cashed the check just after noon and purchased the envelopes at 1:15 p.m.

The exact amount of the stolen money was not released.

? 2010 Naples Daily News. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Construction manager reports cash stolen from truck

All work and no pay for Punta Gorda man

PUNTA GORDA, Fla.– Record high unemployment rates have thousands of people looking for any job they can get.

But a Punta Gorda man says his new job turned into a nightmare.

Now, 20-year-old Shawn Dano is on the job hunt again.

“I’ve been looking for a job for eight months now,” Dano tells WINK News.

He thought he’d found a good gig after a Craigslist search turned up a job with a local Jani-King cleaning franchise.

“They said they’d give me a one day trial period,” Dano says. “That worked out, so I started working every single night.”

He spent nearly two months cleaning restaurants, but says he never saw a dime.

His paychecks from franchise owner Arlex Hernandez of Lehigh Acres bounced, and now he’s out of a job and $732.

We contacted the main Jani-King office in Fort Myers and spoke with the regional director.

He explained how the franchise structure works.

He says customers don’t pay the franchisee directly, but instead pay the regional office. The regional office in turn pays the franchisee. He says the responsibility of the franchisee is to comply with policy and procedure and part of that policy is paying employees.

The Jani-King regional office has suspended the agreement with that franchise.

The local Jani-King office says it has tried to rectify the situation, although it is up to the franchisee to make payments to workers. While WINK News was at their office, Jani-King employees tried getting in contact with the franchisee, but with no luck.

For now, Dano will keep looking for another job.

He’s hoping to find work soon to support his girlfriend and their baby before the holidays.

“I just want to spend some money for my son,” says Dano. “I just wish i could get paid.”

We made multiple phone calls to the franchise owner and they were not returned.

Dano, meanwhile, says he’s contacted his attorney and will continue to fight for his money.

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All work and no pay for Punta Gorda man

New zoo exhibit may make your neck hurt

NAPLES, Fla. – “Giraffe are one of those animals we consider to be charismatic mega fauna,” David Tetzlaff with the Naples Zoo jokes.

It’s doubtful anyone getting a sneak peak of the animals Wednesday night will argue that.

Five male giraffes are the newest edition to the Naples Zoo family. It’s part of a $2 million expansion to open in 2012.

“They’re between 10 and 12 feet high, and weigh about 900 to 1,500 pounds. They’re really just youngsters,” Tetzlaff explains.

Eventually they will grow to be 18 feet tall.

So, how do you move five giants from as far away as California to Florida? It’s no easy feet.

Tetzlaff says there’s only about half a dozen people in the country that have giraffe trucks. “It’s a short unit so they can’t move back and forth. It’s very tall, about 13 feet tall, and fits under overpasses.”

The next tall order will be raising the money to make the giraffes’ permanent habitat, where people will actually be able to get a much more hands on experience.

“Our Coastal African region, it’ll be a whole new experience where you’ll be able to hand feed giraffe from a 10 foot deck.”

You can check our the giraffes starting this Saturday at the Naples Zoo.

New zoo exhibit may make your neck hurt

Controversial plan to save tax money from land-buying program

LEE COUNTY, Fla. – A top Lee Co. official is promoting a plan to suspend the Conservation 2020 tax collection for 2 years, and let property owners hold on to the money.

“This is a good program, but? a luxury in a recession.?? I also have a problem with taking all that land off the tax roll,” said Clerk of Courts Charlie Green.

The program collects tax from property owners, ever since voters approved Conservation 2020 in the mid-1990′s.?? It collects about 27 to 28 million dollars a year.?? The tax translates to 50 dollars a year for a home valued for taxes at 100-thousand.? It has bought and preserved about 22-thousand acres of land.

“We should leave that money in the hands of the taxpayer,” said Green.

Lee Co. homeowner Amber Fricke disagrees.? She says her family goes back 5 generations in Lee, and she loves the 2020 program.

“I consider this a sacred trust, an obligation that the county has to use the money to buy and preserve land!,” she told WINK News.?? “The voters approved it for one purpose only, and they should stick to that one purpose.”

Lee Commissioners will have the final say.? They will talk about the Green proposal during budget meetings in a few weeks.

Controversial plan to save tax money from land-buying program

Real estate agents hounding BP for compensation for losses

WASHINGTON (AP) – The administrator of a $20 billion oil spill compensation fund said Wednesday he’s been besieged by real estate
agents and brokers, demanding that they become eligible for payments.

Kenneth Feinberg, in congressional testimony singled out the real estate agents’ demands as one of many tough eligibility decisions he’ll have to make in the coming weeks.

Feinberg told the House Judiciary Committee he’s working only for victims, not BP or the Obama administration. Operations of the independent fund will begin next month, starting with six-month
emergency checks that will be processed within a day and paid out within the next two days.

The emergency payments will not require a release from future claims. Long-term settlements – for current and future injury or loss – will require agreements to accept the offer as final payment. Victims can reject the money and pursue claims independently in court.

Feinberg said he’ll need to work out a system for those who develop illnesses from the cleanup years afterward.

Feinberg said he has heard from many real estate agents and brokers about their lost income, and promised to address their concerns.

“The Realtors and real estate brokers are a major political force,” he said. “I’m hearing from them constantly. I’m not sure whether they have a valid legal claim. I’m not sure they can win if they litigate.? “If I am going to do justice here, we’ve got to do something.”

Real estate agents hounding BP for compensation for losses

Lee man alleges voodoo, fights to get motel back from Santeria spiritual adviser

In October 2007, Enzo Vincenzi, 43, now of Estero, paid Miriam Pacheco $50 and the “Santeria Africana” spiritual adviser and healer warned he was in grave danger. Pacheco, who calls herself Madrina Miriam (godmother Miriam), warned only she could help. In the end, Pacheco took Vincenzi to a Fort Myers lawyer, and Vincenzi signed documents that Pacheco prepared, signing away his motel.

“During the course of the ceremony, Pacheco killed a bird and passed it over Vincenzi’s stomach while praying and chanting, which she claimed would heal his stomach ailments,” the lawsuit says. “Pacheco also covered Vincenzi’s eyes, made him drink an unidentified liquid and laid her hands on him — all of which she claimed would help heal him.”

Attorney Joseph Hoffman, who represented Pacheco, just considers it a case involving a language barrier: Vincenzi speaks English, while Pacheco only speaks Spanish. “I’ve had weirder cases,” Hoffman said. “I’m not saying this was plain vanilla. But it’s a property dispute. That’s all it was.”


It sounds like a bad TV movie.

A sick Lee County hotelier worried about his finances and stomach problems looked in the Yellow Pages under herbs, found the Botanica 7 Potensias Africanas shop in Fort Myers, then sought treatment and help.

On that day in October 2007, Enzo Vincenzi, 43, now of Estero, paid the owner, Miriam Pacheco, $50 and the “Santeria Africana” spiritual adviser and healer warned he was in grave danger. Pacheco, who calls herself Madrina Miriam (godmother Miriam), warned only she could help.

Over weeks and months, there were ritualistic ceremonies involving a dead bird, a sacrificed rooster, liquid potions, prayers and chants by Pacheco, her Santerian “god-daughter,” Maria Teresa Torres, and another god-daughter.

In the end, Pacheco took Vincenzi to a Fort Myers lawyer, and Vincenzi signed documents that Pacheco prepared, signing away his motel.

Those are the allegations in a lawsuit Vincenzi and Sabal Oasis Inn filed in Lee Circuit Court against Pacheco, 57, and Torres, 43.

“It was a very bizarre case,” Naples attorney Michael D. Randolph, who filed a related lawsuit against Pacheco and Torres, said of Vincenzi’s allegations.

But attorney Joseph Hoffman, who represented Pacheco and Torres, just considers it a case involving a language barrier: Vincenzi speaks English, while Pacheco and Torres only speak Spanish.

“I’ve had weirder cases,” Hoffman said. “I’m not saying this was plain vanilla. But it’s a property dispute. That’s all it was.”

His clients have denied allegations of ritualistic ceremonies, fraud or coercing Vincenzi into turning over his motel.

On Thursday, Lee Circuit Judge Sherra Winesett signed an order for partial summary judgment, for $37,000 that a Lee circuit jury awarded Vincenzi in April for intentional infliction of emotional stress.

Vincenzi, who ended up marrying Torres’ daughter, was involuntarily committed to a psychiatric hospital under the state’s Baker Act months after the rituals, due to the loss of his motel and fears that Pacheco’s predictions of doom, his poisoning and death would come true.

His wife, Cynthia, testified against her mother and Pacheco, as did others who said Pacheco scammed them.

The jury also awarded Vincenzi $99,500 for the loss of his 13-room motel and attached home, finding fraudulent misrepresentation by Pacheco and Torres.

But Pacheco doesn’t have $99,000 and Vincenzi’s attorney, Bradley Lang of Naples, is working on a rescission of deed so Vincenzi can get his motel back.

“Returning the motel is ‘equitable relief’ and only the judge can do that,” Lang said after the brief hearing. “The jury can only award monetary damages.”

A rescission of deed is designed to make everyone involved whole, a domino effect that returns all parties back to the way each started.

In the other case, attorney Randolph has $250,000 that Pacheco obtained through a loan to pay his client, Leone Mason Contracting Inc., which is owned by Vincenzi’s father. He’d had the motel’s original mortgage, sued Pacheco and Torres for payment after the transfer, and they defaulted.

“If you have a car that you bought, you give it back to the dealer and the dealer gives it back to the manufacturer and the manufacturer gives it back to the smelter,” Randolph said, explaining a rescission. “You either choose damages or you choose rescission.”

Randolph would return the $250,000 to Pacheco, who would give it to her lender. Pacheco and Torres and their families would vacate the motel, then Vincenzi would get it back.

A hearing on the deed rescission hasn’t yet been scheduled.

“We’re waiting to see if my client can come up with the money,” Hoffman said. “Money is tight now.”

Vincenzi is hopeful.

“They made me homeless,” Vincenzi said after the hearing, adding that he’s unemployed and faces nearly $20,000 in medical bills. “They traumatized me, I ended up in the hospital, I’m drowning in debt — and they’re still in my house.”

Depositions show Pacheco, of Cuba, and Torres, who is from Honduras, have elementary school educations. They work at the motel and Pacheco’s store, which sells saint statues, candles, herbs for spiritual baths, and other items for spiritual ceremonies, voodoo and Palo, an Afro-Cuban religion also known as Reglas de Congo.

Pacheco denied doing voodoo or Palo, saying her son wrote that when he set up her website: http://botanica7potencias.com/

After the lawsuits were filed, there were allegations back and forth and restraining orders.

“They made up an incident report and three weeks later, when I was in court, they have me arrested and claim I assaulted them,” Vincenzi said. “The day we were supposed to go to trial on this, they dropped it. The judge warned them. He saw right through the whole thing.”

Torres, however, was convicted of battery on Vincenzi and resisting arrest after a Lee County deputy saw Torres hit Vincenzi.

Vincenzi also filed complaints to alert state and federal agencies about the real estate fraud. He’s reported the Fort Myers attorney who handled the deed transfer to The Florida Bar, two real estate brokers and an accountant to the Division of Business and Professional Regulation, and mailed letters to the state Attorney General, the U.S. Attorney, the FBI and others.

The original lawsuit filed by Vincenzi’s prior attorney, Andrew Epstein of Fort Myers, details the unusual case:

Pacheco cautioned Vincenzi he was in danger of demonic spirits, the devil, and said the hotel’s prior owners had buried the devil. He was in grave danger, faced IRS problems and she claimed prostitutes worked at his motel.

She said she could help by becoming his Santeria Africana godmother. At a card reading and St. Lazarus ritualistic ceremony, she warned he was a “walking dead man” and his housekeeper was poisoning his food.

“During the course of the ceremony, Pacheco killed a bird and passed it over Vincenzi’s stomach while praying and chanting, which she claimed would heal his stomach ailments,” the lawsuit says. “Pacheco also covered Vincenzi’s eyes, made him drink an unidentified liquid and laid her hands on him — all of which she claimed would help heal him.”

A week later, she sacrificed a rooster, saying it would protect him from the motel’s former owners, who were trying to kill him. She told him to pay her $500 so he could move into the home she shared with Torres. He remained there, confined to a bed, for about two months as she and Torres served as spiritual advisers.

She took him to a beach and performed a “Queen of the Seas” ceremony, chanting and praying over him as he lay in the sand. She urged him to see her attorney, who could help with legal problems she predicted.

She coerced him into transferring the property, promising to save him from demonic spirits and attempts on his life.

She took him to her attorney and Vincenzi signed deeds Pacheco prepared, transferring the motel to her and Torres without cost. He lost his Jaguar, pickup truck, motorboat and possessions after she evicted him; they deny taking his vehicles.

A former client used to picket Pacheco’s store, claiming she was defrauded, and evidence Lang obtained shows this wasn’t the only time Pacheco was accused of fraud.

An attorney for Devoe Pontiac in Bonita Springs successfully fought a worker’s compensation claim she’d filed under her married name, Miriam Engstrom. An insurance database turned up many fraudulent slip and falls, injuries, a stroke and accidents she’d filed claims for against four employers from 2001 to April 2003; insurers denied them.

Documents show she settled a slip-and-fall hernia case against Walmart for about $56,000 and got $8,000 for a 2001 motor vehicle claim. That insurer later found she’d had two other auto claims in 1998 and 1999, and had sought benefits for an alleged 1995 industrial accident — although she claimed to have only worked as a housekeeper and had no prior auto claims.

? 2010 Naples Daily News. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Lee man alleges voodoo, fights to get motel back from Santeria spiritual adviser

Collier’s fight for Cubs appears to be over

Negotiations between Collier County and the Chicago Cubs appear to be over.

Craig Bouchard today told WINK News, “In our discussions with the Cubs we asked for them to provide our group with an exclusive negotiating period. The cubs politely declined and will continue to negotiate with Mesa for the time being. We understand the importance of loyalty and wish them well. We also respect 57 years of support from Mesa. Therefore we have respectfully withdrawn our offer.”

Mesa, Arizona officials have been having a difficult time coming up with the money to give th Cubs the improvements they want in Mesa, but so far the negotiations continue

Collier’s fight for Cubs appears to be over

VIDEO: Lee County couple pleads guilty to human trafficking

Video from NBC-2


A Lee husband and wife who pimped women through online listings, paid them in drugs and then refused to let them leave pleaded to a human trafficking charge in federal court.

Derrick Ned, 33, and Naomi Vasquez, 32, of Lee County, will likely serve less than the 20-year maximum sentence for a charge of forced labor. In exchange for the pair’s guilty pleas, federal prosecutors dropped three other counts in the indictment and are requesting a downward sentencing departure.

The pair was arrested by deputies in January after an undercover investigation by the Lee County Sheriff’s Office, and they were later charged by federal prosecutors. The state has since dropped charges against Ned, but Vasquez’s case remains open. She is charged with three counts each of recruiting prostitutes, forcing prostitution and living off the earnings of prostitutes, as well as two first-degree felony charges of racketeering and conspiracy to violate the federal Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act.

In arrest affidavits, Lee County detective Michael Zaleski detailed an organization called “My Goddess Companion,” in which Ned recruited women for prostitution, refused to pay them and supplied them instead with drugs. When the women tried to leave, they were told they’d have to repay the costs of the drugs, and they were threatened, Zaleski wrote.

Three of the women, ages 20, 25 and 27, stated that they averaged six sexual acts a day and received $150 to $300 for each act, none of which they were allowed to keep. Ned told the women the money was for rent and transportation, according to the affidavit.

Vasquez acted as the go-between for each client, the women said, and she posted the company’s Internet listings. According to Zaleski, one of the women said Vasquez was more violent than Ned, beating the girls, threatening them and waking them throughout the night to service clients.

As many as 13 other women had been trafficked by Ned, one of the witnesses told Zaleski.

Sentencing for Ned and Vasquez will be set at a future date. The charge for each carries a maximum 20 years in prison, a fine up to $250,000 and supervised release of no more than five years.

? 2010 Naples Daily News. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

VIDEO: Lee County couple pleads guilty to human trafficking

PHOTOS: 63-year-old Naples man charged with robbing two area banks

Video from NBC-2


A Crime Stopper tip led to a Naples man being arrested for two local bank robberies, among them the Thursday afternoon heist at a Wachovia Bank branch in Estero, a Lee County Sheriff’s Office statement said.

Thomas George Klein, 63, of 4985 22nd Place Soutwest, Naples, was arrested Friday with assistance from the Collier County Sheriff’s Office and booked into the Collier County Jail on the Lee County robbery charges, the statement said.

According to the release and media reports:

The tipster provided Klein’s name, and due to use of the Crime Stoppers hotline, can remain anonymous and be eligible for up to a $1,000 reward.

Detectives obtained Klein’s driver’s license photo and prepared a photo line-up, presenting it to several witnesses of Friday’s robbery and one occurring Jan. 13 at the RBC Bank located at 9430 Bonita Beach Road in Bonita Springs.

The witnesses of both robberies positively identified Klein as the suspect.

In both cases, Klein handed a bag and a demand note implying he had a gun to tellers.

In the Bonita Springs robbery, a witness said the robber wore a wig and counted his money behind the bank. In the Estero robbery, authorities described the suspect as either a male or a female.

? 2010 Naples Daily News. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

PHOTOS: 63-year-old Naples man charged with robbing two area banks