New York-based FanDuel and Boston-based DraftKings filed separate lawsuits against Illinois Attorney General Lisa Madigan on Thursday, a day after she declared daily fantasy sports betting illegal in the state. The companies argue that their contests are games of skill allowed by state law. They’re seeking to stop Madigan from enforcing her interpretation of the law and putting them out of business in Illinois. Advertisement Madigan’s action “has set off a chain of... Read More
Category: Broward News
Chicago mob boss had Sinatra singing
In 1962, at the height of his fame, Frank Sinatra gave a benefit performance at the behest of a British princess. He gave another for the head of the Chicago mob. In February, he sang at a ritzy London fundraiser for a children’s charity favored by Princess Margaret. Later that year, he did a week’s gig at the Villa Venice, a gaudy but financially ailing nightclub near Northbrook in which mafioso Sam Giancana had a piece of the action. Advertisement Chicago mafioso Sam... Read More
DraftKings, FanDuel draw scrutiny over employee bets
LAS VEGAS — Stock market traders and chess players — that’s who’s playing DraftKings, according to CEO Jason Robins, who told a crowd of casino executives last week in Las Vegas that fewer than 15 percent of the players on his site make wagers in traditional sports books. What he didn’t mention was growing online criticism at the time that his site may have allowed activity being likened to insider trading. Daily fantasy players appear concerned a DraftKings employee who said he... Read More
Cinco de Mayo: 10 best freebies, deals and $1 margaritas
Cinco de Mayo is Sunday and there are plenty of spicy and salty drink and dining deals to be had to celebrate Mexico’s victory over France, which happened May 5, 1862. Ole! Applebees: $1 Dollaritas all month long. Bahama Breeze: $5 classic margaritas and create your own premium tequila and rum flights for $10 through Sunday. Chili’s: Swill $5 Presidente Margaritas, Tequila Trifectas and draft beers on Sunday. Cumberland Farms: Text Chos to 64827 to get a coupon for $1 nachos... Read More
Fatal Black Panther raid in Chicago set off sizable aftershocks
It was war, and a spy had infiltrated the Panthers’ ranks. William O’Neal, a petty thief from the West Side, had driven a stolen car across state lines, a federal offense, and was offered a deal: Become an FBI informant and the case would go away. “I was beginning to feel clean again, just by helping the FBI,” he afterward told the Tribune. Ordered to infiltrate the Panthers, he quickly rose from handyman to security chief, and in November, he was given an assignment... Read More
Booty calls: Meet the Pirateheads
“I’m the dive-team leader,” Ringo says. “The company rents a house in Tequesta. We keep our boats there. We’ve got a 26-foot Hydra-Sport, which is what we call our anchor boat, or chase boat, and we’ve got a 46-foot vessel, The Iron Maiden. And then, we’ve got the Virgalona, which was Mel Fisher‘s boat.” ... Read More
‘I Truly Don’t Know Why He Didn’t Kill Me’ — Nancy Tyler
When a shaken and distraught Nancy Tyler finally escaped from the South Windsor house where her ex-husband had held her hostage for 13 hours Tuesday, she bore a visible mark of the terror she endured. In addition to numerous small marks, there was an impression from the barrel of a handgun that had been pressed hard into her face. After allegedly being kidnapped by Richard Shenkman at 9 a.m. in Hartford and taken to 96 Tumblebrook Drive, the home they once shared, she had spent much of the... Read More
Legendary Mime Marcel Marceau Dies at 84
Marcel Marceau, the great French mime who for seven decades mastered silence and brought new life to an ancient art form, has died. He was 84. Marceau died Saturday in Paris, French news media reported, citing his former assistant Emmanuel Vacca. The cause of death was not disclosed. On Sunday, French Prime Minister Francois Fillon praised Marceau as “the master,” saying he had the rare gift of “being able to communicate with each and every one beyond the barriers of... Read More
Former Floridian returns to beach hotel of his boyhood
MIAMI BEACH — The familiar buff-colored, turbaned statues still supported the portico. The familiar blue neon sign glowed on the roof, in the same flowing script: Casablanca. Home again. As a boy in the late 1950s, when Collins Avenue’s oceanfront hotels were the height of subtropical sophistication, this one was my hangout. Now I had returned. My family once lived in an apartment in Miami Beach, but we spent our free time at the Casablanca, a curved, modern-style, seven-story... Read More