WORLD
June 8, 2009 | By Ken Ellingwood
As if Mexican tourism needed more bad news, a weekend shootout left 18 gunmen and soldiers dead in Acapulco, the iconic if faded beach resort that has been working on a comeback in recent years. The hours-long gunfight Saturday night took place in a seaside neighborhood of homes and cut-rate hotels that is mainly frequented by Mexicans and sits several miles from the main strip of tourist complexes. Some guests were reportedly evacuated from nearby hotels, but no tourists were known to have been caught in the crossfire.
WORLD
January 15, 2008 | By Laura King and M. Karim Faiez, Special to The Times
Striking at a prime symbol of the Western presence in Afghanistan, assailants armed with grenades, assault rifles and suicide vests stormed a heavily fortified luxury hotel in the heart of the capital Monday. The carefully coordinated assault killed at least six people, leaving trails of blood in the marble-floored lobby and forcing terrorized guests to cower behind locked doors or in the basement awaiting rescue.
WORLD
January 15, 2008 | By James Gerstenzang, Times Staff Writer
President Bush's accommodations are never shabby when he travels abroad. But consider life at his hotel in Abu Dhabi, where a run-of-the-mill suite can go for $1,595 a night. He was, a White House aide indicated, assigned one of the eight "Ruler's Suites" at the Emirates Palace Hotel on Sunday night. The suites are made available only to those who Sheik Khalifa ibn Zayed al Nuhayyan, the ruler of Abu Dhabi and president of the United Arab Emirates, says may stay there.
CALIFORNIA | LOCAL
January 19, 2008 | By Susannah Rosenblatt, Times Staff Writer
The landlord of a residential hotel near downtown Los Angeles who was accused of trying to drive out tenants by cutting phone lines, knocking down walls and ripping out sinks in the rent-controlled building pleaded no contest this week to 10 criminal counts, the city attorney's office announced Friday. Joon Ho Lee, 47, was placed on probation for three years and ordered to repair the building in the 100 block of East 21st Street within a year, authorities said.
NATIONAL
January 19, 2008 | From the Associated Press
Carbon monoxide fumes killed a hotel guest and sickened four others Friday after a construction canopy blocked venting from the building's water heaters, officials said. Levels of the poisonous, odorless gas were so high that rescuers were forced to retreat until the Best Western Allentown Inn & Suites could be ventilated. The dead hotel guest was identified by the coroner's office as Philip D. Prechtel, 63, of Hilton Head Island, S.C.
CALIFORNIA | LOCAL
January 25, 2008 | By Ari B. Bloomekatz, Times Staff Writer
Check-in at the Cecil Hotel had to wait a few minutes because Kerri Torrance, the clerk working the graveyard shift one night in November, had to deal with a heist. A man staying on the 10th floor had called down to report that a woman had grabbed his money and bolted. After the woman dashed through the lobby and burst out the front doors onto Main Street, Torrance called police while a handful of guests waited. "She's right out there . . . you see . . . well . . .
NATIONAL
January 26, 2008 | By Ashley Powers and Joel Rubin, Times Staff Writers
A fast-moving blaze charred the top of the Monte Carlo Resort & Casino on Friday, forcing thousands of tourists and employees to flee the 32-story hotel as firefighters leaned out windows to douse the flames. Firefighters knocked down the blaze in about an hour by punching through suite windows and drenching the 3,000-room hotel. No major injuries were reported, authorities said, though a dozen people were treated for smoke inhalation.
BUSINESS
January 29, 2008 | By Roger Vincent, Times Staff Writer
Marriott is expected to announce plans today for new so-called boutique hotels in downtown Los Angeles and Hollywood as part of a joint venture with hotelier Ian Schrager. The hotels would be two of nine to be built by the unusual partnership of staid industry stalwart Marriott International Inc. and the flamboyant Schrager, one of the founders of the infamous Studio 54 disco in New York in the 1970s.
WORLD
January 30, 2008 | By Bruce Wallace, Times Staff Writer
Shattered glass has been replaced, debris swept away and guests have begun trickling back to the Serena Hotel more than two weeks after Taliban militants killed seven staff members and visitors, sending a shudder through Kabul's foreign community. The psychological damage is proving to be harder to repair.
NATIONAL
February 3, 2008 | By Stuart Glascock, Times Staff Writer
One young mother from Tillamook gathers her five children and drives two scenic miles to go beachcombing at a quaint hideaway off U.S. Highway 101. Another young Tillamook mother slips into a skimpy, form-fitting black gown and steers to the same town to dance for tips at the only exotic club on the northern Oregon coast. They, along with strip-club patrons, visiting families, longtime residents and retirees, mix it up in this quiet community.