Friday, January 22, 2010

Toronto Restaurateur charged with cooking up scam

A well-known Toronto restaurateur is set to make his first court appearance after allegations that he defrauded a handful of Toronto investors out of more than $1 million.

Panagiotis “Peter” Tsatsaris, who was once described in this newspaper as someone who “changes our world just a little bit for the better,” is to appear in a College Park courtroom Thursday afternoon on 14 charges — three counts of fraud over $5,000 and 11 counts of uttering a forged document.

He is accused of bilking investors across the GTA out of their life savings — one man allegedly lost $500,000 — after convincing them through a series of forged letters and contracts that they were buying McDonald’s restaurants along the Hwy. 407 corridor in Thornhill.

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Airline confident on Sandals tie-up

Air Canada is confident its partnership to serve Sandals' Emerald Bay resort in Exuma will be profitable, despite its packaged vacations representing only 15 per cent of seats to the Bahamas.

Stephen Hector, Sandals' spokesman, said Air Canada was excited about what the resort chain has been doing to improve the property in Exuma, and decised to create a new route direct from Toronto.

Venice Walkine, director-general of the Bahamas Ministry of Tourism and Aviation, said Air Canada considered the mechanics and economics of entering into a partnership with Sandals and moved forward with once-a-week direct airlift to the island.

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El Pollo Loco pulls back on Chicago expansion

In 2004, El Pollo Loco announced its plans for a national expansion, including entry into the Chicago market. Now, The Sun Times reports that two of the chain's three stores there have closed recently, possibly putting the brakes on the company's plans for growth in the market.

Franchisee ABE Holdings LLC had previously signed a deal to open 18 stores in the Chicago area in addition to the company's plans for another 12. The company previously took over two of those franchise stores in 2007 and closed them in 2008.

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Lone Star Funds Acquires Lodgian

Lodgian Inc. has entered into a definitive agreement to be acquired by an affiliate of Lone Star Funds for approximately US$270 million, including assumed debt.

Under the terms of the agreement, Lone Star will acquire all of the outstanding common stock of Lodgian for $2.50 per share in an all-cash transaction. The price represents a premium of approximately 67.2 percent over Lodgian's average closing share price during the trading period of one calendar month prior to January 15, 2010 and 64.3 percent over Lodgian's average closing share price during the trading period of six calendar months prior to January 15.
Lodgian's Board of Directors has unanimously approved the merger agreement and has recommended approval of the transaction by Lodgian shareholders.

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Nevada officials approve Carl Icahn's control of 9 casinos as part of Tropicana reorganization

LAS VEGAS (AP) — Nevada gambling regulators on Thursday approved billionaire investor Carl Icahn's plan to control nine casinos in four states as part of the bankruptcy reorganization of Tropicana Entertainment LLC.

The plan involves casinos in Nevada, Mississippi, Indiana and Louisiana, and still must be approved by regulators in New Jersey because the company owns assets there.

Under the plan, Tropicana is reorganizing as a publicly traded company, Tropicana Entertainment Inc., with shares owned by some 150 lenders, said company CEO Scott Butera.

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TripAdvisor Sniffs Out America's Dirtiest Hotels

NEWTON, Mass. – January 22, 2010 /PRNewswire/ — TripAdvisor®, the world’s most trusted source of travel advice, today announced the top 10 dirtiest hotels in America, based on TripAdvisor traveler ratings for cleanliness. For the fifth consecutive year, TripAdvisor reveals the truth about hotels around the world, from the most gleaming to the most grimy.

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JAL bankruptcy will not affect company’s hotel portfolio

One of the largest bankruptcies in Japanese history, JAL is saddled with ¥2.5 trillion (US$28 billion) of debt, according to a bankruptcy filing made by the airliner in a New York court on 19 January. In the filing, the company said it has been stung by rising costs and declining demand for air travel caused by terrorism, the outbreak of the H1N1 virus, and other factors.

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Wynn Macau, Casino Operators Decline on China Rates Concerns

Jan. 22 (Bloomberg) -- Wynn Macau Ltd., controlled by billionaire Stephen Wynn’s casino operator, fell the most in almost three months in Hong Kong trading on speculation China will tighten policies to curb inflation.

Wynn Macau tumbled 5.7 percent to HK$9.60, the most since Oct. 28. Billionaire Stanley Ho’s SJM Holdings Ltd. slid 2.2 percent after earlier falling the most in almost two months. The Hang Seng Index fell 0.65 percent, capping its worst week since November.

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McDonald's Delivers Another Year of Strong Results In 2009

"McDonald's 2009 results reflect the broad-based strength of our global business," said McDonald's Chief Executive Officer, Jim Skinner. "Our in-demand food and beverages, unparalleled convenience and superior value at every level of our menu enabled us to serve 60 million customers per day during 2009, up 2 million per day over the prior year. In addition, McDonald's profitability increased as we marked our sixth consecutive year of positive comparable sales in every geographic segment and generated higher global revenues, operating income and earnings per share in constant currencies - all tremendous accomplishments given the tough global economy."

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Burger King plans beer-selling Whopper Bar in South Beach

Gimme a Whopper, fries — and a beer.
Those words are no longer wishful thinking. Friday, Burger King (BKC) will unveil plans to sell beer and burgers at a Whopper Bar — a new BK concept to compete with casual dining restaurants — in Miami Beach's tourist-heavy South Beach. The South Beach Whopper Bar is scheduled to open in mid-February.

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