Unspecified threats close Newtown elementary school

NEWTOWN, Conn. — A school principal at a Newtown, Conn., elementary school says it has been locked down due to unspecified threats.

Most schools in Newtown opened on Tuesday, four days after a gunman fatally shot 20 children and six adults at Sandy Hook Elementary School.

But in a letter to parents published by WFSB-TV, the principal says students at Head O'Meadow Elementary School should stay home because police were prepared to have the school in lockdown. School officials said the lockdown was normal procedure because some threats were predicted by police.




AP



Police officers stand guard at the entrance of Head O'Meadow School, Tuesday, Dec. 18, 2012, in Newtown, Conn.



All other schools in town, except Sandy Hook, opened on Tuesday.

A police dispatcher would not confirm the lockdown.

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Mango’s opening in Orlando




















One of South Beach’s liveliest clubs is heading to Orlando.

Mango’s Tropical Cafe, where bartop dancers routinely draw a crowd on Ocean Drive, plans to open the new location on Orando’s International Drive at the end of 2014.

“Mango’s is a natural fit for this market, and we have an incredible location,’’ Mango’s owner David Wallack said in a press release. “We look forward to serving millions of happy guests.”





Mango’s paid $10.4 million for the three-acre site at 8102 International Drive, a two-story complex that currently houses a T.G.I.Friday’s and a retail outlet, said a spokeswoman for CBRE, which brokered the deal.

DOUGLAS HANKS





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Narcy Novack gets life in prison for killing her hotel heir husband




















An epic family murder saga ended Monday when Narcy Novack, wife of Fontainebleau hotel heir Ben Novack Jr., was sentenced to life in prison.

Three years after she and her brother, Cristobal Veliz, planned and helped execute Ben Novack and his mother Bernice, the convicted killers, who had remained loyal to each other throughout the trial, made it clear their family ties would not extend to prison. Cristobal also was sentenced to life in prison Monday.

Each blamed the other for masterminding the murders, and their lawyers each asked the judge for leniency, claiming they were less culpable because the other sibling was pulling the strings.





But U.S. District Judge Kenneth M. Karas, was not swayed, calling the crimes “vile.” The former Hialeah stripper, 56, did not attend the sentencing, a move that Karas called “a final act of cowardice,’’ according to those in the courtroom.

Novack, who ordered the hitmen to cut out her husband’s eyes, will now see little more than the inside of a federal prison. She will spend her days in a yellow jumpsuit and sneakers and sleep on a jail cot. Known as a late riser, Novack will be forced up at the crack of dawn each day to do chores, like washing floors and peeling potatoes.

Her new life will be far cry from her jet-setting days drinking champagne and having servants to do her cooking and cleaning.

With her conviction, Narcy Novack loses all rights to the bounty she hoped to claim after the murders. While she was designated as the sole beneficiary of his estimated $10 million estate, under Florida’s Slayer Statute, she now forfeits all rights to his fortune and Karas also ordered that any of her own personal assets be seized.

Novack, and her brother, both natives of Ecuador, were convicted in June of plotting the July 12, 2009, killing of her husband, 53, son of the late Ben Novack Sr., who built Miami Beach’s storied Fontainebleau hotel. Narcy Novack believed that her husband was going to leave her for another woman and that she would be left with a fraction of his wealth.

Under Ben Novack Jr.’s will, his mother, had she lived, would have been appointed as curator of his estate and received $200,000 in cash plus $2,500 per month. Though Narcy Novack would receive the balance of her husband’s property and money, as curator, Bernice Novack, 86, would have exercised great control over the purse strings, and likely would have made life difficult for her daughter-in-law, whom she had once accused of trying to poison her.

Novack’s attorney, Howard Tanner, argued that his client should be sentenced to 27 years, instead of life, arguing that her brother planned her mother-in-law’s murder. As he did during trial, Veliz claimed that Narcy’s daughter, May Abad, planned the killings, an allegation that prosecutors had dismissed years ago.

In sentencing the siblings, Karas spoke about a letter he received from one of Bernice Novack’s neighbors, Doug Reynolds. Reynolds pointed out that if Novack received just 27 years, as her lawyer suggested, she would conceivably see freedom in her mid-80s, or about the same age Bernice Novack was when her life was taken from her. Karas agreed that it would be an injustice if Bernice Novack’s killers would be able to live out their lives in freedom when Bernice wasn’t able to.





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The Fabulous Flubs of 'Pitch Perfect'

The vocal stylings of Pitch Perfect create a near-perfect fit for the eardrums, but as with all movies, sometimes it took several takes to get it just right. The stars of the musical-mash-up movie clearly had plenty of fun on the set trying to hit the right notes in the songs and performances, and we have an exclusive clip of outtakes from the Blu-ray/DVD, out tomorrow!

Video: 'Pitch Perfect' Premiere Mash-Up

Loaded with new takes on old favorites to hits seamlessly mixed together, mashed-up and arranged like you've never heard before, Pitch Perfect stars Anna Kendrick, Elizabeth Banks, Rebel Wilson, Skylar Astin, Adam DeVine, Anna Camp, Brittany Snow, Alexis Knapp, Ester Dean, Hana Mae Lee, Ben Platt, Freddie Stroma, Christopher Mintz-Plasse and John Michael Higgins in an entertaining tale of the cutthroat world of college music competitions.

The film is directed by Jason Moore (Avenue Q).

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Hollywood postpones violent shows and movies after Newtown shooting








NEW YORK — Movie studios and television programmers have postponed or canceled violent films and TV shows after a shooting left 20 children and six adults dead in a Connecticut elementary school last week.

Viacom Inc.'s Paramount studios delayed the premiere of "Jack Reacher," an action-thriller based on the Lee Child novels starring Tom Cruise that was scheduled for Dec. 15, the day after the murders. Separately, Discovery Communications Inc. canceled the new season of "American Guns," a reality-based serial about a family of gunmakers, Fox News reported.





Karen Ballard



Tom Cruise is the titular character in "Jack Reacher."





The killings by a single gunman armed with two handguns and a semi-automatic rifle have reignited debates over the need for gun control and violence in Hollywood's movies. President Barack Obama said he would "use whatever power this office holds" to prevent further tragedies.

"Due to the terrible tragedy in Newtown, Connecticut, and out of honor and respect for the families of the victims whose lives were senselessly taken, we are postponing tomorrow's Pittsburgh premiere of 'Jack Reacher,'" Paramount said in an e- mailed statement on Dec. 14. "Our hearts go out to all those who lost loved ones."

Michelle Russo, a spokeswoman for Discovery, didn't respond to requests for comment.

CBS Corp.'s Showtime cable channel acknowledged the Connecticut killings — the second-most fatal mass shooting in the U.S. — before recent airings of "Dexter," a show about a serial killer, and "Homeland," a popular series about domestic terrorism.

"In light of the tragedy that has occurred in Connecticut, the following program contains images that may be disturbing. Viewer discretion is advised,' the network broadcast before the shows.










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Miami Herald digital subscriptions start Tuesday




















Starting Tuesday, unlimited use of websites and mobile apps for The Miami Herald and El Nuevo Herald will require a subscription.

The “Miami Herald Plus+” program allows readers to have free access to a certain number of stories every month: initially, 15 on the websites, 20 on mobile web and 60 on mobile apps. After reaching that limit, users will get a notice that they need to log in or subscribe.

Print subscribers will be able to read online for free until their subscription is set to renew, though they will need to set up a “Plus+” account. When renewal is due, subscribers will be notified that they will automatically roll over to a combined print and digital package at a higher price or learn how to opt out.





Miami Herald packages include a 99-cent digital-only one-month trial, $3.99 monthly fee for the Sunday print edition and digital access, $10.99 monthly fee for Thursday through Sunday papers and digital access and $15.99 monthly fee for Monday through Sunday papers plus digital. El Nuevo Herald packages run from 99 cents a month for digital only through $10.99 a month for the print edition and digital access.

More information is online at MiamiHerald.com/plus or elnuevoherald.com/plus.





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Narcy Novack to be sentenced Monday in killing of Fontainebleau Hotel heir husband, mother-in-law




















Fort Lauderdale resident Narcy Novack, convicted of arranging the killings of her millionaire husband and mother-in-law will hear her sentence Monday — if she’s in the courtroom.

A disgusted Novack, apparently certain she’d be found guilty, decided not to attend in June when a federal jury’s verdict was read.

“We all wondered, `Where’s Narcy?“’ one juror said.





She and her brother, Cristobal Veliz, were convicted of hiring hit men to carry out the 2009 beating deaths of Ben Novack Jr. in a suburban New York hotel room and Bernice Novack at her Fort Lauderdale home.

Ben Novack was the son of the man who built the Fontainebleau hotel in Miami Beach, which appeared in the movies “Scarface” and “Goldfinger.”

The sentence will be bad news too — the U.S. attorney’s office has asked Judge Kenneth Karas to send Novack to prison for life, and her own lawyer is suggesting a 27-year stretch. He argues that she had only a minor role in Bernice Novack’s death and was “substantially less culpable than other participants.”

He also said her crime-free background and her age should be considered.

Veliz’s lawyer has not submitted a sentencing recommendation.

Novack, 56, an Ecuador native, would likely die in prison even under the 27-year scenario, defense attorney Howard Tanner said. But it would give her at least “a chance of reformation and rehabilitation.”

“She would be released from prison an elderly woman with virtually no possessions or home,” he told the judge. “Her future is in all respects bleak and limited.”

Prosecutor Elliott Jacobson said it should stay that way forever. He told the judge in court papers that Novack and Veliz “engaged in the very worst criminal conduct imaginable.”

“They are evil; they are dangerous; they are remorseless; and they are relentless,” he wrote. He said the killings “involved particularly cruel, sadistic and gratuitous savagery seldom seen in the annals of crime.”

Prosecutors said Novack feared that her husband, who was having an affair, would divorce her, and that a prenuptial agreement would bar her from the multimillion-dollar family estate.

She recruited her brother and he hired a group of thugs who testified about slamming Bernice Novack in the teeth and head with a plumber’s wrench and beating Ben Novack with barbells and slicing his eyes with a knife.

Veliz denied any involvement and blamed Narcy Novack’s daughter for the killings. Her two sons stand to inherit the bulk of the family estate, which includes Ben Novack’s large collection of Batman memorabilia.

Narcy Novack did not testify. But before her arrest she gave police a striking account of her marriage, including that her husband had a fetish for amputees. She also said she once went into a hospital to have a broken nose repaired and awoke with breast implants she hadn’t requested.

In addition to the murder charge, the defendants were convicted of domestic violence, stalking, money laundering and witness tampering.





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Riveting Details Emerge from CT School Rampage

As morning turned to afternoon on Friday, further details continued to emerge from Newtown, CT, a tight-knit community shaken by a massacre at Sandy Hook Elementary School that took the lives of innocent students and teachers, in addition to the gunman, reportedly identified as Adam Lanza.

RELATED: President Fights Tears as He Addresses Nation

As President Barack Obama touched on in his tear-jerking press conference, this is not the first time the nation has witnessed a tragedy of this kind. The recent mass shooting at an Aurora, CO movie theater is just one instance of such violence. Columbine High School and Virginia Tech also resonate as prime examples.

Hollywood's biggest stars were quick to react to the news on Twitter and made an outcry for stricter gun control regulations.

Watch the video for ET's complete coverage of today's biggest headline.

RELATED: Celebs Tweet Reactions to CT School Shooting

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President Obama heads to grieving Newtown, as Dems talk gun control








WASHINGTON — For President Barack Obama, it was another sorrowful visit to another grieving community full of broken hearts from unimaginable violence.

The spot, this time, was Newtown, Conn., where on Friday a man opened fire inside Sandy Hook Elementary School. The toll: 26 dead, including 20 boys and girls just 6- or 7-years-old.

The president planned a private meeting Sunday afternoon with families of the victims and with emergency personnel who responded to the shootings. In the evening, he was to speak at an interfaith vigil at Newtown High School.





REUTERS



President Barack Obama departs the White House today to travel to Newtown, Conn., the scene of Friday's senseless rampage that left 20 elementary schoolchildren dead.





"As a nation, we have endured far too many of these tragedies in the last few years," he said in his weekly radio address Saturday. "An elementary school in Newtown. A shopping mall in Oregon. A house of worship in Wisconsin. A movie theater in Colorado. Countless street corners in places like Chicago and Philadelphia."

Just last summer, Obama went to Aurora, Colo., to visit victims and families after a shooting spree at a movie theater in the Denver suburb left 12 dead. He went to Tucson, Ariz., in January of last year after six people were killed and 13 were wounded, including then-Rep. Gabrielle Giffords, outside a grocery store.

In November 2009, Obama traveled to Fort Hood, Texas, to speak at the memorial service for 13 service members who were killed on the post by another soldier.

"We have to come together and take meaningful action to prevent more tragedies like this. Regardless of the politics," Obama said in his broadcast remarks.

After the Colorado shooting in July, the White House made clear that Obama would not propose new gun restrictions in an election year and said he favored better enforcement of existing laws.

The Connecticut shootings may have changed the political dynamic in Washington, although public opinion in favor of gun control has declined over the years. While the White House has said Obama stands by his desire to reinstate a ban on military-style assault weapons, he has not pushed Congress to act.

Several Democratic lawmakers, during appearances on the Sunday talk shows, said the gruesome killings at the school were the final straw in a debate on gun laws that has fallen to the wayside in recent years.

"This conversation has been dominated in Washington by — you know and I know — gun lobbies that have an agenda" said Illinois Sen. Dick Durbin, the second-ranking Democrat in the Senate. "We need people, just ordinary Americans, to come together, and speak out, and to sit down and calmly reflect on how far we go."

Sen. Joe Lieberman, a Connecticut independent who is retiring, suggested a national commission on mass violence that would examine gun laws and what critics see as loopholes, as well as the mental health system and violence in movies and video games. Durbin said he supports the idea, and would add school safety to the list of topics to examine.

Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., said she would push legislation next year to ban future sales of military-assault weapons like those used in the elementary school shooting. The bill will ban big clips, drums and strips of more than 10 bullets.

The proposals were among the first to come from Congress in the wake of Friday's shooting. Gun rights activists remained largely quiet on the issue, all but one declining to appear on the talk shows.

Rep. Louie Gohmert, R-Texas defended the sale of assault weapons and said that the principal at Sandy Hook Elementary School, who authorities say died trying to overtake the shooter, should herself have been armed.

Authorities identified the shooter as Adam Lanza, a 20-year-old who police say first killed his mother before driving to the school, opening fire in two classrooms and then taking his own life.

Before leaving for Connecticut, the president went to watch a dance rehearsal for one of his daughters in suburban Maryland.

As he said in his radio address, "this weekend, Michelle and I are doing what I know every parent is doing — holding our children as close as we can and reminding them how much we love them. "










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Miami in spotlight at AVCC, other entrepreneurship events




















Entrepreneurs from around the world took the stage during this packed week of entrepreneurship events in Miami: Florida International University’s Americas Venture Capital Conference (known as AVCC), HackDay, Wayra’s Global DemoDay and Endeavor’s International Selection Panel.

The events, all part of the first Innovate MIA week, also put the spotlight on Miami as it continues to try to develop into a technology hub for the Americas.

“While I like art, I absolutely love what is happening today... The time has come to become a tech hub in Miami,” said Miami-Dade Mayor Carlos A. Gimenez, who kicked off the venture capital conference on Thursday. He told the audience of 450 investors and entrepreneurs about the county’s $1 million investment in the Launch Pad Tech Accelerator in downtown Miami.





“I have no doubt that this gathering today will produce new ideas and new business ventures that will put our community on a fast track to becoming a center for innovative, tech-driven entrepreneurship,” Gimenez said.

Brad Feld, an early-stage investor and a founder of TechStars, cautioned that won’t happen overnight. Building a startup community can take five, 10, even 15 years, and those leading the effort, who should be entrepreneurs themselves, need to take the long-term view, he told the audience via video. “You can create very powerful entrepreneurial ecosystems in any city... I’ve spent some time in Miami, I think you are off to a great start.”

Throughout the two-day AVCC at the JW Brickell Marriott, as well as the Endeavor and Wayra events, entrepreneurs from around the world pitched their companies, hoping to persuade investors to part with some of their green.

And in some cases, the entrepreneurs could win money, too. During the venture capital conference, 29 companies —including eight from South Florida such as itMD, which connects doctors, patients and imaging facilities to facilitate easy access of records — competed for more than $50,000 in cash and prizes through short “elevator’’ pitches. Each took questions from the judges, then demoed their products or services in the conference “Hot Zone,” a room adjoining the ballroom. Some companies like oLyfe, a platform to organize what people share online, are hoping to raise funds for expansion into Latin America. Others like Ideame, a trilingual crowdfunding platform, were laser focused on pan-Latin American opportunities.

Winning the grand prize of $15,000 in cash and art was Trapezoid Digital Security of Miami, which provides hardware-based security solutions for enterprise and cloud environments. Fotopigeon of Tampa, a photo-sharing and printing service targeting the military and prison niches, scored two prizes.

The conference offered opportunities to hear formal presentations on current trends — among them the surge of start-ups in Brazil; the importance of mobile apps and overheated company valuations — and informal opportunities to connect with fellow entrepreneurs.

Speakers included Gaston Legorburu of SapientNitro, Albert Santalo of CareCloud and Juan Diego Calle of .Co Internet, all South Florida entrepreneurs. Jerry Haar, executive director of FIU’s Pino Global Entrepreneurship Center, which produced the conference with a host of sponsors, said the organizers worked hard to make the conference relevant to both the local and Latin American audience, with panels on funding and recruiting for startups, for instance.





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