Quick-thinking robbery victim turns the tables on 2 gun-toting crooks — a male and female — behind Memphis hotel



A quick-thinking robbery victim turned the tables on a male and female who pulled guns on him early Friday morning behind a Memphis hotel.

Officers responded to a report of a shooting at 6:15 a.m. at the Classic Inn on American Way, WMC-TV reported, citing the Memphis Police Department.

But when the gun-toting male and female turned around at the sound of a loud noise in the distance, the victim grabbed the female’s gun ...

Police found a male shot multiple times and a female shot in her upper arm, WMC said, adding that both were hospitalized — the male in critical condition and the female in non-critical condition.

The station said another call came in from behind the hotel on Fairbrook Avenue, where police met a man who told officers he was the one who fired at the male and female — but that they tried to rob him.

The man said he arrived at the hotel earlier that morning to meet with the female who eventually was shot and hospitalized, WMC said.

The man said the female — wrapped in a blanket — approached him and asked if he was armed, the station reported.

After he said he wasn't armed, she reportedly lured him to the back of the building and gave him the impression that they were going to her car, WMC noted.

But just as he noticed there was no vehicle, the female pulled a gun on him, demanding that he turn over his property, the station said, adding that he said a male then appeared, also pointing a gun at him.

The victim said he complied and threw his wallet on the ground, WMC reported.

Script suddenly is flipped

But when the gun-toting male and female turned around at the sound of a loud noise in the distance, the victim grabbed the female’s gun, after which her accomplice opened fire at the victim, the station said.

But her accomplice missed, and the victim returned fire, hitting both of them, WMC reported.

The victim took off running but wasn't physically injured, WREG-TV reported, adding that a police report indicated one of the suspects was connected to another report police already had taken.

According to WMC, police said all three individuals were detained.

Gene Perry was charged with aggravated robbery and convicted felon in possession of a handgun, WREG said, adding that he was being held on a $360,000 bond.

Gene PerryImage source: Shelby County (Tenn.) Sheriff's Office

Alexius Deberry was charged with aggravated robbery, and she was being held on a $100,000 bond, WREG said, adding that her mug shot was not available.

Those with information about the incident are asked to contact Crime Stoppers at 901-528-CASH, WHBQ-TV reported.

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Room costs in NYC soar as 1 in 5 hotels converted into shelters for illegal aliens, homeless



Travelers interested in booking a hotel room in New York City this summer might be shocked at the price now that 20% of the city's hotel rooms have been converted into shelters for illegal aliens and the homeless, draining the city's supply of available rooms and sending costs through the roof.

According to a recent report from the New York Times, NYC has approximately 680 hotels. Of those, 135 have been turned into shelters.

'Make sure that your asylum hearing is in New York. ... If you put your court hearing in Texas, you're gonna screw yourself over.'

The city currently has 2,812 fewer hotel rooms than it had just before the COVID-related government shutdowns of 2020. That drop in supply has coincided with a sharp increase in demand now that tourists are returning to NYC at about pre-COVID levels.

These economic changes combined with a significant decline in short-term Airbnb rentals has caused rental costs to soar. In the year after NYC began accommodating large influxes of illegal aliens, the average cost of a hotel room in NYC rose 8.5%, from $277.92 in 2022 to $301.61 in 2023.

Many of these rooms are in hotels that were once frequented by middle-income tourists, and some believe that such tourists are likely to be hit the hardest by the changes.

"I really believe it’s enabled two-, two-and-a-half-star hotels to be a little more emboldened, to take advantage of the situation and charge prices that perhaps they wouldn’t otherwise be able to," said Sean Hennessey, a hotel industry adviser and clinical associate professor at New York University.

Many of these hotels were in dire straits before swarms of illegal aliens began arriving in the city, and some have been significantly altered to accommodate migrants in particular. For example, the Roosevelt has since turned its lobby into a immigration processing center.

Some will close their doors for good once the immigration crisis ends. "Some of them will not come back into the hotel industry, period," claimed Vijay Dandapani, president and CEO of he Hotel Association of New York City.

NYC, a sanctuary city, legally obligated itself years ago to provide a bed for all migrants who show up within its limits. As such, it's now paying cooperating hotels at least $185 per room per night, even if a room remains unoccupied.

The illegal alien and homeless guests who do occupy the rooms get to enjoy amenities such as "housekeeping every other day and fresh towels and linens at least once a week," the Times reported, citing sources.

Carlos Arellano, who used to work at the Row NYC Hotel, which has since become a shelter, told Fox Business that these migrant guests have not taken care of the accommodations they've been given, agreeing with host Stuart Varney's suggestion that the hotels have been "trashed."

"They're ruined. They're never going to be what they once were," he stated.

Arellano also claimed that some of the hotels have been billing the city — and, by extension, the taxpayers — for luxuries such as "homeschool teachers" for migrant children whose parents don't want to send them to public school. "They find any little excuse to charge more money," he said.

Arellano even suggested that illegal aliens are warned at the border to make their way to NYC, where they can take advantage of a legal system more sympathetic to their supposed plight.

"I've been hearing when I've been down talking to migrants at the border [] that they ... coordinate," he said.

"They tell each other: 'Make sure that your asylum hearing is in New York. Because in New York, there's judges who lean a certain way that will give you more time. If you put your court hearing in Texas, you're gonna screw yourself over.' So they tell each other: '[Have a court hearing] here in New York, claim your free hotel once you get there, and then come back to Texas. Because if you do it in Texas, it's not going to go well for you.'"

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Disney's Star Wars $5,000-a-night nerd hotel fails fantastically



Disney might have been able to pull it off in a galaxy far, far away, but here on planet Earth, its Star Wars-themed hotel failed fantastically.

The company announced Thursday that its Star Wars: Galactic Starcruiser hotel at Walt Disney World in Florida is closing up shop.

"This premium, boutique experience gave us the opportunity to try new things on a smaller scale of 100 rooms, and as we prepare for its final voyage, we will take what we’ve learned to create future experiences that can reach more of our guests and fans," the company said in a statement concerning the closure.

Despite previously showing availability through Dec. 31, the 100-room hotel's website now indicates the final "voyages" will take place on Sept. 28.

Prospective guests with bookings scheduled after the newly announced closure are being given the option of switching to an earlier slot, reported the Washington Post. It is unclear whether they can alternatively be reimbursed to better spend their money elsewhere.

New bookings have been paused, but will reopen on May 26.

Touted by the company as "the most immersive Star Wars story ever created — one where you live a bespoke experience and journey further into a Star Wars adventure than you ever dreamed possible," the hotel features live music, activities both for children and adults, and opportunities to engage with costumed employees.

Scott Trowbridge, the Disney creative executive who oversaw the development of the failed hotel, said at the time of its debut, "We’ve made the first of something that will hopefully change the way we think about the possibilities of immersive experiences."

Polygon reduced it to a "a Disney cruise ship on land."

The Verge characterized it as "a giant improv exercise with dozens of strangers" with an "exorbitant price tag."

Packages for a two-guest cabin are presently priced at $1,209 per guest per night or $4,809 total. Two adults and a child would be looking at a minimum expenditure of $5,299, not including various other Disney-styled cash-grabs.

IGN reported that the windowless cabins "are as basic as they come. A standard cabin is comparable to what you’d find on a cruise ship cabin, which is hard to accept when you know the room could be as large as Disney wanted to make them, and with the imagination of Star Wars, yet they chose to go small."

A tricked-out suite can cost upwards of $20,000, noted the New York Times.

"The family price of $6,000 for four people is just too much. A family of four could do so much more at Disney or on Disney Cruise Line for that money," wrote Matt Roseboom of Attractions Magazine.

While that astronomical price tag might force some guests to drink, vacation packages do not include alcoholic beverages. A glass of beer costs $13.50, and wine goes for at least $11.

Robert Niles, founder and editor of Theme Park Insider, told the Post, "There was no way that this ever could scale to the numbers where it made enough money to be a better investment than other projects on which Disney could spend this operating budget."

Niles stressed that "Disney does blockbusters, not boutique."

The Orlando Sentinel indicated that there are no immediate plans for the building housing Disney's blockbuster failure.

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