In secret, behind locked gates, our Nation's Oldest City dumped a landfill in a lake (Old City Reservoir), while emitting sewage in our rivers and salt marsh. Organized citizens exposed and defeated pollution, racism and cronyism. We elected a new Mayor. We're transforming our City -- advanced citizenship. Ask questions. Make disclosures. Demand answers. Be involved. Expect democracy. Report and expose corruption. Smile! Help enact a St. Augustine National Park and Seashore. We shall overcome!
Friday, May 28, 2010
St, Augustine WRecKord Fell for Ringo Starr Hoax Fed by CA$A MONICA HOTEL PR Person -- TWICE!
By JUSTIN YURKANIN, Staff
(This was not Ringo Starr, but the WRecKord fell for a hoax, with two page one stories reporting on a Ringo Starr siting in 2004).
St. Augustine visitors, residents surprised to spot former Beatle Ringo Starr downtown
LORY POUNDER and Kati Bexley
Staff Writers
Published Friday, August 06, 2004
click photo to enlarge
RINGO STARR, former drummer for The Beatles, walks on the sidewalk outside of the Casa Monica Hotel in downtown St. Augustine on Thursday.
Ringo Starr almost escaped attention Thursday in downtown St. Augustine.
The world-famous drummer for The Beatles toured the Lightner Museum without fanfare, played the piano in the ballroom of the Casa Monica Hotel without drawing a crowd and politely said, "No comment, no comment" to St. Augustine Record reporters and photographers, who eventually caught up with him.
Marge Kirk, a volunteer at the Lightner Museum gift shop, said she talked to Starr without knowing who he was.
"You never expect to see someone like that," she said. "It never dawned on me it was him until someone told me it was Ringo. He had the accent and the beard. He was very friendly and so were the men he was with."
It might not have been Starr's first visit to St. Augustine. Forty years ago, The Beatles played in Jacksonville on Sept. 11 during the group's first United States tour.
On Thursday, Starr played the opening to "Lean on Me" in the Casa Monica's ballroom.
A gold star cross earring hung from his left ear. He wore a black T-shirt, with a Volkswagen Beetle on the front. When approached by a reporter, he was polite and calm.
Earlier, another reporter had been star struck and unable to speak.
At one point, Joni Barkley, director of sales and marketing at the Casa Monica, was sitting in the lobby discussing the upcoming America's Oldest City Stands United in Freedom charity event with a Record reporter.
Minutes after mentioning the possibility for VIP guests at the Sept. 10 event, Starr emerged from the hall. Barkley's eyes scanned the lobby as Starr walked by. Her face glowed when he flashed her a peace sign and walked out the door.
"We always have stars stay here," Barkley said. "You'd be surprised."
Previous guests have included John Travolta and Spain's royal couple, among others.
After being recognized outside, Starr remained in the hotel lobby to wait for a car to be pulled around the back. Employees tried to remain calm, but smiles and darting eyes were everywhere.
Charlene Peterson of Peterson's Bakery on King Street said her landlord met Starr around 1:30 p.m. while he was at the Lightner Museum. She said her landlord did not want to be identified.
"He told me he saw him and I kept saying, 'It was the Beatle, the Ringo Starr?' " Peterson said, laughing with excitement. "He said he shook his hand and I said little bits of Ringo Starr are on your hand. That's a really big thing."
Broken Hearts Club: Ringo sighting was just a hoax
KATI BEXLEY
Staff Writer
Published Tuesday, August 10, 2004
It turns out the Ringo Starr sighting in St. Augustine last Thursday was really a man starring in a hoax, according to Sgt. Steve Fricke of the St. Augustine Police Department.
A man with a beard, round sunglasses, a gold cross dangling from his ear and a British accent stayed at the Casa Monica Hotel last Thursday.
He even gave out autographs and appeared to shun media attention.
At the time, Joni Barkley, the hotel's director of sales and marketing, said the man was Ringo Starr, the legendary drummer of The Beatles.
Other celebrities, including John Travolta and the Spanish royal family, have stayed at the downtown hotel, which added an air of authenticity to the man's appearance.
Two stories with a photograph ran in The St. Augustine Record on Friday and Saturday. Other media also covered the news.
Fricke said Monday that he responded to media inquiries from England and found Starr had not been in St. Augustine at all.
"I talked to several sources to confirm it," Fricke said. "We are normally contacted when someone with a prominent background is in town. We were not contacted and that was the first indication something was amiss."
Elizabeth Freund, of Elizabeth Freund Public Relations in New York, told The Record that she is in charge of Starr's public relations and he was not in St. Augustine.
"He was not in Florida at all. I have no idea who that was, but he wasn't Ringo Starr," Freund said.
She said she heard there was a man pretending to be Starr in St. Augustine through e-mails and phone calls. She said she does not know of a Starr impostor in Florida.
Barkley would not comment Monday on the possibility that the man was not Starr. She said she could not give out any information about hotel guests.
A freelance reporter and photographer for The Sun, a newspaper in England, said they traveled to St. Augustine to do a story on Starr impostors they have found in Florida.
Fricke said St. Augustine Police are not investigating the Starr impersonator any further because he did not appear to break any laws.
"At this point we're making sure that no one in the community was scammed or harmed, other than a couple of people getting their hearts broken, which is kind of cruel," Fricke said.
During his stay in St. Augustine, the man was seen at the Lightner Museum, the Tradewinds Tropical Lounge and Grill and in the Casa Monica ballroom, where he played the opening of "Lean on Me" on a hotel piano.
He signed a few autographs and posed for photos with local people.
Angie Labutti, a waitress and bartender at Tradewinds, took a picture with Starr and watched him perform the Beatles' song "Boys" Thursday night with the Tradewinds house band.
"I thought he sounded exactly like Ringo Starr," Labutti said. "I was a huge fan of The Beatles in high school. I had their posters, I read their books."
She said the man never called himself Starr.
"He never said he was Ringo Starr. He never said he wasn't when people called him that," Labutti said.
She said she doesn't care either way if the man she met wasn't Starr.
"I think it's cool I met a guy that looks just like him."
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