Investors shuffling assets ahead of fiscal cliff




















Some citizens aren’t waiting to find out if the White House and Republicans in Congress will be able to reach a last-minute deal to pull the country away from the “fiscal cliff.”

They are selling securities while capital gains tax rates are still low or transferring millions into trusts for the benefit of children and grandchildren before estate tax laws become more stringent. Others are getting out of the markets and parking money in less risky accounts.

Miami financial planner Cathy Pareta has been counseling her upper middle class clients — “the Johnsons, not the Rockefellers” — on whether to adjust investment portfolios, accelerate income or realize capital gains sooner than planned.





“Some people are going to get hit hard,” said John Bacci, a financial planner in Linthicum, Md., who has gone down his client list and run projections on what higher taxes would look like for them. He’s looking at tax-friendly alternatives for some clients, such as annuities or rental property.

At year’s end, the country will leap off the “fiscal cliff” unless politicians reach a compromise on mandated spending cuts and the expiration of the Bush-era tax cuts.

For most investors, the expiring cuts will mean that the tax rate for long-term capital gains will rise from 15 percent to 20 percent. Dividends also will no longer be taxed at 15 percent but treated as ordinary income, which could mean a tax rate as high as 39.6 percent. And individuals with multimillion-dollar estates will find much more of their money subject to the federal estate tax.

Estate planning lawyers say the demand is so intense that they are putting in grueling hours to set up trusts.

“It’s very stressful. We are working day and night,” said Diana Zeydel, an estate planning lawyer with Greenberg Traurig in Miami. “Were doing three times what we normally do for end-of-the-year planning.”

Zeydel said many of her clients waited until after the elections in November to gauge how the political tide would affect their future finances. This gave them little more than a month to make major decisions about their wealth.

Most observing the political jousting in Washington expect taxes will go up even if the political leaders reach a deal — they’re just not sure how much. Many aren’t taking any chances.

Jim Ludwick, a financial planner in Odenton, Md., said one client in his late 50s cashed out stock and bond funds totaling $1.7 million not long after the election and stashed the proceeds in a money market fund.

The client, anticipating a market plunge due to the “fiscal cliff” and other issues, said he spent his entire working life building up a nest egg and wouldn’t have time to wait for his portfolio to recover, according to Ludwick. The client fears it won’t be safe to re-enter the stock market for another year.

“We have a number of clients who are taking capital gains this year, expecting that if they wait until next year, they will have to pay higher taxes on those same gains,” said Daniel McHugh, president of Lombard Securities in Baltimore. Some of those clients are realizing six-figure gains but are still willing to take the tax hit now, he said.

Of course, the downside is that the stock market could take off, and these investors will miss out on even higher gains, McHugh said. But, he added: “Given the state the economy is in, that’s a very small risk.”





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Teen charged in bus shooting remains on house arrest




















When 20 school children were shot and killed in Newtown, Conn. last Friday morning, few people in South Florida felt the pain as deeply in her heart as Ady Guzman-DeJesus.

Exactly a month ago, Guzman-DeJesus, just like many of the Connecticut parents, sent her daughter off to school. And hours, later, her daughter, 13, was fatally shot by a young man wielding a gun that had been stored in his mother’s Homestead home.

“I was in the car when I heard about the shootings on the radio,” Guzman-DeJesus recalled. “Everything just came back to me. I began crying and shaking so badly that my friend had to come and help me out of my car.’’





Guzman-DeJesus said she posted some condolences on Sandy Hook Elementary school’s Facebook page.

“I just wanted to tell them that I knew how they felt,’’ she said.

Guzman-DeJesus, in Miami-Dade court Thursday, wept at the memory, as prosecutors agreed to allow her daughter’s shooter, 15-year-old Jordyn Alexander Howe, to be released from juvenile detention where he had been held since the Nov. 20 killing. Howe, who did not appear in court, was ordered to remain on house arrest, monitored by an ankle device, pending his next hearing set for Jan. 23.

Lourdes Guzman-DeJesus, whose nickname was “Jina,” was killed when Howe packed a .40-caliber pistol in his backpack and took it out on the school bus transporting kids to three charter schools in Southwest Miami-Dade. The gun went off, striking Lourdes in the neck. Howe, a student at Somerset Academy Silver Palms, faces charges of manslaughter and carrying a concealed weapon.

The incident happened as the bus was driving children near SW 296 Street and SW 137 Avenue in Homestead. Lourdes, a student at Palm Glades Preparatory Academy, was shot in front of her 7-year-old sister. About seven other students were on the bus when the gun went off, police said.

Prosecutors on Thursday asked the judge for 30 additional days to decide whether to charge Howe as an adult. Judge Richard Hersch agreed to the extension, warning Howe’s public defender that if the teen violated the terms of his release, he would be taken into custody.

Miami-Dade police detectives continue their investigation. After the shooting, they said it appeared that Howe had taken the gun from his parents’ closet and had brought it to school at least once before. The day of the shooting, he was on the bus, showing the gun to another student when it suddenly discharged. Thus far, no charges have been brought against his parents.

Under Florida’s Child Access Prevention Law, it is a felony for a gun owner to leave a firearm where a child can access it, brandish it in public or use it to harm another person.

Gun law expert Jon Gutmacher said that by the time a child is 15, however, they are old enough to know not to bring a gun to school.

“It’s obviously a tragedy. You have a child who takes possession of a highly dangerous instrument. He knows he’s committing a crime and knows it at that age. A weapon doesn’t fire itself. It’s a .40-caliber semi-automatic… and it takes somebody to pull the trigger,’’ said Gutmacher, an NRA firearms trainer and attorney.

However, sources close to the case said Howe had a younger sibling in the home. Gutmacher said if there is a child under the age of 12 in the home, parents should have had the gun locked in a safe.

Howe’s family thus far have declined comment on the case. The gun allegedly was owned by Howe’s stepfather.

“This gun was not in a secure place, there is a younger child in that house, and the parents had the responsibility to keep that gun locked up,’’ said DeJesus family spokesman Ron Book, a lobbyist and child-safety advocate.

“A lot of people are talking around the country today about added laws that ought to be passed,’’ he said.

“But we’ve got laws in place that should have protected this parent and her children and we expect justice to be done and for him to be charged as an adult.’’

Ady Guzman-DeJesus said she believes that God will guide investigators to do the right thing. But, she said, she believes the boy who killed her daughter should be punished.

“He just has to pay,’’ she said.





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Matt Damon Kicks Up Controversy in Promised Land

Matt Damon is facing criticism for his upcoming film Promised Land, which debates the use of fracking in the oil and gas industry.

VIDEO: Matt Damon's Dramatic Promised Land

Fracking is a term used for hydraulic fracturing -- a gas extracting technique where fractures are created in rock formations by injecting water mixed with sand and chemicals at high pressure.

Those opposing the method have expressed concerns about the chemicals used, alleging that if they are harmful they could pollute the groundwater.

Critics of the film accuse the co-writers, Damon and The Office's John Krasinski, of presenting a unilateral position that puts the practice in a negative light without acknowledging the safety measures put in place, but according to Damon, the film doesn't take a stance one way or the other.

"It really asks more questions, you know, than it answers," Damon told FOXNews. "But they're important questions that we all need to be asking right now."

Still, the pro-fracking lobby group, Energy in Depth, has prepared talking points to counter any negative attention that may arise after the film's debut.

Promised Land opens January 4.

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Bernie Madoff's brother gets 10-year sentence








The brother of imprisoned financier Bernard Madoff has been sentenced in New York to 10 years in prison for crimes committed in the shadow of his notorious sibling.

Peter Madoff was sentenced Thursday after victims described their anguish at losing their life savings in the Ponzi scheme. The sentence was announced in a crowded Manhattan courtroom by Judge Laura Taylor Swain six months after Madoff pleaded guilty to conspiracy and falsifying books and records. He agreed then to serve 10 years in prison. It was four years ago this month that his brother revealed his multi-decade fraud that cheated thousands of investors out of their $20 billion investment. Bernard Madoff is serving a 150-year prison term.



Peter Madoff says he did not know of the fraud but committed other crimes.










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John Fumagalli succeeds Sheldon Anderson at Northern Trust Florida




















Northern Trust has named John Fumagalli President of Northern Trust in Florida. Fumagalli succeeds well-known banker Sheldon Anderson, who announced his retirement earlier this year.

A Northern Trust veteran, Fumagalli joined Northern Trust in Chicago in 1989. In the years since he was served as President and CEO of Northern Trust in Missouri, President and CEO for the Southwest Florida region and regional head of West Florida. In his new position, he oversees Northern Trust’s 22 offices across the state.

Anderson, who has served as Chairman and CEO of Northern Trust’s Southeast Region since 2009, will retire on December 31, 2012. He will continue in a new capacity as Chairman of Northern Trust’s Florida Advisory Board.








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DCF chief inspects Miami Gardens nursing home where girl died




















Florida’s top child-welfare administrator visited children Wednesday at a troubled Miami Gardens nursing home that is under investigation over its treatment of medically fragile children in state care.

Department of Children & Families Secretary David Wilkins flew to Miami Wednesday and led a team of child-welfare administrators and nurses who inspected Golden Glades Nursing & Rehabilitation, a 180-bed nursing home that was levied one of the harshest federal fines in recent history after the death of a 14-year-old Tampa girl who was taken to the home last year despite her mother’s emphatic objections.

DCF oversees three children at the home, who are among the 36 children with medical complexities who live there.





Along with the agency’s Miami chief and a local pediatrician, Wilkins delivered stuffed animals to the children, and spoke at length with the home’s administrators.

“It’s unfortunate to see any child there,” he told a reporter after leaving the home. “Our model now is to make it very hard for a child to be in this type of facility.”

Until the past few days, five DCF children lived at Golden Glades. But the state’s privately run foster-care agency in Miami, Our Kids, removed two children in its care — one was sent to a Broward medical center, and the other to a medical foster home licensed by Our Kids.

The state Agency for Health Care Administration began an investigation of Golden Glades last week after DCF leaders filed a formal complaint.

Inspections by AHCA staff last week and Monday found “no immediate concerns to the health and safety” of residents, AHCA’s general counsel, Stuart F. Williams, wrote in a letter Monday to a Miami lawyer, Matthew Dietz, who filed a lawsuit claiming the state was violating the civil rights of disabled children by forcing them into nursing homes.

Child-welfare officials, however, have registered serious concerns about the home.

After his tour of the nursing home at 220 Sierra Dr., Wilkins declined to discuss what prompted the agency to file a complaint with healthcare regulators other than to say that a nurse overseeing dependent children at Golden Glades became upset when detailed care-giving instructions for one or more children had been ignored. One of the home’s doctors resigned abruptly last week, as well.

DCF and Our Kids staff discovered that, although child-welfare bosses had been assured the children would be seen by doctors on a daily — or, at least, a regular — basis, the home’s pediatrician had not seen the children in weeks, sources told The Miami Herald.

That was when DCF and Our Kids began an effort to transfer dependent children either back to their parents, into medical foster homes or to other nursing homes.

Two dependent children might remain indefinitely, Wilkins said, because they are too frail to move.

Golden Glades, which used to be called Florida Club Care, came under heightened scrutiny in recent weeks after extensive coverage of the home in The Herald, including a story about 14-year-old Marie Freyre, who died less than 12 hours after she arrived at the home.

Marie, who had severe cerebral palsy and a seizure disorder, had been taken from her mother and sent by private ambulance to the home against her mother’s wishes. She was not given life-saving anti-seizure drugs, records show, and died of a heart attack.





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Apple is dominating the small and medium business market in Q4









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Brad Pitt Commends President Barack Obama's More Sensible Drug Policy

In the wake of the terror that struck Sandy Hook Elementary School last week, President Barack Obama has stated that the prosecution of pot users is 'not a top priority,' drawing favor from Hollywood stars like Brad Pitt.

Pitt released a joint statement along with fellow The House I Live In executive producers Danny Glover, John Legend and Russell Simmons, stating, "President Obama should be commended for expressing the will of the people in Colorado and Washington. Our jails are overburdened with nonviolent drug users in this country, too often serving harsher sentences than violent criminals. This defies all common and economic sense. The President's statement reflects a saner and more sensible drug policy, and a step away from the decades long failed war on drugs."

VIDEO: Hollywood Reexamines Use of Violence Onscreen

The House I Live In, out now, is the award-winning documentary that dissects the errors of the War on Drugs, including the "profound human rights implications" and the toll it has taken on American families.

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Madoff victims angry Ponzi schemer brother gets pricey meal ahead of sentencing








They hope you choke!

Two of Bernie Madoff's victims are outraged that his younger brother got to publicly scarf down a pricey meal ahead of his sentencing tomorrow for helping pull off the world's biggest Ponzi scheme.

In a letter to the judge, Jill and Nancy Miller said they are "very unhappy" that Peter Madoff got his punishment postponed from Nov. 9.

"This man was not using the time for getting his 'tax' situation resolved he was out an(d) about enjoying a leisurely lunch in an expensive Upper East Side restaurant where many of his victims would like to eat but can't afford too (sic)," the hand-written missive says.




"He has his nerve showing his face and flaunting his freedom."

The Millers also said they "hope he savored the food 'cause that's not what he will get in PRISON!"

Another wiped-out victim, Natalie Erger, noted with disdain how Peter Madoff has asked to remain free so he can attended his daughter's Bat Mitzvah next month.

"My grandson will be a Bar Mitzvah in November....How can we pay to fly? How much would it cost to drive? What about food and lodging?" she wrote.

"Thanks Madoff brothers."

On the other hand, Robert Roman -- whose wife, Joan, is Bernie Madoff's sister-in-law -- said that while they lost their life savings to the arch fraudster, jailing Peter Madoff "is an answer only to those who seek revenge."

"Peter was victimized as much as Bernard's 'investors' were. His fear of his brother's domination and back-yard bullying, personally witnessed in real time by me, should not have prevailed," he wrote.

"My family will not cast one stone for that failure nor will we receive satisfaction by the incarceration of Peter Madoff."

bruce.golding@nypost.com










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For South Florida hotels, BCS championship a post-holiday gift




















This season is bringing some extra gifts for South Florida’s tourism industry: Tuesday holidays that allow for extra-long weekends away from home and the college football championship that will extend festivities another week.

For locals who want to put relatives up in area hotels or just drive around town without traffic, the crush of visitors might be a bother, but hoteliers are happy to have the crowds.

“This season is going to be more robust than last year,” said Howard Wolfson, vice president of operations for Hospitality America, which operates three Miami Hampton Inn locations.





While business typically drops off after New Year’s Day, Wolfson said, that doesn’t hold true this year.

“There’s not much of a lull this year because of how the holiday falls in the middle of the week,” he said. “More people may be going on cruises or spending time with friends and family — or maybe they’re waiting around for the bowl game.”

More than 70,000 people — mostly Notre Dame and Alabama fans — are expected to attend the sold-out Discover BCS National Championship Game at Sun Life Stadium on Jan. 7, filling hotels from South Beach to Fort Lauderdale. The 79th annual Discover Orange Bowl on Jan. 1, with a match between Florida State and Northern Illinios University, isn’t quite the draw but is expected to bring some visitors as well.

But even before the biggest game, South Florida is proving popular for Christmas and New Year’s travelers.

Overall this season, the number of Americans traveling 50 miles or more from home between Saturday and Jan. 1 is expected to increase 1.6 percent to 93.3 million, according to AAA. In Florida, the number of holiday travelers is expected to hit 4.8 million, a 1.3 percent increase over last year.

While Miami International Airport is expecting a nearly 2 percent drop in passenger traffic between Friday and Jan. 6 over last year — part of a national softening trend — the number of travelers still is expected to hit just more than two million. Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport expects more than a million passengers between Thursday and Jan. 2, an increase of 3-4 percent.

The Orbitz Holiday Travel Insider Index named Fort Lauderdale the third most popular destination for Christmas and fifth for New Year’s, a ranking based on hotel bookings.

And Kayak.com, which lets users compare hundreds of travel sites, shows Fort Lauderdale at No. 5 and Miami at No. 7 based on searches for flights around Christmas; for New Year’s, Miami is No. 4 and Fort Lauderdale is No. 6.

Bob Diener, president of lodging deals website getaroom.com, said Tuesday that for the last 21 days, Miami has been the fifth most popular spot for future bookings — and ranks fourth in terms of arrivals in the upcoming 21 days.

“You definitely have a very extended holiday period in Miami,” Diener said. “Which none of my hotel friends are complaining about.”

The Westin Diplomat Resort & Spa certainly has no gripes.

The 998-room hotel in Hollywood is hosting Florida State for the Orange Bowl and Notre Dame for the championship — as well as hundreds more people for each time period.

“We are at 100 percent occupancy for both bowl games,” said marketing manager Judy Erickson.

Erickson said the hotel is expecting different shifts of guests: those who are arriving early and staying Christmas, New Year’s guests leaving a day or two after the official holiday and bowl game visitors arriving the Friday or Saturday before the game and staying until Tuesday.

“It’s a good pattern,” she said.

At the Clevelander and Essex House hotels in South Beach, rooms are nearly sold out during New Year’s and the championship despite a three-night minimum. Marketing manager Anna Whitlow said the national championship is driving significant traffic — especially among Notre Dame fans.

“What we’re seeing from Notre Dame is not only are they excited about the game, they’re exited to experience Miami,” she said. “And we’re loving that. We’re excited to host them.”





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