Imperial Valley Press

During Trump hotel strife, a ‘Trump Mojito’ but no water

- BY MARK STEVENSON AND JEFF HORWITZ

PANAMA CITY — If you can overlook the intermitte­ntly running water, Friday’s four-hour power outage and occasional police presence in the lobby, the Trump hotel in Panama City retains its status as one of the city’s finest.

The hotel remains open for business against a backdrop of service interrupti­ons, bad press and a fight over the Trump Organizati­on’s management contract that ended in fisticuffs and repeated police calls last week.

“This isn’t what you expect from a luxury hotel,” one guest was heard fuming when told Thursday that access to running water would not be restored for hours.

The hotel’s lobby is notable mostly for its shortage of guests, compensate­d for by a generous allotment of reporters and security staff bracing for renewed confrontat­ions after investor Orestes Fintiklis tried to wrest the administra­tive office back from the Trump Organizati­on last week.

Armed with terminatio­n notices for the hotel’s management, he met stiff resistance from Trump lawyers and security — the first skirmish in a battle for physical control of the hotel property.

Unlike the Trump Internatio­nal Hotel in Washington or the Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida, which draw guests hoping to bask in Donald Trump-style affluence, guests who spoke to The Associated Press seemed less enamored of the Panama City property’s fondness for aggressive branding.

“I could really do without the Trump Mojito. There are like four or five Trump drinks on the menu,” said Leanne Horning, a tourist from Chicago staying at the hotel because she got a good deal online.

Horning is “adamantly not” a supporter of the U.S. president and said it irked her that instead of ordering standard cocktails, guests had to choose from among the Tropical Trump, Trump Breeze and Trump Rose.

While Trump Meritage and Trump Chardonnay also were available, what was lacking a good chunk of this past week was Trump water, at least when guests turned on the hotel’s faucets.

According to municipal authoritie­s, Trump receptioni­sts, housekeepe­rs and a maintenanc­e man, city workers spent much of last Tuesday and Wednesday repairing a damaged water main at the hotel. Though water was restored late Wednesday, the Trump Organizati­on seized the opportunit­y to perform some additional maintenanc­e, extending the cutoff into late Thursday.

A helpful worker distribute­d cases of Trump-branded bottled water to guests.

Fintiklis, who manages the Miami-based private equity fund Ithaca Capital, has alleged financial misconduct by Trump Hotels dating back years and has said Donald Trump’s statements on immigratio­n have destroyed his brand in Latin America. Fintiklis is waging a bitter battle to oust the Trump team from the hotel.

The dispute has left hotel employees not knowing from one day to the next who they should take orders from or whether they will have jobs when the dust settles.

“Many of us came to work at the hotel precisely because of the Trump brand — it meant quality” said one bellhop, who did not want his name used for fear of reprisals. “Now, we don’t know. We just want to work.”

Anibal Herrera, a lawyer for Fintiklis, said that while 10 Trump management employees had been fired — though they refused to leave the property or attend labor hearings — none of the 230 other employees has anything to fear.

Representa­tives at Trump Hotels dispute the firings’ validity.

Herrera did say that Fintiklis had control of the hotel’s finances and would stop paying bills incurred by the Trump management team.

Under a decade-old agreement with the property’s original developer, Trump Hotels was supposed to manage the property until at least 2031.

As part of a deal to sell 202 of the hotel’s 369 condo units last year, the Trump team attempted to extract an ironclad concession from the buyer, Fintiklis, not to challenge that management contract.

That is precisely what Fintiklis is now doing. Whether the Trump business got a legally binding commitment is a matter of contention.

 ?? AP PHOTO/ARNULFO FRANCO ?? In this Feb. 27, file photo, a Panamanian police car passes in front the Trump Ocean Club Internatio­nal Hotel and Tower in Panama City. The hotel remains open for business against a backdrop of service interrupti­ons, bad press and a fight over Trump’s management contract that ended in fisticuffs and repeated police calls last week.
AP PHOTO/ARNULFO FRANCO In this Feb. 27, file photo, a Panamanian police car passes in front the Trump Ocean Club Internatio­nal Hotel and Tower in Panama City. The hotel remains open for business against a backdrop of service interrupti­ons, bad press and a fight over Trump’s management contract that ended in fisticuffs and repeated police calls last week.

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