logo
Woman found dead on yacht sparks scrutiny of Montauk's party scene and rising wealth

Woman found dead on yacht sparks scrutiny of Montauk's party scene and rising wealth

Fox News5 days ago
MONTAUK, N.Y. — From Key West to Lake Tahoe, formerly quiet enclaves across the country are grappling with the impact of rising wealth, short-term rentals and influencer-fueled tourism.
In one such town on the eastern edge of Long Island in New York, the sudden death of a young fashion entrepreneur has stirred new concerns about how a once-tight-knit fishing village is being transformed by these cultural shifts.
Martha Nolan-O'Slatarra, a 33-year-old Irish immigrant, was found dead early Tuesday morning aboard a luxury yacht docked at an exclusive marina. Police said they are not treating the case as foul play and the cause of death remains inconclusive pending toxicology results.
Authorities have not yet confirmed whether drugs were involved. Still, the case is stirring anxiety among locals about what some describe as an ever-growing party culture fueled by visiting social media influencers and young professionals escaping the city grind for a glamorous weekend or summer vacation.
"It's absolutely changed," Tommy Rando, a marina operator born and raised in town, told Fox News Digital. "Social media put Montauk on the map. It used to be a fishing village… now it's a very happening place."
"This is mostly a peaceful, family-friendly spot," another local resident told Fox News Digital. "But in the summer, there's a younger crowd that comes in and they party hard. You see the yachts, the nightlife — it's become a kind of escape valve for New York's elite."
Located on the eastern tip of Long Island and beyond the rest of the ritzy Hamptons area, Montauk has witnessed a boom in luxury redevelopment, with major investments and renovations to hotels and docks, including the exclusive Montauk Yacht Club where Nolan-O'Slatarra was found and was a frequent patron.
Many wealthy people descend on the area via the vibrant yacht scene, with one woman telling Fox News Digital that sea-goers follow a popular luxury loop — describing it as part of a well-worn yacht circuit connecting Newport, Block Island, Martha's Vineyard, and Nantucket. Others come from Florida or the Cayman Islands and their boats are brought up via the Intracoastal Waterway.
Revelers party summer nights away as the sun goes down, with boats becoming floating extensions of the bar scene. Locals say weekend nightlife now stretches deep into the early morning, and it's not uncommon to hear music blasting around the marina in the wee hours.
Michael Brown, a former DEA senior special agent, said that money, parties and youth are fertile ground for drug-pushers looking to capitalize on curiosity, trust and the illusion of safety. Sometimes, it can have deadly consequences. Dealers have been lacing drugs with fentanyl, causing an explosion in overdose deaths, he said.
"Young adults are going to do drugs," Brown said. "That's just a given… But you don't know what's in what you're taking. And if I'm wrong, I'm gonna die in 30 seconds."
Well over 100,000 people around the nation die from drug overdoses every year, although total drug-related fatalities dropped from around 111,000 in 2022 to approximately 107,500, marking the first fall in five years, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).
"Local dealers spike cocaine with small amounts of fentanyl — not necessarily enough to kill, but to intensify the high and hook new users," said Brown, the global director of counter-narcotics technology at Rigaku Analytical Devices.
"We're talking about individuals who are very well-off, especially young individuals — they have the money to spend. Drug traffickers know this is fertile ground for distribution. Dealers are taking advantage of individuals who don't know they're buying fentanyl."
"Fentanyl has jumped all racial, ethnic, religious, and income lines," he added. "It's in every community — high-income, middle-income, and low-income."
One lifelong Montauk resident and business owner in his 70s lamented the dramatic transformation in the town's character over the past few decades.
Once a tight-knit fishing village where "everybody knew everybody," Montauk has, in his view, become an enclave for wealthy outsiders and partygoers who have little connection to the community.
He reminisced about the summers when Irish youth would come over to work seasonal jobs in bars, restaurants, and marinas — often forming lasting bonds with locals and leaving with fond memories.
"The most you'd see wrong with them was a few drinks," he said, calling them "completely innocent compared to this other class that's coming out here."
Now, he said, Montauk draws "spoiled kids using their parents' credit cards" and has become a hub for influencers and drug use. He said that over-priced hotel rooms and bottle-service clubs have fed into a culture of overspend and synthetic highs — where image matters above all else.
"Montauk was known as a small fishing village with a drinking problem. That is very true," he said. "Now it's... craziness."
Still, for most of Montauk, life carried on this week.
Wednesday night at the Montauk Yacht Club, the restaurant was bustling with well‑to‑do patrons in evening attire. In one corner, about two dozen people participated in a wine‑tasting session — a reminder of Montauk's upscale side.
During the day, families strolled barefoot across golden sand. Kids slurped ice cream outside weathered beachfront shacks and the town's beloved cafés buzzed with brunch crowds ordering iced lattes and açaí bowls. The sun spilled across the docks and dunes. Young people played beach volleyball, and for a moment, it was easy to forget anything dark had ever touched this place.
But a tragedy had, and on Wednesday evening, a woman walked quietly to the marina — to the boat where Nolan-O'Slatarra had been found.
She remembered Nolan-O'Slatarra as kind, warm, and driven — someone who was just beginning to make a name for herself, a view shared by many other boaters.
"She was very sweet, very genuine," the woman said through tears. "She was just getting started. It's heartbreaking."
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

BA pilot suspended for allegedly leaving cockpit door open during flight
BA pilot suspended for allegedly leaving cockpit door open during flight

Yahoo

time19 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

BA pilot suspended for allegedly leaving cockpit door open during flight

A British Airways pilot was suspended after allegedly leaving the cockpit door open during a transatlantic flight. He wanted his family – who were travelling as passengers – to see him operating the controls while flying from Heathrow to New York JFK last week, according to the Sun. The newspaper reported that his actions 'alarmed' some passengers, and other crew members alerted the airline about the incident. The pilot was suspended, meaning the return flight scheduled to arrive at Heathrow on August 8 was cancelled. Affected passengers were offered alternative flights and the vast majority arrived within four hours of their original plan, the PA news agency understands. The pilot has returned to flying after an investigation found there was no security threat. A British Airways spokesperson said: 'Safety and security is our top priority and allegations of this nature are always fully investigated.' Since the September 11 terror attacks in the US in 2001, pilots have been required to keep cockpit doors closed and locked to prevent unauthorised access. It emerged earlier this week that an easyJet captain who reportedly walked around a luxury hotel drunk and naked has been suspended. He was scheduled to fly holidaymakers back to the UK from Cape Verde, west Africa, around 36 hours later but was grounded by the airline.

AG Bondi strips power from DC police chief, rescinds sanctuary city protections in crime crackdown operation
AG Bondi strips power from DC police chief, rescinds sanctuary city protections in crime crackdown operation

Fox News

time39 minutes ago

  • Fox News

AG Bondi strips power from DC police chief, rescinds sanctuary city protections in crime crackdown operation

Attorney General Pam Bondi issued a two-page order on Thursday rescinding illegal immigration protections in Washington, D.C., and naming an "emergency police commissioner" for the city's Metropolitan Police Department. Bondi's order, titled "Restoring Safety and Security to the District of Columbia," mostly took aim at sanctuary city policies within the nation's capital, rescinding any order that limits how Metropolitan police officers can handle interactions and incidents with illegal immigrants. She also stripped power from Metro Police Chief Pamela Smith by naming Drug Enforcement Administration Administrator Terry Cole as the department's "emergency police commissioner," granting him all the "powers and duties vested" in the position. Cole has the ability to issue general orders, executive orders and written directives affecting all members of the department, and existing department leadership must receive his approval before issuing directives of their own. Bondi also explicitly rescinded three orders issued by the Metro police within the past two years related to illegal immigration – the most recent one being an executive order issued by Smith earlier on Thursday limiting cooperation with federal immigration authorities. While Smith's order stated that Metro officers could now assist in "sharing information about persons not in MPD custody" and provide "transportation for federal immigration agency employees and detained subjects," it prohibited personnel from making "any inquiry through any database solely for the purpose of inquiring about" immigration status. "Members shall not arrest individuals based solely on federal immigration warrants or detainers as long as there is no additional criminal warrant or underlying offense for which the individual is subject to arrest," the order stated. Bondi rescinded that order hours later. She also suspended a June 2024 general order limiting inquiries into immigration status and an October 2023 general order preventing arrests solely for federal immigration warrants. "To the extent that provisions in this order conflict with any existing MPD directives, those directives are hereby rescinded," Bondi concluded in her order on Thursday. The order comes after President Donald Trump issued an executive order on Monday declaring a crime emergency in the nation's capital and announcing a federal takeover of the police department. Since then, federal law enforcement and the National Guard have been visible throughout the district. On Wednesday night alone, numerous agencies arrested 45 people – 29 of them illegal immigrants – as part of the major crime crackdown. "Residents of the District of Columbia, the thousands of Americans who commute into the District for work every day, and the millions of tourists from all over the world who visit our nation's capital have a right to feel safe and to be free from the scourge of violent crime," Bondi's order stated.

Federal agents gather in DC to enforce Trump-directed crackdown on homeless encampments
Federal agents gather in DC to enforce Trump-directed crackdown on homeless encampments

CNN

timean hour ago

  • CNN

Federal agents gather in DC to enforce Trump-directed crackdown on homeless encampments

Small groups of federal agents gathered throughout Washington, DC, on Thursday night to clear out homeless encampments as part of President Donald Trump's takeover of law enforcement in the nation's capital. In Washington Circle – an area in southwest DC close to George Washington University – confusion quickly developed when several agents showed up after dark. 'It was kind of a melee of (DC police), Secret Service, Customs and Border Patrol and the FBI,' Jesse Rabinowitz, the campaign and communications director at the National Homelessness Law Center, told CNN. CNN did not observe agents removing tents at the Washington Circle site. DC officials and homeless advocates were waiting for expected federal law enforcement action – and there were notices posted on tents in the circle giving the homeless occupants until Monday to clear out, creating some confusion among the federal agents who didn't seem to know about the Monday extension. CNN observed the notices from the DC Office of the Deputy Mayor for Health and Human Services, which gave occupants until 10 a.m. on Monday to leave. Lawyers from the Washington Legal Clinic for the Homeless intervened with the agents and pointed to the notice, according to Rabinowitz. After 'an extended back and forth,' the federal agents left the scene, he said. 'This is exactly what happens when you have a federal government take over a city they know nothing about and not care anything about,' he said. Homeless advocates had been bracing for the worst earlier this week, lobbying city officials to open up more shelter beds and mulling potential lawsuits in anticipation of federal officials' stepped-up efforts to move the homeless out. Meghann Abraham, whose tent is in Washington Circle, told reporters that she would peacefully pack up her things if she was told to, and that she wasn't scared, because she felt she wasn't doing anything wrong. 'A lot of people want to paint us as disgusting or criminals, and all of that stuff. Or they want to do it, like a charity case, like 'oh, the poor thing,'' she said to CNN-affiliate WJLA. 'We're just people. We're normal people out here working, trying to do well and things like this – to pack up every belonging I have and move to someplace else. That's a stress that shouldn't exist, but it is.' A major sweep took place earlier Thursday morning at an encampment near a highway close to the vaunted Lincoln Memorial and Kennedy Center, where Trump's motorcade often passes through. Last week, he posted photos of the encampment on social media. Trump, who announced aggressive new moves this week to federalize the local police force and deploy National Guard troops in the city, has also declared that homeless people 'have to move out, IMMEDIATELY,' and added, 'we will give you places to stay, but FAR from the Capital.' Kierstin Quinsland, spokesperson for Miriam's Kitchen in DC, told CNN earlier Thursday that they were aware that encampments throughout the city would begin to be cleared out that night, but the federal government hadn't shared a plan with outreach groups. 'This is definitely unprecedented,' she said, describing the scale of the planned clear outs. Some of the people who could be forcibly moved earlier in the day had been matched to housing programs, but because it takes a few months for things to get set in place, Queensland said she's worried about people losing their chance because they're going to be cut off from their support system. 'I think the problem that it solves is that people in the administration, including Donald Trump, don't want to see the fact that there are homeless individuals living outside, and whether they are in Virginia, in Maryland, or in a neighborhood that Donald Trump doesn't drive through, people will still be experiencing homelessness,' she added. CNN's Allie Gorden contributed to this report.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store