Latest news with #Hyde
Yahoo
3 hours ago
- Business
- Yahoo
Ennismore announces new hotel signings in Mexico
Lifestyle and leisure hospitality company Ennismore has signed four new hotel properties in Mexico. This expansion illustrates the company's commitment to growing its footprint in the Americas, now boasting over 70 operational and pipeline properties in the region. The new signings in Mexico represent landmark entries for Ennismore's various brands. Delano East Cape in Los Cabos will offer 117 guest rooms and 60 branded residences, set to open in 2029 with a 100-meter beachfront, multiple dining options, event spaces, and a wellness centre. Hyde Mexico City, opening later this year, will introduce 215 bohemian-inspired rooms, restaurants, bars, and wellness facilities. The Hoxton and Mama Shelter are also set to make their Mexican debut in Mexico City, with openings slated for 2028 and late 2025, respectively. Further expansion in the Americas includes Hyde Mazatlan and The Hoxton Nashville, both scheduled to open in 2027. The former will feature 150 guest rooms and 22 suites on Mexico's western coast, while the latter will offer over 200 guestrooms in Nashville. The company has also announced the integration of Balfour Miami Beach into the Morgans Originals collection. Balfour Miami Beach showcases 82 rooms and a rooftop pool deck. Ennismore's growth extends to the branded residence market, with more than 45 residential projects across 20 countries, including the US, Spain, Mexico, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates. The company is known for its 25hours, Hyde, and Rixos brands, which it is now bringing to homeownership. In April 2025, Ennismore entered exclusive negotiations with Royal Holiday Group to add six all-inclusive resorts with over 1,600 rooms to its ALL Inclusive Collection. Three resorts in Puerto Vallarta, Cozumel, and Cancun will be renovated and rebranded as Rixos Hotels, marking Ennismore's arrival in Mexico. The remaining properties will retain their existing brand. Ennismore is also making its mark in Jamaica, collaborating with LCH Development to introduce two brands across three buildings, including luxury residences, private villas, and a 240-key branded luxury hotel. Ennismore Americas head Phil Zrihen said: 'From hotels and resorts, to branded residences, restaurants and bars, The Americas represent a strong growth market for Ennismore. "These new signings represent a significant acceleration of our presence in the region, and as the fastest growing lifestyle and leisure company. Ennismore is perfectly positioned to bring authentic lifestyle experiences, curated through creative storytelling, innovative design, destination-led culinary experiences, and dynamic programming to new destinations and guests in the coming years.' In May 2025, Ennismore collaborated with Vivium to add Luura hotels to the Morgans Originals Collection. "Ennismore announces new hotel signings in Mexico" was originally created and published by Hotel Management Network, a GlobalData owned brand. The information on this site has been included in good faith for general informational purposes only. It is not intended to amount to advice on which you should rely, and we give no representation, warranty or guarantee, whether express or implied as to its accuracy or completeness. You must obtain professional or specialist advice before taking, or refraining from, any action on the basis of the content on our site. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

Boston Globe
a day ago
- Politics
- Boston Globe
Immigration officials say they intended to arrest father of Milford teen instead
The so-called 'collateral arrest,' in which agents arrest immigrants in the country illegally even if they are not an intended target, was previously banned by the Biden administration, but reinstated under President Trump. The arrest of Gomes sparked outrage and protest in Milford, as friends and family of the 18-year-old high school junior questioned why ICE would arrest a teenager who they said was a dedicated student athlete with no criminal record. When asked why Gomes was arrested, Hyde said, 'I didn't say he was dangerous, I said he was here illegally.' Advertisement Officials did not say why they wanted to arrest the father. Court records show the elder Gomes was was stopped for running a stop sign and driving without a license in July 2023, but the charges were dismissed on recommendation of the probation department the following November. He paid $100 court costs. No other court records were found. Hyde blamed so-called 'sanctuary' jurisdictions for the number of collateral arrests in Massachusetts, saying agents would not have to go out searching in communities if local authorities would assist with removal operations. Advertisement 'When we go into the community and find others who are unlawfully here, we are going to arrest them,' Hyde said. Hyde said Gomes remains in ICE custody, but did not specify which facility. On Sunday, Gov. Maura Healey said she was 'disturbed and outraged' by the teen's detainment. The first-term Democrat, who served for eights years as the state's attorney general, said she supports ICE arresting those with criminal backgrounds, but said they've 'made mistakes' before. 'By their own admission, they have also arrested several hundreds of individuals in Massachusetts and taken them away who do not have criminal records,' she said. 'Everybody should be following the law here, following the rules here. ICE should be producing information about who has been arrested, what they've been charged with, what their circumstance was, and they should make that available to the public.' Dan Glaun can be reached at


Boston Globe
a day ago
- Politics
- Boston Globe
As ICE officials publicize surge in May arrests in Mass., Democrats call for more oversight
ICE officials said 790 of those detained had criminal convictions or pending charges, but provided no details on what those charges were. Officials also did not immediately provide information on how many of those arrested had a record of violent crimes, or how many had previous convictions. The total figure included international criminal charges and people charged for illegally reentering the country, officials said. Lyons and US District Attorney for Massachusetts Leah B. Foley said the recent enforcement sweep, dubbed 'Operation Patriot,' had improved public safety in Massachusetts by removing dangerous criminals from the streets. Advertisement Lyons spoke next to blown up photographs of 14 men who he said ICE had committed serious offenses, including murder, drug trafficking and sexual assault. Neither he, Foley or other immigration officials provided the men's names, making it impossible to verify their records. Meanwhile, across town at a simultaneous immigration-focused roundtable, US Representative Ayanna Pressley and others highlighted immigrants whose family members have been arrested and detained by ICE without having been formally charged with a crime, and called for the release of their loved ones. Advertisement 'ICE raids have robbed us and our family members in our collective sense of security and belonging,' she said. 'This is a systemic, coordinated, unrelenting attack that is being felt throughout [Massachusetts].' Patricia Hyde, field director of ICE's Enforcement and Removal Operations in Boston, defended the arrests of immigrants with no significant criminal history. 'Every person we arrested was breaking our immigration laws,' Hyde said. Foley echoed the sentiment: 'These are not immigrants. They are criminals, and they will be treated as such." On Beacon Hill, Governor Maura Healey spoke at an unrelated event about another high-profile ICE arrest: the detention of a Healey said there 'there's no reason to believe' that Marcelo Gomes Da Silva had any criminal background or record, and decried that lack of details the US Immigration and Customs Enforcement has released. She said that absent new information, federal immigration authorities should release him. 'Unless ICE has additional information about this young person, he should be released,' she told reporters. Hyde said Gomes was not ICE's initial target. Instead, they were looking for his father, and Gomes was driving his father's car when agents pulled him over. Friends and family of Gomes told the Globe Sunday he was a dedicated student athlete with no criminal record. 'I didn't say he was dangerous,' Hyde said. 'I said he was here illegally.' When agents didn't find their man, they detained Gomes in a 'collateral arrest,' where agents arrest undocumented immigrants they encounter even if they are not an intended target. The practice was previously banned by the Biden administration, but reinstated under Trump. Advertisement 'When we go into the community and find others who are unlawfully here, we are going to arrest them,' Hyde said. Healey said in a statement on Sunday that she was 'disturbed and outraged' by the teen's detainment. The first-term Democrat, who served for eights years as the state's attorney general, said she supports ICE arresting those with criminal backgrounds, but said they've 'made mistakes' before. 'By their own admission, they have also arrested several hundreds of individuals in Massachusetts and taken them away who do not have criminal records,' she said. 'Everybody should be following the law here, following the rules here. ICE should be producing information about who has been arrested, what they've been charged with, what their circumstance was, and they should make that available to the public. 'We need transparency, we need information,' she later added. 'We need ICE to follow the law. Samantha J. Gross can be reached at
Yahoo
a day ago
- Entertainment
- Yahoo
Sleep Token are "the least metal thing I've ever heard" says TV host Richard Osman
When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission. Scoring a number one album on both the UK and US charts, as Sleep Token did earlier this month with Even In Arcadia, will naturally boost an artist's profile, and bring it to the attention of 'normies', people who previously would have had zero knowledge of the act's existence. Even so, we doubt that Sleep Token frontman Vessel was expecting to find his band discussed this week by TV presenter and author Richard Osman (Pointless, Richard Osman's House of Games) and Guardian newspaper columnist Marina Hyde on their popular podcast The Rest Is Entertainment. He might have been even more bemused to find his band described by Richard Osman, the brother of Suede bassist Matt Osman, "as the least metal thing I've ever heard". The subject arose following a discussion about the rescheduling of daytime television shows on British TV channel ITV, with Osman and Hyde then turning their attention to an analysis of Sleep Token, throwing in a mention of Ghost along the way."To be number one in America, number one album in America is huge," Osman stated by way of an introduction to the band. "It's a huge deal. And that's exactly what Sleep Token have just done with their fourth album, which is called - and this will give you an idea of the type of band Sleep Token are - Even in Arcadia." "Now, Sleep Token are one of those bands, nobody knows who they are, because they are always masked, at all times," he continued. "The lead singer is called Vessel - probably not his real name - and the other members of the band are called, in Roman numerals II, III, and IV."The idea of a public figure using a pseudonym to mask their true identity shouldn't have come as a huge surprise to Marina Hyde, to be fair, given that she too uses a pseudonym. Born Marina Elizabeth Catherine Dudley-Williams, the daughter of Sir Alistair Edgcumbe James Dudley-Williams, 2nd Baronet, the journalist adopted the surname 'Hyde' while working for The Sun newspaper. But we digress... "It's hard rock," Hyde tells the podcast's viewers/listeners, to which Osman replies, "It's not hard rock, this is what shocked me.""It's the least metal thing I've ever heard," he continues. "Basically, you could put this in your hand luggage and it would go through the scanners." "Genuinely, if you've not listened to them, go on to Spotify or, you know, buy an album and have a listen, because it's sort of everything all at once. There's some nu metal there, there's EDM in there, here's alt. pop, there's pop-rap, there's a bit of shoegaze... it's a very, very peculiar sound."For the benefit of the podcast subscribers, Hyde adds, "Their live shows are called 'Rituals', the singles are 'Offerings'. For older listeners there's a very, very strong sense of Spinal Tap Stonehenge to this." If you want to hear more of the discussion, the tone of which should be familiar to any professional musicians who've had to endure family members asking annually if they're "still doing your little band thing", the full conversation is below, with the Sleep Token chat beginning around the 22 minute mark. In the 400th issue of Metal Hammer, we uncovered Sleep Token's secret origin story, via those who were there. From their first producer, to publicists and promoters, we revealed what Vessel was really like, and how his vision developed.
Yahoo
4 days ago
- General
- Yahoo
ICE agents in Boston arrest migrant murderer, child rapists as Fox News rides along
Fox News embedded exclusively with Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) in the greater Boston area this week, when agents were carrying out the arrests of hundreds of egregious criminal migrants in what the agency said is the largest operation it has undertaken since President Donald Trump returned to office. The sweeping operation, called "Patriot," is expected to hit 1,500 arrests and is targeting immigrants like a Salvadoran illegal immigrant convicted of child rape who went to prison and was deported in 2017. He was nabbed by ICE living right next to a children's playground. ICE also swooped on another illegal migrant who is on El Salvador's most wanted list and has an Interpol Red Notice for aggravated murder, aggravated kidnapping and robbery. Trump Administration Sets New Goal Of 3,000 Illegal Immigrant Arrests Daily Both arrests were captured exclusively on camera by Fox News, with ICE Boston telling Fox News that local ICE activists have been interfering in their operations this week. ICE deployed 19 teams across Massachusetts this week, and the agency brought in ICE teams from other parts of the country to assist. Read On The Fox News App It is in direct response to Massachusetts and Boston's sanctuary policies, where officials do not fully enforce or assist with federal immigration laws, as border czar Tom Homan has promised to surge ICE to these areas. Fox News is told that about 70% of the arrests are criminals with convictions or pending charges. Ice Touts Record-breaking Immigration Enforcement During Trump's First 100 Days Patricia Hyde, the head of ICE Boston, said it is not uncommon to see immigrants convicted of child rape roaming public streets close to where children play. "It's not unusual. Due to the open border policies, we are finding that plenty of people who have been previously deported and committed heinous crimes and were removed from the country are now back here, just living among us," Hyde said. "And now that's our job to go round them up." Fox News also joined ICE as they arrested a Colombian illegal immigrant facing pending charges for sexual assault of a child, as well as a Dominican illegal immigrant with a drug trafficking conviction who is now facing local charges for fentanyl distribution. Meanwhile, other arrests included a Guatemalan illegal immigrant who's facing charges in Massachusetts for aggravated child rape but was released from state custody. They also arrested a Honduran immigrant who is facing local charges for rape and was also released from local custody. Hyde said sanctuary jurisdictions are starting to escalate against ICE. On Thursday, activists tried to grab onto an illegal immigrant who had been handcuffed by ICE. In another incident, agents were staking out an illegal immigrant murderer's home and a crowd gathered and blew their cover. "I think the lack of cooperation is getting worse and worse, and it's putting law enforcement lives in danger," Hyde said. Hyde said that ICE agents will continue to round up dangerous criminal illegal migrants, despite pushback from local lawmakers and activists. "We're not going away. It might take us longer. It might be harder, but we're not going away, we're here," Hyde said. "We know what the American people voted for. We understand that we work for the American people and we're going to be here until we send everyone home."Original article source: ICE agents in Boston arrest migrant murderer, child rapists as Fox News rides along