Fla. hotel heir slaying sparks bitter estate feud
Relatives accuse victim's wife of murder; no charges have been filed
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FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. - The mysterious death of a Fontainebleau Hotel heir has triggered a family feud over his multimillion-dollar estate, with relatives accusing his wife of murder even though no one has been charged.
Ben Novack Jr., whose father founded the lavish Miami Beach landmark frequented by President John F. Kennedy and Frank Sinatra, was found beaten to death in a suburban New York hotel in July. His wife Narcy Novack is a person of interest in the killing, and relatives claim she deserves nothing from the estate, which includes a vast collection of Batman memorabilia.
Novack Jr., 53, was found in a Rye Brook, N.Y., hotel room covered in blood. His face, hands and legs were bound with duct tape.
Novack's daughter, 33-year-old May Abad, claims in court documents in the estate case that Narcy Novack "unlawfully and intentionally killed or participated in the procuring of the death." Abad wants a judge to invoke Florida's "killer" statute, which can bar someone responsible for a person's death from collecting an inheritance. She's joined in a similar motion by Novack's elderly aunt.
Neither Narcy Novack nor her attorney returned repeated calls and e-mails seeking comment.
Tempestuous relationship?
Police documents said Narcy Novack was "deceptive" regarding her knowledge of the killing during a polygraph test, an investigative tool not usually admissible in court.
Other court documents showed a tempestuous relationship between the couple that included bondage sex games and bouts of violence. In 2002, Novack claimed his wife orchestrated a home invasion robbery that left him tied to a chair for 24 hours, then decided not to prosecute when she told police it was an episode in their unusual sex life. Narcy Novack also claimed her husband once broke her nose.
Then there's Novack's Batman collection, which lawyers in the case said was among the world's largest and includes a replica of the Batmobile featured in the 1960s TV show. Some of the items — figurines, comic books, costumes and the like — may have been removed from the four warehouses where the collection is housed. Estate attorney Douglas Hoffman said the collection was being inventoried by experts.
Rye Brook Police Chief Gregory Austin said Narcy Novack and everyone at the hotel the day of the killing was considered a "person of interest." Austin said detectives were reviewing hotel surveillance video, and police collected five rolls of duct tape, computers, videotapes and paperwork from the Novacks' $3 million waterfront Florida home.
"The case is active and continues to move forward," Austin said in an e-mail.
Novack Jr. grew up in the swanky confines of the Fontainebleau, whose frequent visitors in its 1950s heyday included the famous — Jerry Lewis, Harry Truman, Irving Berlin — and the infamous, such as mobsters Meyer Lansky and Sam Giancana. The massive hotel, with its signature curved exterior, was the setting for the James Bond movie "Goldfinger."
Left a sizable estate to his son, widow
The founder, Ben Novack Sr., was often photographed with celebrities along with his wife Bernice, a striking redheaded ex-model. Although Novack lost the hotel after a 1977 bankruptcy, he left a sizable estate to his son and widow.
Bernice Novack, 86, died in April from what was classified by the medical examiner as an "unwitnessed fall" at her Fort Lauderdale home. She suffered a broken jaw and police found blood smeared on her car and on walls in the house, but they concluded no crime was committed.
Ben Novack Jr. eventually built his own multimillion-dollar convention planning business, which brought the Novacks and Abad to the Hilton Rye Town in New York for an Amway convention July 12.
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