[4] The same year, while the Volstead Act was law in the United States, two arrests were made at the hotel for selling champagne.
The syndicate obtained the stock of the Hotel Weylin Company owned by Louis and Charles Loeber.
There were plans to remodel guest rooms and public areas, with the entire hotel becoming air conditioned.
[8] The Weylin Hotel was remortgaged to the Ponce de Leon Company at 231 East Flagler Street in Miami, Florida for 5 years at 5%; $300,000, in March 1953.
[11] The advertising account for the Weylin Hotel was obtained by the firm of Kastor, Farrell, Chesley & Clifford, Inc., in July 1953.
[12] In October 1934 Guy Rennie, cabaret entertainer at the Weylin Hotel, was put on trial for disorderly conduct.
[13] Hotel management added $120 to actress Lupe Vélez's bill for carpet damage in December 1938.
[14] Stephen Rowe Bradley, 3rd, a nine-year-old from Lowell, Massachusetts, died after falling from a 6th floor window of the Weylin Hotel in August 1943.
[16] Ruth Shotland Originals, a women's clothing store, was granted a business lease in the hotel in August 1952.
[17] John Boettiger, newspaperman and former son-in-law of President Franklin Delano Roosevelt, jumped to his death from a seventh floor room of the hotel in November 1950.
[18] Mrs. Gerald De Courcy May either jumped or fell from her eighth floor apartment in the hotel in February 1952.
[20] The American Horse Shows Association opened a new national headquarters at the Weylin Hotel in July 1954.
With this acquisition, Sachar and the corporations he owned were primary interest holders in eighty-nine commercial and industrial buildings in Manhattan.