The Nevada Gaming Control Board (NGCB) will consider whether to appeal a recent court ruling that found the state agency no longer has any jurisdiction over Steve Wynn.
Last week, Clark County District Court Judge Adriana Escobar ruled that the NGCB and its superior Nevada Gaming Commission (NGC) overstepped their legal authority in motioning to place a lifetime ban on Mr. Wynn from being involved in the state gaming industry. The Gaming Commission determined that the 78-year-old is “unsuitable to be associated with a gaming enterprise or the gaming industry as a whole.”
Attorneys for the billionaire sued the state gaming agencies on grounds that since their client is no longer involved in any capacity in the Nevada gaming industry, the board and commission have no powers over him. Escobar agreed.
On the NGCB’s December 2 agenda, the three-member board will discuss whether to appeal the issue to the Nevada Supreme Court.
Penalties for Past Conduct
Steve Wynn exited the Nevada gaming industry in March of 2018, two months after The Wall Street Journal published a career-ending expose on the billionaire’s alleged sexual misconduct throughout his decades in Las Vegas. From forcing himself on female salon workers, to fostering a workplace environment where women often feared to report such allegations, the WSJ piece forever damaged the casino tycoon’s reputation.
Wynn has consistently denied he ever acted inappropriately.
Regardless, after he resigned from Wynn Resorts as chairman of the board and CEO in February of 2018, and sold off his entire stake in the company the following month, Wynn’s career in Nevada effectively ended. He’s said to be living at his Florida beachfront mansion in Lantana, which he purchased last year for $43 million.
The NGCB has recommended to the Nevada Gaming Commission that Wynn be financially penalized for failing to adhere to state gaming laws during his tenure. A board investigation concluded five violations. They include failing to adhere to state regulations that require a licensed individual to be a person of good faith, and his failing to disclose to the state a $7.5 million payment he made to a woman who he allegedly sexually assaulted.
However, Judge Escobar’s says it’s too late to penalize Wynn.
“Respondents fail to support their position that they have jurisdiction over a person with no intent to be involved in Nevada’s gaming industry in the future,” she explained in her verdict.
Court Odds
Similarly to the US Supreme Court, having a case accepted for review in the Nevada Supreme Court is far from a sure thing.
The Nevada Supreme Court received 2,536 cases in 2019 — the vast majority coming from Clark County (1,557). The final appeals court in the Silver State issued opinions on just 69 of the cases petitioned.
That equates to an acceptance rate of 2.7 percent.
The post Nevada Gaming Regulators Mulling Appeal of Steve Wynn Court Ruling appeared first on Casino.org.
Via Casino.org https://www.casino.org/news