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BINION'S HORSESHOE: Casino to remain closed
Review Journal ^ | Sunday, January 11, 2004 | JEFF SIMPSON

Posted on 01/11/2004 8:26:33 AM PST by Lokibob

Sunday, January 11, 2004
Copyright © Las Vegas Review-Journal

BINION'S HORSESHOE: Casino to remain closed

Fate of more than 1,000 employees unclear after Behnen agrees to keep landmark shutBy JEFF SIMPSON
GAMING WIRE




Photo by Jeff Scheid.



Binion's Horseshoe security officer Del Ebreo consoles a fellow employee of the 52-year-old property on Saturday after the hotel was closed. U.S. marshals armed with court orders authorizing seizure of $2 million forced the casino's closure on Friday.
Photo by Jeff Scheid.



Nevada Gaming Commission members, from left, Art Marshall, Radha Chanderraj and Augie Gurrola leave the Sawyer Building Saturday afternoon after the five-member panel voted to agree to a deal with Horseshoe owner Becky Binion Behnen requiring the casino to remain closed until its bankroll is replenished.
Photo by Jeff Scheid.

Unable or unwilling to raise the money required to maintain her casino bankroll, Binion's Horseshoe owner Becky Binion Behnen agreed Saturday to keep her casino closed.

Her deal, approved by an emergency Saturday afternoon meeting of the Nevada Gaming Commission, requires Behnen to keep the 52-year-old casino closed until state regulators agree that it has sufficient funds on hand to cover gamblers' winnings.

But with the casino and its hotel closed, the future of the Horseshoe Club and its 1,000-plus workers remained unclear.

Former owner Jack Binion, who operated the property until sister Behnen assumed control of it in 1998, said Saturday that he won't be returning to control the family landmark.

"I don't see it happening," said Binion, who maintains a small ownership slice of the downtown property. "I've got too many other things going on."

He said, however, he believes the Horseshoe remains a viable property and that "It could be turned around."

But the Horseshoe Gaming Holdings Corp. chairman, currently awaiting federal and state regulators' approval of the $1.45 billion sale of his three-riverboat casino company, which is unrelated to Binion's Horseshoe, to Harrah's Entertainment, was sad that many people who worked for him for "years and years" were losing their jobs.

"Obviously, I'm sad," Binion said. "I'm sad they closed it, that it degenerated."

Horseshoe executives were unavailable to say how many employees have lost their jobs. During the summer of 2002, property bosses said the Horseshoe employed 1,700 workers, but the number of workers has dropped since then.

Saturday's actions came after deputy U.S. marshals armed with court orders authorizing seizure of $2 million entered the Horseshoe casino Friday evening and ordered it closed while an estimated $1 million was seized.

The Horseshoe's hotel was allowed to remain open Friday, but on Saturday the remaining guests were ordered to leave the historic downtown fixture, which was almost empty except for a handful of Binion's workers and security guards.

"It's got a lot of history," Frances McKissick, 41, told The Associated Press. "It's going to take away from the tradition of Fremont (Street)."

Another guest who was forced to pack up Saturday, Jim DiGiorgio, an adult film director, told The Associated Press, "It's the end of an era."

U.S. District Judge Roger Hunt approved the seizure in December to satisfy debts owed to the Southern Nevada Culinary and Bartenders Pension Trust Fund and to the Hotel Employees and Restaurant Employees International Union Welfare Fund.

Elected officials of Culinary Local 226 issued a Friday statement to members who worked at the Horseshoe, explaining why the union planned to seize the money even though it could force the property's closure.

Noting that the Horseshoe owed the union's health and pension plans close to $2 million, the letter said the hotel-casino stopped paying its required contributions to the funds in June.

"The plans have had to provide your benefits even though they were not being paid," the letter noted. "The (plans') trustees ... have bent over backward trying to help the Horseshoe. They gave the Horseshoe extension after extension in the hope that the promises made by Horseshoe ownership about getting substantial new money in the form of loans would come true. ... It is sad that the Horseshoe has come to this."

Culinary officials were unavailable to comment Saturday, but D. Taylor, security and treasurer for the Culinary Union Local 226, told The Associated Press, "This was a desperation measure on our part. It's never good when something like this happens."

Taylor also said if Binion's cannot reopen, the union will help its members find other jobs.

The gaming commission acted Saturday at its emergency meeting after Behnen agreed to sign a stipulation agreeing to keep the casino closed.

"The Horseshoe will close its gaming operations immediately and will not activate any game, gambling game, gaming device, sports pool or race book without the prior administrative approval of (the chairmen of the control board and commission)," the order noted.

The Horseshoe will keep its gaming license but will have to pay applicable gaming taxes and fees while the casino is closed. Prior to reopening, the casino will have to "secure the minimum bankroll requirements," the order noted.

The commission voted 5-0 to approve the order, which meant that the panel didn't have to order the Horseshoe to close its casino, which it was prepared to do if Behnen hadn't signed the deal agreeing to close it without a commission order.

"The Horseshoe has been a prominent, world-renowned licensee for many, many years," commission Chairman Pete Bernhard said after the emergency meeting. "Any time a licensee is in financial difficulty it's a sad situation."

Commission member Art Marshall added the Horseshoe has a special place in the memories of longtime Las Vegans.

"The Horseshoe is an institution," Marshall said. "It's a sad day for the industry, for downtown and for the Binion family. I hope they can work their way out of this."

Behnen didn't appear at the public meeting at the Sawyer Building; she sat at a conference table in an anteroom next to the hearing room while the regulators decided her fate.

Bob Faiss, Behnen's lawyer, observed the brief hearing.

"Mrs. Behnen has agreed to the stipulation (requiring the casino closure)," Faiss said. "It speaks for itself, and I have no further comment."

Becky Behnen was not available for comment. Nick Behnen, her husband and the property's former marketing executive, was reached at home by telephone but shouted a profanity at a reporter before hanging up.



TOPICS: Business/Economy; News/Current Events; US: Nevada
KEYWORDS: benions; casino; horeshoe; lasvegas
A Las Vegas landmark gone.
1 posted on 01/11/2004 8:26:33 AM PST by Lokibob
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To: All
Hey, I don't mean to be nosey...
... but I'd really like some bacon,
or some help for FR.

2 posted on 01/11/2004 8:27:31 AM PST by Support Free Republic (Your support keeps Free Republic going strong!)
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To: Lokibob
I don't know why the casino didn't file Chapter 11 bankruptcy - giving the casino freedom from creditors while it reorganized itself. If it filed just minutes before the US Marshal busted in - that would have preventing this fiasco.
3 posted on 01/11/2004 8:33:56 AM PST by BCrago66
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To: Lokibob
New meaning to the phrase "All in"....
4 posted on 01/11/2004 8:36:07 AM PST by dakine
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To: dakine
What about the bettors? There were supposedly hundreds of thousands of outstanding sport bets. Will they be paid off, reimbursed, or did the IRS take their money too. Why am I not surprised that this was essentiallyl a "support the unions" move. Oh well.
5 posted on 01/11/2004 8:54:13 AM PST by Jack Black
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To: BCrago66
I think they have reserve requirements that, if not met, they can be closed.
6 posted on 01/11/2004 9:11:07 AM PST by international american (support our troops.........revoke Hillary's visa!!)
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To: BCrago66
I don't know why the casino didn't file Chapter 11 bankruptcy - giving the casino freedom from creditors while it reorganized itself.

Interesting question. Could be they were just plain inept at financial matters (in Vegas?). or it could be that the place was milked dry and a seizure was the easy way to get out of it. Or someting might be behind the scenes that wouldn't look good in a bankruptcy proceeding. Assuming no bankruptcy had been previously attempted.

7 posted on 01/11/2004 9:38:47 AM PST by templar
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To: Jack Black
All bettors with winners will be paid....Nevada law...even
if they have to sell the property...Darn, I had just (last week) made arrangements for Vegas..flying over and back from San Diego..always stay at Golden Nugget..walk across
street to H-Shoe to bet ponies and play poker...guess that
is out...I don't think there is another downtown Casino that has a poker room??? none..year ago? later..Jake
8 posted on 01/11/2004 9:51:15 AM PST by sanjacjake ( Luvya-Dubya)
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To: sanjacjake
Doesn't the 4 queens have a poker room?
9 posted on 01/11/2004 10:16:02 AM PST by Lokibob
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To: sanjacjake
There must have been something that prevented the bankruptcy. Other properties like the Aladdin and Regent have successfully navigated that path. My guess is that Becky and the insiders have takena large amount of money out in the last few months that would have to go back in as as preferential payments under the bankruptcy. It may have to go back anyway under this seizure. I can only imagine how many laws have been violated.

This is a particularly sad ending for the employees at the Shoe. They are really stuck. Jobs in gaming are hard to come by in Vegas at least until the Wynn property opens in 2005. There will be a line a mile long to apply to work there.
10 posted on 01/11/2004 10:24:25 AM PST by TheExploited (R-Illinois)
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To: TheExploited
--the employees sure didn't have any qualms about going on strike not long ago when the financial problems of the Horseshoe were well known-with the usual anti-company commentary to the media, etc.,---
11 posted on 01/11/2004 10:37:47 AM PST by rellimpank
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