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Shortly after Michigan announced it would begin to shutter its brick-and-mortar casinos for a second time as a part of another round of COVID-19 restrictions, other states have begun to follow suit.
Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker announced that it will shut down the state’s gaming market starting at 11:01 p.m. Thursday night. He did not announce how long these closures will last, according to a report from the Las Vegas Review-Journal.
If any of the state’s 10 casinos refuse to close during the mandated shutdown, they could lose their gaming license, according to the Illinois Gaming Board’s website.
Along with Illinois, New Mexico casinos are also beginning to cease operations in response to a COVID-19 surge. Route 66 Casino Hotel closed in mid-October response and according to local media outlets, the government is urging the 23 other tribal casinos to follow suit.
Santa Ana Star Casino announced the closure last week and Sandia Casino never reopened since it shut its doors in March. Since the entire gaming industry in the state is run by tribes, the state government is unable to unilaterally shut down the entire market.
While Pennsylvania hasn’t announced a statewide mandate, one of its biggest cities is beginning to enact strict lockdown measures and one of the state’s biggest casinos is being forced to close again.
Rivers Casino Philadelphia, formerly SugarHouse Casino, is shutting down Friday and will not be allowed to reopen until January 2, 2021. South Philadelphia Race and Sportsbooks will be closed during that same timeframe.
Other states, like California and Ohio, are beginning to implement curfews on its citizens. While state officials haven’t announced anything specific to the gaming industry, it’s still unclear what effect curfews will have on the casino industry.
Before reopening in July, New Jersey was one of the strictest and most cautious states when it came to its casino industry. This time around, however, it appears that Garden State casinos will avoid another shutdown. According to a report from the Press of Atlantic City, Gov. Phil Murphy said that there is no evidence that his state’s casinos are linked to any outbreaks of COVID-19.
Colorado casinos were in jeopardy of being closed as new restrictions were imposed Monday, but Teller County officials said earlier this week that the casino industry would not be affected.
The Philadelphia casino was fined by the state in 2018 for problems at its gaming tables, and now two men who say they lost more than $250,000 there want their money back … and then some.
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When you sit at a casino card table and lay your money down, you probably assume that you’re playing with a full deck and that the cards have been properly shuffled, right? Well, that wasn’t always the case at SugarHouse over a recent nine-month period, and now two men who say they lost more than $250,000 at the Philadelphia casino during that time are taking SugarHouse to court.
South Philadelphia’s Anthony Mattia and Cherry Hill’s William Vespe filed a federal lawsuit against SugarHouse on Wednesday, accusing the casino of fraud and failing to “provide an honest wagering environment.”
The allegations in the lawsuit stem from findings by the Pennsylvania Gaming Control Board in 2018 that some of SugarHouse’s blackjack, poker and mini-baccarat tables had suffered a series of problems between May 2017 and January 2018.
In some cases, the PGCB found, dealers had been using decks that contained too many cards. In other cases, there were too few cards in the decks. And at times, the cards had not been shuffled properly — or at all. SugarHouse was fined $85,000 plus costs over these issues.
“For our clients, and surely for SugarHouse’s other patrons, the thrill in playing table games at SugarHouse is knowing that while the odds are against them, they can still ‘beat the house,’” said attorney Steven Feinstein in a statement. “But that all goes out the window when a casino uses broken equipment or ‘illegitimate’ decks, as the Pennsylvania Gaming Control Board previously found SugarHouse to have done.”
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The Gaming Control Board found that in one incident from May 2017, there were six blackjack decks in use that were missing cards, leading to 122 hands of blackjack played at SugarHouse without the proper number of cards.
In another instance, 16 hands of poker were dealt to players before the dealer realized that the cards were not shuffled — they were arranged by suit and sequentially.
And on another occasion, 27 hands of Spanish 21 were dealt with decks that contained 10s. The problem with that? The whole twist on Spanish 21 is that it’s basically blackjack with 10s removed from the deck. SugarHouse was fined $10,000 plus costs over this incident.
The problems with the decks were traced to card-shuffling machines that had malfunctioned, but the Gaming Control Board found that some dealers had ignored blinking red lights on their machines that would have alerted them to the issues.
In the lawsuit, Mattia claims that he lost more than $147,000 during the time that SugarHouse was using the bad decks, and Vespe says he lost more than $103,000, though the suit does not specify that either man played any hands during the specific games cited by the Gaming Control Board.
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“Based on the fact that SugarHouse apparently had been using broken equipment and ‘illegitimate’ decks … we think it is fair to question the integrity of the thousands of card games that were played at SugarHouse at tables using that equipment and those decks,” said Conrad J. Benedetto, the other attorney in the case.
“The integrity of our gaming operations is of the utmost importance,” said Jack Horner, a spokesman for SugarHouse. “We have disciplined or terminated the employees responsible, and revised procedures to help prevent recurrence. We deny the claims made by the individuals in this lawsuit, and cannot comment further on pending litigation.”
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The men accuse SugarHouse of negligence, breach of contract (said contract being an implied contract that the play was fair and honest), unjust enrichment, breach of good faith, fraud, and conspiracy. The suit seeks unspecified damages that include the $250,000 lost plus punitive damages and attorney fees.