Gambler says
Wynn plied
him with prostitutes
Casino owner,
accused of abetting losses, files
defamation lawsuit
|
International
Union of Gaming Employees
(IUGE) agrees with Reno
Attorney Marie Mirch:
Gaming Control should
fully investigate these
charges. |
By Jeff German
Thu, Aug 14, 2008 (2 a.m.)
In one corner is an art-collecting
casino mogul and in the other is a
millionaire soft-porn outlaw, and at
stake are millions of dollars and the
reputation of a Strip casino.
Steve Wynn’s lawsuit to collect a $2
million gambling debt from “Girls Gone
Wild” promoter Joe Francis turned into a
no-holds-barred legal donnybrook this
week, as Francis alleged in court papers
that the casino mogul used a variety of
tactics to run up the gambler’s losses,
including providing prostitutes at his
Strip resort.
Wynn hit back with a defamation lawsuit
just three hours after Francis’ filing.
Francis alleges Wynn was with Francis
and the prostitutes in his hotel room
and that Francis was told the women were
Wynn’s “personal gift to you.”
Francis also claims Wynn Las Vegas
deceived him into gambling large sums of
money and forged casino credit documents
to show that he’d gambled more than he
did. Francis lists other tricks he
alleges Wynn and his hotel used to keep
him playing blackjack last year.
Wynn Las Vegas denies all of the
allegations.
“The claims made in the counter suit by
Joe Francis are not only false but
scurrilous beyond imagination,” the
resort said in a statement. “Mr. Francis
obviously felt secure making such
defamatory statements under the
protection of a judicial pleading.
“However, he has recently made other
false and defamatory public statements.
We not only intend to press the proper
charges for collection of his gambling
debts, but we will also pursue Mr.
Francis for damages resulting from those
incredibly damaging and libelous
statements. Each and every statement
made by Mr. Francis is an outrageous
falsehood and he will be held
accountable for those statements.”
In Wynn’s defamation suit, his
attorneys, Todd Bice and James
Pisanelli, charge that Francis published
those statements “with knowledge of
their falsity” or “reckless disregard”
for the truth.
The defamation lawsuit says Wynn has
“suffered injury to his reputation,
shame, mortification, hurt feelings and
emotional distress,” and that Francis
should be forced to pay for the damage
he has done.
Wynn was recently in other news stories
featuring the word “prostitution” — but
in a very different context. On July 25,
he got into a scuffle with two sisters
who had been banned from Wynn Las Vegas
in connection with alleged prostitution.
Metro Police reported that Wynn was
slapped in the face by one of the
sisters as he was attempting to have
them removed from the casino.
Francis’ credibility can be questioned.
He is, after all, the guy who earned a
fortune producing videos of drunken,
stripping college girls, and he has been
in trouble with the law in recent years.
He is free on $1.5 million bail while
facing tax evasion charges in Reno. This
year, he pleaded no contest to felony
child abuse and misdemeanor prostitution
charges in Florida.
Wynn Las Vegas initially sued Francis in
late June to recover $2 million in
gambling debts the casino claims he
incurred in February 2007. Last week, as
the suit began to heat up, the casino
asked the district attorney’s bad check
unit to open a criminal case against
Francis.
Francis’ response, Wynn’s attorneys say,
has consisted of statements that
“falsely imply that the hotel did not
keep contractual agreements with
Francis, and (that) the hotel did not do
business with Francis in a fair and
ethical manner. The statements falsely
imply that Francis possesses some
undisclosed facts that show that Wynn
deceives customers.”
Francis alleges Wynn Las Vegas
“intentionally miscalculates markers and
forges the high-rollers’ signatures in
order to change a high-roller’s win to a
loss.” He goes on to claim that the
resort also changes computer records to
match the altered markers and destroys
surveillance videotapes of the gambler’s
play at the casino to make it more
difficult for the gambler to dispute his
losses.
Francis says Wynn Las Vegas offered him
a number of perks during his junket,
including the use of Wynn’s private jet,
a posh hotel suite, player chip
discounts, and the right to gamble alone
at a table and select a dealer.
The casino, Francis claims, also
promised to give him control over how
many times a dealer would shuffle a deck
of cards and the ability to bet up to
$30,000 a hand, and said it would limit
his credit line to $200,000 to minimize
his losses.
But, he alleges, the casino switched
dealers when he started to win and
shuffled the deck without his approval,
using a shuffle machine under the table
outside of his view.
As his gambling debts piled up, Francis
claims, Wynn and his casino created an
effective diversion to distract him from
thoroughly reviewing his markers —
alcohol and prostitutes. Francis says
Wynn plied him with wine from his
private wine cellar.
Reno attorney Marie Mirch, who filed the
countersuit for Francis, is hoping it
attracts the attention of state gaming
regulators.
“These are serious allegations,” she
said. “They should be interested in
looking into this conduct, but I’m
skeptical that they will because the
industry protects itself.”
Jerry Markling, chief of enforcement for
the Nevada Gaming Control Board, plans
to get a copy of the counterclaim.
“Once we get our hands on it, we
certainly will look into the
allegations,” Markling said.