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Next: LOOKING IN ON: TOURISM 23 Sept. 07:37:39
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Today: September 24, 2006 at 9:55:8 PDT
Jeff Simpson on how Harrah's massive project at Center Strip is going to take more planning than originally thought
What should be the biggest
business news story of the year in
Las Vegas is now expected to be
announced a little later than originally
planned. Harrah's Entertainment's
mammoth redevelopment of
the Center Strip area was set to be
announced by the end of this month,
but all of the details are yet to be
finalized.
The total project cost is likely to
be more than MGM Mirage's $7 billion-
plus Project CityCenter.
Among the pricey components:
hundreds of millions in land acquisitions
along Koval Lane and behind
Harrah's Las Vegas, the Imperial
Palace and the Flamingo; acquiring
the Barbary Coast from Boyd Gaming
Corp.; a major redevelopment
of flagship Caesars Palace that will
include utilizing much of its underutilized
Strip frontage near Flamingo
Road; demolishing the older of
Bally's two hotel towers; and building
a new resort (a Horseshoe, perhaps?)
on the site and imploding
the Imperial Palace, possibly using
the space to expand and improve
Harrah's.
Many of the existing two-story
apartments and time shares behind
its properties and on Koval Lane
would also be demolished, probably
making way for vertical condominium
and time-share projects and
parking garages.
The biggest mystery is what
Harrah's will do with the Barbary
Coast if it ends up with the property.
Separating the project from other
major developments up and down
the Strip is the marketing muscle the
company will use to unify the Center
Strip properties as a single entity.
Owners and bosses of Internet
casinos that take sports bets from
Americans are quaking in their
boots.
Despite the recent arrests of two
top Internet gaming executives who
made the mistake of setting foot on
U.S. soil, what scares these operators
is not the prospect of going to jail.
What scares them is losing the
lifeblood of their businesses: bets
from American customers.
But jail for Internet bosses may
be a sign that the federal and some
state governments are serious about
the companies that flout U.S. law.
BetOnSports Chief Executive
David Carruthers was arrested by
federal authorities July 16 in the Dallas-
Fort Worth airport while changing
planes on his way home to Costa
Rica, where the company's sports
betting and casino games are legal.
And Peter Dicks, the chairman
of Sportingbet, a United Kingdom-based
company that offers sports
wagering and casino games, was
arrested in New York on Sept. 6 on a
warrant from Louisiana, a jurisdiction
that reportedly has warrants
outstanding for dozens of other
online gambling honchos.
BetOnSports fired Carruthers
after his arrest, before he was
released on bail. And Dicks resigned
soon after his arrest.
They didn't quit because of the
shame of being arrested, but because
as corporate officers they were considered
legitimate representatives
of their companies who could be
served with subpoenas and other
legal documents by federal and state
officials at least that's the explanation
offered by one online gambling
expert I spoke with.
Carruthers' arrest was less surprising
to the online gaming world
than was Dicks'. BetOnSports was
considered a U.S. company run by
Americans from a Caribbean sanctuary,
a logical target for the Justice
Department as it looks to enforce the
Wire Act of 1961 a law that clearly
makes taking sports bets over phone
lines illegal. But Sportingbet is a U.K.
company largely run by British citizens,
and Dicks' arrest sent a shock
wave through the online world.
BetOnSports has already stopped
taking bets from American gamblers
under terms of a temporary
restraining order, while Sportingbet
has no plans to quit booking action
from the world's biggest sports-betting
market.
It's the U.S. or what's the
point?" Sportingbet CEO Andrew
McIver told the Financial Times. I
still hold that view."
Jeff Simpson is business editor
of the Las Vegas Sun and executive
editor of sister publication
In Business Las Vegas. He can be
reached at 259-4083 or at simpson@
lasvegassun.com.
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