Nevada
Control Board Approves $370 Million Deal
After less than 10 minutes of
discussion, the Gaming Control Board gave its
unanimous consent Wednesday to the $370 million
purchase of the Imperial Palace by Harrah's
Entertainment.
"We
seem to have Harrah's on every agenda,"
quipped Gaming Control Board Chairman Dennis
Neilander.
He
noted that the purchase of the 2,640-room hotel
will be important for Harrah's from "a
real estate perspective."
With
the purchase, Harrah's controls significant
acreage in Las Vegas, mainly along the east
of Las Vegas Boulevard between The Venetian
and Aladdin.
Ted
Jenkin, Harrah's Western Division president,
said the company has not yet decided what it
ultimately will do with the Imperial Palace.
The hotel-casino for now will remain open with
the same management team, he said.
"Hopefully
we can make it more profitable, while we make
a determination on what is best for the site,"
Jenkin said.
The
purchase will not be complete until after the
state Gaming Commission reviews and approves
the acquisition at its Dec. 22 meeting.
Harrah's
has been acquiring new properties in Las Vegas
throughout the year. Its $9 billion buyout of
Caesars Entertainment was completed in June.
Harrah's
now operates the Flamingo, Caesars Palace, Bally's
and Paris Las Vegas on the Strip.
The
Imperial Palace was built by the late Ralph
Engelstad, a North Dakota-born contractor, who
initially operated it as the Flamingo Capri
motel. He later enlarged the property into the
Imperial Palace, which featured low-priced rooms
and a classic automobile collection.
Separately,
the control board also gave unanimous approval
to allow Navegante, a company managed by veteran
gaming executive Larry Woolf, to operate four
downtown Las Vegas casinos.
The
company will begin operating the Plaza, Gold
Spike, Las Vegas Club and Western Hotel on Dec.
23 if it receives Gaming Commission approval.
"We
need to fill holes on the staff," Woolf
said. "There has been confusion on who
is in charge, and the more sophisticated help
have left. We need to get in and operate them
as best as we can."
Neilander
said his checks of the casino's earning records
shows that even if there is not any growth in
revenue all debts can be paid."
The
hotels now are owned by Barrick Gaming Investments
and the Tamares Group, companies that are in
litigation.
Barrick
attorney Anthony Cabot said Tamares "has
not paid us what we think is the amount due"
to complete a transfer of interest. He said
Tamares owes Barrick $12 million, but wants
to pay only $6.5 million.
But
Neilander said their dispute has nothing to
do with management of the four downtown Las
Vegas casinos and instead dealt with a disagreement
over the Nevada Club.
"The
regulatory system is being injected in a commercial
dispute," he added.
|