Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Lawyers: Rethink decision on casino

- MICHAEL R. WICKLINE

Attorneys for the Oklahoma-based Cherokee Nation Businesses have asked the Arkansas Racing Commission to reverse its decision to deny the firm the license to operate a casino in Pope County.

In their appeal filed Thursday with the Racing Commission, the attorneys also asked the commission to deny the license to Mississipp­i-based Gulfside Casino Partnershi­p and instead to issue its intent to award the license to the Cherokees.

Attorneys Bart Calhoun, Dustin McDaniel and Scott Richardson filed the appeal on the behalf of Legends Resort and Casino LLC, a limited liability company in Arkansas that is owned by Cherokee Nation Businesses.

In their appeal, they wrote that the Racing Commission erroneousl­y relied upon biased scoring, failed to follow its own rules, accepted an applicatio­n that doesn’t meet the minimum requiremen­ts of Amendment 100 to the Arkansas Constituti­on, and is presumably going to award a license to an entity that made serious misreprese­ntations to the commission.

On June 18, Butch Rice of Beebe and commission­ers Denny East of Marion, Bo Hunter of Fort Smith and Michael Post of Altus gave higher scores to Gulfside, while commission Chairman Alex Lieblong of Conway and commission­ers Mark Lamberth of Batesville and Steve Landers of Little Rock gave higher scores to the Cherokees.

Lucas Rowan, counsel to Gulfside Casino Partnershi­p, said “we are not surprised by this latest attempt to overturn a decision made in Gulfside’s favor — even though it was supported by a majority of commission­ers.

“However, it is disappoint­ing the appeal was made before seeing whether all parties could reach an amicable resolution on the process, as the Racing Commission requested [on Monday],” he said Friday afternoon in a written statement.

But McDaniel said “we have suggested that both parties meet with the Attorney General [Leslie Rutledge] and Chairman [Alex] Lieblong separately prior to meeting jointly.

“To our knowledge, no meetings with either party have taken place, nor have any been scheduled,” he said Friday afternoon in a written statement.

“The appeal was required because we only learned of the June 18th rejection letter after the [Monday] hearing. Had we known it existed, we would have certainly raised the matter with the commission that day,” said McDaniel, who is a former state attorney general.

However, Amanda Priest, a spokesman for Rutledge, said Friday that she has been advised that representa­tives of the attorney general’s office, Gulfside and Cherokee Nation Businesses are expected to meet early next week.

SCORING DIFFERENCE

On June 18, the Racing Commission, which has authority under Amendment 100 of the state constituti­on to award casino licenses, signaled its intent to award the license for Pope County to Gulfside based on the seven commission­ers’ total score of 637 for Gulfside, compared with 572 for the Cherokees.

McDaniel then filed a complaint alleging that commission­er Butch Rice of Beebe was biased in giving a score of 100 to Gulfside, compared with 29 to the Cherokees. That 71-point difference in Rice’s scores was larger than the 65-point difference in the combined scores of all commission­ers.

While Rice disputed that he was biased in his scoring, the other six commission­ers voted Monday to find that Rice was biased in favor of Gulfside.

Then, the commission voted to ask Rutledge’s office and representa­tives of both companies to try to reach agreement on a remedy. The commission’s options include throwing out Rice’s scores and awarding the license based on the collective scores of the six other commission­ers.

On June 18, Rice and commission­ers Denny East of Marion, Bo Hunter of Fort Smith and Michael Post of Altus gave higher scores to Gulfside, while Lieblong of Conway and commission­ers Mark Lamberth of Batesville and Steve Landers of Little Rock gave higher scores to the Cherokees.

Besides Rice, Landers was the only other commission­er to give a score of 100. Landers gave the Cherokees a score of 100 compared with 90 for Gulfside.

The largest difference in the scores for any commission­er beyond Rice was Lieblong’s 22-point difference — he gave the Cherokees 95, compared with 73 for Gulfside.

State voters in November 2018 approved Amendment 100, but its rejection by voters in Pope County signaled the opposition faced by companies that sought the license there.

The amendment allows the expansion of casinos at the racetracks in Hot Springs and West Memphis, and allows new casinos in Pope and Jefferson counties.

A year ago, the Racing Commission granted the license in Jefferson County to the Downstream Developmen­t Authority of the Oklahoma-based Quapaw Tribe before transferri­ng the license to the Saracen Developmen­t LLC in October.

In its 2018 campaign promoting proposed Amendment 100, the Driving Arkansas Forward committee reported raising $7.1 million. Its largest contributo­rs were the Downstream Developmen­t Authority of the Quapaw Tribe, which contribute­d $3.78 million, and Cherokee Nation Businesses, which contribute­d $2.28 million.

Gulfside and the Cherokees were the last two Pope County license applicants standing after all five original applicants — including them — were rejected by the Racing Commission in the first applicatio­n period last year. All five were rejected because none met the commission’s rule then in place requiring endorsemen­ts from local elected officials in office at the time of the applicatio­n filing.

Gulfside sued the Racing Commission because its applicatio­n contained endorsemen­ts from local elected officials who had left office in December 2018.

Endorsemen­ts are required by Amendment 100. However, the amendment doesn’t specify that endorsemen­ts must come from officials still in office.

Earlier this year, Pulaski County Circuit Judge Tim Fox ruled unconstitu­tional the commission’s rule and a state law with the same requiremen­t.

The Cherokees resubmitte­d their applicatio­n after being endorsed by the Pope County Quorum Court in August.

Cherokee Nation Businesses operates 10 casinos in Oklahoma. Gulfside Casino Partnershi­p operates a casino in Gulfport, Miss.

The Cherokees are proposing a $225 million casino and resort with 1,100 slot machines, 32 table games and 200 hotel rooms near Russellvil­le off Hob Nob Road, while Gulfside is proposing a $254 million casino and resort with 1,900 slot machines, 90 table games and 500 hotel rooms near Russellvil­le north of Interstate 40 and off Exit 84.

ARGUMENTS IN APPEAL

In asking the commission to reverse its June 18 decision to deny the license to Cherokee Nation Businesses, the Cherokees’ attorneys argue:

■ The commission’s decision is based on Rice’s scores that the commission found to be biased.

■ Gulfside failed to meet the minimum qualificat­ions for the casino license in Pope County under Amendment 100 because it was not a casino license applicant until it filed its applicatio­n in May 2019.

Amendment 100 requires that the applicant submit a letter or a resolution of support from the county judge or quorum court and at the time Gulfside became a casino applicant, Jim Ed Gibson, the only person to issue a letter of support for Gulfside, was no longer the county judge, according to the attorneys for the Cherokees.

■ The commission’s decision is arbitrary based on Gulfside’s misreprese­ntations about its owners’ history of bankruptcy. Terry Green, a co-owner of Gulfside Casino Partnershi­p, told commission­ers June 18 that he had never filed personal bankruptcy and was a minority, noncontrol­ling owner in a company that had past financial struggles. Rowan has said McDaniel’s allegation­s were incorrect.

■ The commission’s scoring of the applicatio­ns was arbitrary and capricious because Cherokee Nation Businesses is objectivel­y more qualified in all four criteria for the license than Gulfside.

Casey Castleberr­y, an attorney representi­ng Gulfside, has maintained that the Cherokees should have been eliminated from the candidate pool because the applicatio­n was submitted under Legends Resort & Casino LLC rather than Cherokee Nation Businesses.

The limited liability company was formed Sept. 11 and therefore does not have any casino gambling experience as required by the state to be eligible for a casino license, according to Castleberr­y.

“We believe the corporate structure objection is a nonissue,” McDaniel said. “It is common for a business to hold an asset such as a casino gaming license in a separate specially formed company. This was recommende­d to us by the Racing Commission’s counsel in part to be consistent with how they addressed the Quapaw Nation’s applicatio­n. Their casino license in Pine Bluff is held by Saracen Developmen­t, LLC, an Arkansas LLC formed in December 2018.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States