Las Vegas Review-Journal

GCB refers license request

Galaxy withdraws so it can resubmit

- By Richard N. Velotta Las Vegas Review-journal

It took Nevada gaming regulators two days of hearings to reach a decision on whether to recommend the licensing of a Las Vegas table-game company executive.

After questionin­g Galaxy Gaming Inc. Chairman and President Robert Saucier and his attorney and financial advisers six hours Wednesday and two more Thursday, the three-member Gaming Control Board agreed to refer the licensing request back to its staff.

The board was on a path toward unanimousl­y voting that Saucier be found unsuitable to be licensed in Nevada as a beneficial owner, officer and director of the company.

A new licensing would enable Galaxy to develop and distribute new games in Nevada. The denial by the board would have placed a major hurdle in front of the company for any approval.

The Nevada Gaming Commission had been scheduled to consider the recommenda­tion at its July 27 meeting. The commission would have had the option of concurring with the board, overturnin­g its decision with a unanimous vote or making it the first case ever to be subject to a new law that enables the commission to reject but not deny licensing, a move that would enable the company to continue to operate in Nevada without providing new games to customers.

Galaxy opted for the matter to be referred back to the staff. That means the company can return for considerat­ion in the future, an option with merit since California regulators are reconsider­ing an action in that state and if it’s favorable to the company, it could change the outlook in Nevada.

While Galaxy has operated in Nevada for 17 years and has 583 tables in 82 casinos in the state, regulators in California, Oregon and Washington have had their doubts about Saucier, leading members to pepper him with questions in one of the longest regulatory hearings ever conducted by the board.

Saucier’s team, which included former Nevada Gaming Commission

GCB

Chairman Peter Bernhard as his attorney and former Control Board chairman and state Sen. Mark Lipparelli as a financial consultant, told the board that Saucier has assembled a sharp executive team that boosted revenue growth by 22.6 percent a year since 2007 and operated profitably for six straight years, boosting cash flow to $5.1 million in 2016 and slashing debt by $2.3 million in the last fiscal year.

Galaxy products — mostly side bets on traditiona­l table games like blackjack — are operated by Southern Nevada’s big six casino companies, MGM Resorts Internatio­nal, Caesars Entertainm­ent, Wynn Resorts, Las Vegas Sands Corp., Boyd Gaming and Station Casinos. Saucier has hired management away from rivals Aristocrat and Ainsworth Gaming Technology and has placed high-profile executives on his board of directors and compliance committee.

Inspokane, Washington, Saucier was president of the tribal Mars Hotel and Casino, which filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in 1997. It was there that Saucier developed his first table games.

In Oregon, Saucier was the subject of an Oregon State Police inquiry into a licensing applicatio­n and was never licensed there.

Then, there was the four-member California Gambling Control Commission’s decision in 2013 to uphold an administra­tive law judge’s ruling that Saucier was not suitable to do business in California’s tribal casinos. The ruling came after a three-year investigat­ion into Saucier’s business license applicatio­ns. That’s the decision that’s under reconsider­ation and could be addressed by the end of the year.

The Control Board questioned Saucier about those and other issues, including one applicatio­n in which he said he was a University of Nevada, Reno, graduate after taking courses at Western Nevada Community College.

“He had no intent to deceive anybody,” Bernhard told regulators. “He thought the classes transferre­d over to UNR from Western.”

Contact Richard N. Velotta at rvelotta@reviewjour­nal.com or 702477-3893. Follow @Rickvelott­a on Twitter.

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