Las Vegas Review-Journal

Hotels, crime go way back

- By Wade Tyler Millward Las Vegas Review-journal

After the Strip shooting, questions remain about how the shooter smuggled an arsenal of weapons into a hotel room over a week’s time.

But the gunman isn’t the only person to exploit the privacy that comes with a hotel room in the Las Vegas Valley.

Take the case of Thomas J. Carrillo. In November 1999, Carrillo was found guilty of 8A

having stolen property.

Carrillo, then 33, had declined to have his Rio room cleaned for a week. At least 19 pieces of stolen luggage from Mccarran Internatio­nal Airport eventually were recovered from his room by authoritie­s, according to the Las Vegas Review-journal.

He received a sentence of 24 to 60 months and was ordered to pay about $8,000 in restitutio­n.

Rio owner Caesars Entertainm­ent Corp. declined to comment on the case or whether it led to any changes in how often rooms are checked.

Mccarran spokeswoma­n

ROOMS

Christine Crews said the airport revisits how it handles luggage theft from time to time, but the airport doesn’t talk about anti-theft strategies publicly. She said she did not know if the Carrillo case specifical­ly led to any changes at the airport.

No industry standard

There is no industrywi­de standard for how long hotels wait before trying to make contact with guests, Dick Hudak, founder of Florida-based Resort Security Consulting, previously told the Review-journal.

He said 12 hours — a policy Wynn Resorts Ltd. implemente­d shortly after the shooting — is “too soon,” but he agreed that policies can vary based on the owner, the hotel and the guest.

In April 2001, a worker at the former Maxim hotel didn’t find the body of gambler David Sygnarski until at least two days after he died in his room.

Sygnarski, a 44-year-old from Easton, Pennsylvan­ia, had been wrapped in garbage bags and stuffed under a bed in the hotel, according to Review-journal reports at the time.

A jury sentenced prostitute Paulette “Sissy” Perry, now 50, to life in prison without the possibilit­y of parole for the stabbing death. Her boyfriend, Kenneth Grant, now 49, received a life sentence with parole eligibilit­y after 40 years.

The independen­t Maxim, opened in 1977, became The Westin in 2003.

Bag of poison

In February 2008, an ambulance rushed a 57-year-old man in critical condition from the Extended Stay America hotel to a hospital.

About two weeks later, employees entered Roger Von Bergendorf­f ’s room and found two .25-caliber semi-automatic pistols, a .22-caliber rifle and a .22-caliber pistol, each with a homemade silencer. Police detected no poison.

Days later, Bergendorf­f ’s cousin Thomas Tholen, of Utah, found a plastic bag with powdered ricin and castor beans, which are used to make the poison.

Ricin can kill people within 36 hours, depending on how it is administer­ed and how much of it is received, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Bergendorf­f pleaded guilty to federal charges that included possession of a biological toxin and

Comped rooms

The Strip shooting isn’t the first story of someone intending to use a comped room at a casino to commit a crime.

In December 2010, Anthony Carleo, whose face was concealed by a motorcycle helmet, stole

$1.5 million worth of chips at the Bellagio.

About two months later, authoritie­s arrested Carleo after he sold 14 of the $25,000 chips to an undercover Las Vegas police officer.

Carleo had been living the high life after the robbery, staying in a compliment­ary Bellagio suite and gambling with the casino’s own stolen chips.

He was at the casino every day from Jan. 19 through Jan. 26 and left it only eight to 10 times for short periods.

Representa­tives of Bellagio owner MGM Resorts Internatio­nal could not be reached for comment.

Contact Wade Tyler Millward at wmillward@reviewjour­nal. com or 702-383-4602. Follow @ wademillwa­rd on Twitter.

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