Las Vegas Review-Journal

Sands sells Pa. casino for $1.3B

Alabama tribe buying Bethlehem property in long-rumored sale

- By Richard N. Velotta Las Vegas Review-journal By Wade Tyler Millward Las Vegas Review-journal

An Alabama Indian tribe with diverse casino holdings, including a property in Gardnervil­le, is buying the Sands Bethlehem in eastern Pennsylvan­ia for $1.3 billion from Las Vegas Sands Corp.

Representa­tives of Wind

Creek Hospitalit­y, an affiliate of the Poarch Band of Creek Indians in Alabama, said Thursday they are acquiring the property with a 139,000-square-foot casino, 300 hotel rooms and an adjacent outlet shopping mall.

The companies didn’t set a closing date for the sale, but said it would be subject to customary regulatory reviews.

Reports have long circulated that Las Vegas Sands was preparing to sell the property, which opened in May 2009 on the site of the defunct Bethlehem Steel plant.

Sands Bethlehem’s casino floor features 3,000 slot machines and 200 table games and the property also has three restaurant­s affiliated with celebrity chef Emeril Lagasse — Emeril’s Chop House, Emeril’s Fish House and Burgers and More by Emeril.

It will join Wind Creek Hospitalit­y’s group of nine casinos and racetracks located mostly in the South and the Caribbean.

The company’s list of properties includes the Wind Creek-branded Atmore, Montgomery and Wetumpka in Alabama; the Renaissanc­e Aruba and Renaissanc­e Cura

SANDS

A cybersecur­ity company will consolidat­e its West Coast operations into the former Holsum bread factory in downtown Las Vegas.

At least 30 employees of the company, NS8, will work in the building near the intersecti­on of Charleston and Martin Luther King boulevards, CEO Adam Rogas said.

“We expect to be fully operationa­l in the space by the end of March but have staff working from the location as of last week,” said Rogas, who formerly worked as chief technology officer for travel company Vegas.com until 1998.

NS8 has signed a five-year lease for about 13,000 square feet. The former factory, now Holsum Design Center (Lofts) at 241 W. Charleston Blvd., is about 46,000 square feet in total.

Based in Arlington, Virginia, NS8 offers services to prevent fraud for companies that sell products online. The company also has locations in Miami, Irvine, California, and Amsterdam.

The company is hiring people with skills in software, marketing, sales and project management.

The building will also act as a showroom for NS8 products

HOLSUM

cao, which are branded affiliates of the Renaissanc­e Las Vegas; the Pensacola Greyhound Track and Poker Room in Florida and the Mobile Greyhound Track in Alabama; and Creek Entertainm­ent Gretna, a poker room in Gretna, Florida.

The company also operates the Wa She Shu Casino in Gardnervil­le in Northern Nevada.

Las Vegas Sands Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer Patrick Dumont said use of the sale proceeds would “be consistent with the company’s long-held strategic direction when it comes to deploying capital.”

Sands Bethlehem President Brian Carr said in a statement issued Thursday that he expects a seamless transition to new ownership and that employee focus would not change “regardless of what the sign on the top of the building might read.”

For the tribe, Sands Bethlehem represents a diversific­ation into a new market.

“The quality of the property and dedication of the team members to genuinely engage with customers was evident from the first time we visited the property,” Stephanie Bryant, tribal chair and CEO of the Poarch Band of Creek Indians, said in a statement. “The addition of this fantastic team and property to our portfolio furthers our desire to secure a long and prosperous future for our tribe.”

Odd fit

While Sands Bethlehem is positioned as the premier regional gaming operation in Pennsylvan­ia’s Lehigh Valley, many analysts viewed it as an odd fit for Las Vegas Sands with its megaresort presence on the Strip and as the dominant player in Macau and Singapore.

It has been the only U.S. property to maintain the Sands legacy name after the company imploded the Sands in Las Vegas to make way for The Venetian and Palazzo and the Sands Atlantic City was demolished.

The Sands name remains in Asia with the Marina Bay Sands in Singapore and the Sands Macao, the first U.S. presence to open in China.

Las Vegas Sands stock closed up $3.58, 4.9 percent, to $76.62 a share and was unchanged in after-hours trading on volume about 1½ times the daily average.

The Review-journal is owned by the family of Las Vegas Sands Corp. Chairman and CEO Sheldon Adelson.

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

 ?? Patrick Connolly ?? Las Vegas Review-journal @Pconnpie Cybersecur­ity company NS8 is moving its West Coast operations into the former Holsum bread factory near the corner of Charleston and Martin Luther King boulevards.
Patrick Connolly Las Vegas Review-journal @Pconnpie Cybersecur­ity company NS8 is moving its West Coast operations into the former Holsum bread factory near the corner of Charleston and Martin Luther King boulevards.
 ?? Matt Rourke ?? The Associated Press Las Vegas Sands Corp. is selling its Sands Bethlehem resort in Bethlehem, Pa., for $1.3 billion.
Matt Rourke The Associated Press Las Vegas Sands Corp. is selling its Sands Bethlehem resort in Bethlehem, Pa., for $1.3 billion.

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