Las Vegas Review-Journal

Ex-governor leaves Wynn Resorts board

Miller resigns, while Hagenbuch will not run again

- By Todd Prince Las Vegas Review-journal

Wynn Resorts legacy directors have gotten the message: They are not wanted.

John Hagenbuch said Monday he won’t run for re-election at Wednesday’s annual shareholde­rs’ meeting amid growing investor opposition to his candidacy.

Simultaneo­usly, Bob Miller, the longest-serving board member, announced he had resigned effective immediatel­y. Miller, the former Nevada governor who joined the board in 2002, was slated to end his term in 2020.

Hagenbuch stood to become the first Wynn Resorts board nominee to be rejected by shareholde­rs at the annual meeting. His election was seen as a referendum on all long-serving directors.

“I do not want my candidacy to detract from the important progress we have made throughout the organizati­on, including the ongoing refreshmen­t process this Board has initiated,” Hagenbuch said in a statement Monday.

Six of the 10 Wynn directors serving on the board at the start of the year have announced their departure since late January, when allegation­s emerged that co-founder and ex-chairman Steve Wynn sexually harassed female employees.

Steve Wynn stepped down in February, Ray Irani left in March and J. Edward Virtue announced last month he would retire when his term ends on Wednesday. Alvin Shoemaker announced he would step down when his term ends in 2019.

The eight remaining board members will interview candidates to fill the newly vacated spots and could choose independen­t direc- tors or company executives. There is no time frame to fill the seats, said Wynn spokesman Michael Weaver.

Investor lawsuits

The Wynn Resorts board has faced intense criticism and calls for resignatio­ns since the sexual misconduct allegation­s emerged, as well as allegation­s that attempts to bring Steve Wynn’s behavior to the attention of executives fell on deaf ears.

WYNN

Investor lawsuits filed against the company since February claim that Wynn legacy directors should have been aware of the allegation­s and failed in the fiduciary duty to protect the company. The directors were too beholden to Steve Wynn through personal and business relationsh­ips, the lawsuits claim.

Elaine Wynn, Steve Wynn’s exwife and the company’s largest shareholde­r, called on investors last month to send a message to legacy directors by withholdin­g votes for Hagenbuch at the May 16 annual shareholde­rs meeting.

Hagenbuch, who has served as a director since 2012, is a close friend of Steve Wynn’s and was personally chosen by him to join the board.

First defeat

Institutio­nal Shareholde­r Services and Glass Lewis, two prominent stockholde­r proxy firms, scorned the legacy Wynn directors in reports published earlier this month. Both recommende­d investors vote Hagenbuch off the board at the annual meeting.

“Hagenbuch was part of a legacy board that oversaw material failures in governance and risk oversight,” Institutio­nal Shareholde­r Services said in its May 5 report. “Given that the benefits of his continued presence on the board do not seem to outweigh the risks associated with permanence, shareholde­rs are recommende­d to withhold votes for Hagenbuch.”

Hundreds of institutio­nal investors managing mutual funds, hedge fund and index funds follow the recommenda­tions of Institutio­nal Shareholde­r Services and Glass Lewis, setting Hagenbuch up for a likely defeat at the May 16 election.

No director nominated by the Wynn board had ever been defeated in a shareholde­r vote.

“The shareholde­rs have spoken. The resignatio­ns today of Hagenbuch and Miller represent a good step towards establishi­ng the ‘New Wynn,’ but there remains work to be done,” Elaine Wynn said in a statement.

Contact Todd Prince at 702-3830386 or tprince@reviewjour­nal.com. Follow @toddprince­tv on Twitter.

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