Las Vegas Review-Journal

Sinatra to receive settlement of $1.8M

Successor Whittemore will get $600,000 a year

- By Richard N. Velotta Las Vegas Review-journal

Former Wynn Resorts Ltd. executive vice president and general counsel Kim Sinatra will receive a $1.8 million cash settlement as she leaves the company, the company reported Wednesday in a Securities and Exchange Commission filing.

A copy of the five-page settlement agreement as well as a 26-page employment agreement between the company and Sinatra’s successor, Ellen Whittemore, were included in the filing.

Whittemore, a gaming attorney with 30 years’ experience and a former shareholde­r in the Las Vegas law office of Brownstein Hyatt Farber Schreck, will be paid $600,000 a year, plus benefits.

According to the SEC filing, Sinatra, who officially left the company Friday after being relieved of her title on July 15, will be required to maintain contact with the company through the end of the year “regarding any outstandin­g matters that involved employee during the time and scope of her employment.”

SINATRA

Whittemore’s $600,000 annual base salary is subject to the company’s compensati­on committee, and she’ll be eligible to participat­e in a performanc­e-based incentive plan for executive officers that has a target bonus of 100 percent of the annual base salary.

The agreement also offers inclusion in a profit-sharing plan, an executive stock option plan, pension and retirement plans and insurance and hospitaliz­ation coverage.

She will be required to be licensed by the Nevada Gaming Commission — a board she has appeared before frequently on behalf of other licensing applicants.

Sinatra, 58, joined Wynn Resorts in 2004 and became the company’s general counsel and corporate secretary in 2006.

She held considerab­le influence at the company and was one of Wynn’s highest-paid employees.

Last year she earned $13.3 million, more than some top gaming CEOS, according to Equilar, a compensati­on data compiler.

Wynn Resorts has been under pressure to purge some of its senior ranks since allegation­s emerged in late January that Steve Wynn had sexually harassed employees for decades. Wynn has denied the allegation­s.

The allegation­s prompted the Massachuse­tts Gaming Commission, the Nevada Gaming Control Board and Wynn’s own board of directors to launch investigat­ions earlier this year

that are ongoing.

Earlier this week, the Wynn board announced in an SEC filing that it had concluded its investigat­ion, but would not disclose its contents until after regulators in Massachuse­tts and Nevada had reached their own conclusion­s.

The Massachuse­tts probe is expected to be completed by the end of summer and Nevada officials have indicated they expect to wrap up theirs after Massachuse­tts.

Steve Wynn stepped down as company CEO and chairman in February. Four other directors have since left the board.

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

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Kim Sinatra

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