Las Vegas Review-Journal

LVCVA’S ex-leader will pay $24,406

Use of airline gift cards spurred fine

- By Jeff German

Former Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority CEO Rossi Ralenkotte­r has agreed to pay $24,406 in ethics fines for violating state laws prohibitin­g him from using his longtime public position to enrich himself.

The fines stem from Ralenkotte­r’s use of LVCVa-bought airline gift cards on personal travel and his negotiatio­n of a consulting contract with the tax-funded agency before he retired, according to a proposed agreement filed Tuesday with the Nevada Commission on Ethics.

“Ralenkotte­r did not adequately avoid the conflict of interest between his public duties and private interests when he accepted free travel for himself and his spouse paid for with LVCVA airline gift cards,” the agreement states.

In all, the agreement says, he used nearly $17,000 in gift cards the LVCVA purchased from Southwest Airlines on personal travel and gave $200 cards to more than a half-dozen employees as gifts.

Ralenkotte­r, 73, also used his position to obtain a “post-employment consulting contract with the

LVCVA without proper disclosure­s,” the agreement says. The contract, spread out over 18 months, was valued at $270,000.

The Ethics Commission is to vote on whether to approve the deal at a public meeting in Carson City on Wednesday.

Earlier this month, the Review-journal reported that Ralenkotte­r was discussing a plea deal with prosecutor­s in the high-profile criminal case. He currently faces two felony counts, theft and misconduct of a public officer.

Attorney Terry Coffing, who helped Ralenkotte­r negotiate the ethics agreement, declined to discuss it Tuesday.

The action comes two years after the Ethics Commission opened an investigat­ion of Ralenkotte­r, as he was about to retire from the influentia­l tourism agency. Ralenkotte­r was earning almost $1 million a year in salary and benefits at the time and preparing to receive a nearly $300,000 annual state pension.

The 14-member LVCVA board approved his $455,000 separation package in August 2018, which included the $15,000-a-month consulting contract.

But a year later, the board canceled the contract after Ralenkotte­r and other former convention authority executives were charged in the alleged gift card theft.

Criminal case

The criminal investigat­ion was prompted by Review-journal stories in 2018 disclosing audit results that showed widespread misuse of the Southwest gift cards. The agency could not account for $50,000 of the $90,000 in purchased Southwest cards, the audit found.

The audit was ordered amid the newspaper’s investigat­ion that revealed wasteful spending and poor board oversight of the convention authority.

In Ralenkotte­r’s ethics case, he agreed to pay a $5,000 fine for “improper use of LVCVA property for a personal purpose” and another $16,906 fine for the value of the gift cards used in his personal travel. He

The agreement praises Ralenkotte­r for cooperatin­g with the commission’s investigat­ion, as well as auditors hired by the LVCVA.

“However,” it also states, “these mitigating factors are offset by the seriousnes­s of the conduct when measured against the public’s trust that public officers will not use their public position or influence to acquire economic opportunit­ies or advantages for themselves that are not available to the general public.” also agreed to pay the commission $2,500 for his ethical misconduct in the consulting contract negotiatio­ns. He has until Dec. 31, 2021, to pay the entire $24,406.

The agreement praises Ralenkotte­r for cooperatin­g with the commission’s investigat­ion, as well as auditors hired by the LVCVA. It also states that Ralenkotte­r publicly accepted responsibi­lity for his misconduct and maintained that it was not intentiona­l.

“However,” the agreement states, “these mitigating factors are offset by the seriousnes­s of the conduct when measured against the public’s trust that public officers will not use their public position or influence to acquire economic opportunit­ies or advantages for themselves that are not available to the general public.”

The Review-journal is owned by the family of Las Vegas Sands Corp. Chairman and CEO Sheldon Adelson. Las Vegas Sands Corp. operates the Sands Expo & Convention Center, which competes with the LVCVA-OPerated Las Vegas Convention Center.

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Rossi Ralenkotte­r

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