Los Angeles Times

Casino deal looks like a win for Flynt

Adult entertainm­ent mogul gets Gardena to approve economic package he sought.

- By Jason Song jason.song@latimes.com

Larry Flynt won a highstakes gamble with the city of Gardena over the future of the the city’s oldest casino after the City Council voted Wednesday night to give the adult entertainm­ent mogul the economic package he sought for his newly acquired business.

Flynt bought the gaming license for the former Normandie Casino on Rosecrans Avenue this month for an undisclose­d price. Flynt, who already owns the nearby Hustler Casino, said he planned to spend at least $60 million over the next four years to renovate the aging facility, which he renamed Larry Flynt’s Lucky Lady Casino.

But Flynt threatened to shut down the casino and sell the license after the City Council voted last week to grant tax breaks to the Lucky Lady only if Flynt paid the city at least $800,000 a month from both casinos.

Previously, casinos have had to contribute 12% of their monthly gross revenues to the city. In 2014, the Hustler and Normandie, the only two casinos in Gardena, paid the city about $9.5 million. The minimum monthly payments of $800,000 a month would amount to $9.6 million a year.

Evan Roosevelt, a spokesman for the Flynt Management Group, said the objection “wasn’t the amount, it was the monthly guarantee.”

After the meeting, Flynt said he intended to campaign against City Council members in the next election, according to the Daily Breeze. (The seat held by Paul Tanaka, the former L.A. County undersheri­ff recently sentenced to five years in federal prison for his role in obstructin­g an FBI investigat­ion into deputy jail abuses, is already empty and will be filled via a special election or council appointmen­t.)

The Gardena council held another meeting Wednesday night and unanimousl­y approved a new economic package, which does not include the $800,000 monthly minimum stipulatio­n.

The new casino had been closed since Monday while undergoing small modificati­ons but could open as early as Friday, Roosevelt said.

Members of the City Council could not be reached for comment, and City Manager Mitch Lansdell did not return a call for comment.

The Normandie Casino had been owned by the Miller family since 1947, but several members pleaded guilty this year to shielding several high-rollers from federal reporting requiremen­ts and were ordered to sell the casino.

The Normandie Casino had experience­d financial difficulty, especially after the Hustler opened in 2000. Gardena officials would not say how much each casino paid individual­ly, but a recent report noted that “the Normandie Club has continued to struggle financiall­y, with some periods of recovery.”

This isn’t the first time Flynt has been at odds with elected officials. He once offered a $1-million payment to anyone who came forward with evidence of adultery by a member of Congress or top government official.

 ?? Marcus Yam Los Angeles Times ?? LARRY FLYNT bought the gaming license for the former Normandie Casino on Rosecrans Avenue this month for an undisclose­d price.
Marcus Yam Los Angeles Times LARRY FLYNT bought the gaming license for the former Normandie Casino on Rosecrans Avenue this month for an undisclose­d price.

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