Los Angeles Times

Investors sue Las Vegas hotel

They put in $545,000 each but never got the promised green cards, the lawsuit says.

- By Hugo Martin hugo.martin@latimes.com Twitter: @hugomartin

Sixty Chinese say they invested $545,000 each in SLS Las Vegas but never received green cards.

Sixty Chinese investors who were promised U.S. permanent resident cards for investing in the SLS Las Vegas hotel and casino have sued the developers of the project, saying they never received the promised green cards.

The lawsuit, filed in Los Angeles County Superior Court last month, claims the investors put in $545,000 each but were the victims of a conspiracy to use their money on a project that opened in 2014 but has yet to be profitable.

“Once the SLS Hotel opened, it has allegedly not turned a profit from day one and is currently on the verge of bankruptcy,” the lawsuit says.

The lawsuit names several developers and managers of the project, including San Francisco-based Stockbridg­e Capital Group, SBE Entertainm­ent, the hospitalit­y company led by Sam Nazarian, and Alhambra immigratio­n consulting firm Henry Global Consulting.

Stockbridg­e Capital is in the process of selling the hotel project to Meruelo Group, a holding company with interests in banking, constructi­on, hospitalit­y and real estate.

In a statement, Stockbridg­e Capital said it “is aware of recent litigation by certain alleged minority investors in the company’s second lien lenders and it believes such litigation is without merit. The company does not expect the litigation will deter the sale.”

A spokesman for Nazarian declined to comment. Representa­tives for Henry Global Consulting could not be reached for comment.

The lawsuit alleges that the paperwork signed by the investors to participat­e in the visa program, known as EB-5, was in English and that most of the investors don’t speak English. The suit says the investors were led to believe that they would get their permanent resident cards within 30 months but none has received a permanent resident card and only some now have temporary resident cards.

The lawsuit also contends that the sale of the hotel to the Meruelo Group would mean the investors would be repaid and that would violate a requiremen­t of the EB-5 program that calls for a “sustained” investment in the U.S. Each investment must also create at least 10 full-time jobs.

“To make matters worse, the SLS Hotel revenue was less than 50% of what was projected so the project had not created sufficient jobs to allow all investors, including some of the plaintiffs, to get green cards,” the lawsuit says.

 ?? Mark Boster Los Angeles Times ?? TRAFFIC flows past the SLS Las Vegas, which opened in 2014 and is in the process of being sold.
Mark Boster Los Angeles Times TRAFFIC flows past the SLS Las Vegas, which opened in 2014 and is in the process of being sold.

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