Los Angeles Times

Hotelier accused of misconduct

Wynn Resorts stock falls after report that CEO harassed women.

- By Christophe­r Palmeri Palmeri writes for Bloomberg.

Wynn Resorts Ltd. faced calls Friday to oust or investigat­e Steve Wynn, the company’s founder, chairman and chief executive, over allegation­s that he sexually harassed or pressured women who work for him.

Wynn investor Richard “Trip” Miller, managing partner of Gullane Capital Partners, recommende­d an outside investigat­ion, similar to six years ago when Wynn Resorts hired former FBI chief Louis Freeh to investigat­e claims that company co-founder Kazuo Okada had bribed foreign casino officials. As a result of that report, Wynn Resorts unilateral­ly bought out Okada’s shares.

“These are darn serious allegation­s,” said Miller, whose company is based in Memphis, Tenn. “We would welcome someone like that coming back and doing a full investigat­ion.”

Wynn, who serves as finance chairman for the Republican National Committee, paid $7.5 million to settle claims brought by a former manicurist at his resort who said the executive pressured her to have sex with him, the Wall Street Journal reported Friday. Wynn coerced massage therapists to perform sex acts for $1,000 tips, and others at the spa created fictitious appointmen­ts to avoid contact with him, said the newspaper, which contacted more than 150 people who worked with the casino magnate.

Wynn, 76, denied the allegation­s. “The idea that I ever assaulted any woman is prepostero­us,” he told the Journal.

In response to the allegation­s, Wynn Resorts pointed to Wynn’s ex-wife, Elaine Wynn, accusing her of running a smear campaign “in an attempt to pressure a revised divorce settlement from him.” An attorney for Elaine Wynn told the Journal that she did not instigate Friday’s report.

The legal settlement detailed by the Journal has become a major focus of a lawsuit between Steve Wynn and Elaine Wynn, who is seeking to gain control of her 9% stake in the casino giant. Steve Wynn has long sought to maintain his hold over the company because he lost his previous business, Mirage Resorts, to an unsolicite­d bid from mogul Kirk Kerkorian.

The Republican National Committee — which urged the Democratic National Committee last year to return campaign donations from movie mogul Harvey Weinstein when Weinstein was accused of sexual assault — did not respond to a request for comment.

Wynn Resorts shares slumped 10.1% on Friday, their biggest decline since December 2016. Even with the drop, they’re still up nearly 89% over the last 12 months.

“We’re aware of the situation and reviewing the informatio­n,” Becky Harris, chairwoman of the Nevada Gaming Control Board, said in a statement. The board is the chief regulator of casinos in the state.

In Massachuse­tts, where Wynn Resorts is building a $2.4-billion Boston Harbor casino project, regulators also plan to review the allegation­s. The Massachuse­tts Gaming Commission is “taking very seriously the troubling allegation­s detailed in the Wall Street Journal article,” the agency said in a statement.

Nita Chaudhary, cofounder of the women’s advocacy group UltraViole­t, called on the board of the casino company to fire Wynn and for the Republican National Committee to remove him as finance chair.

“Steve Wynn needs to go,” Chaudhary said in a statement. “He is a predator of the worst kind who used his position of power to sexually coerce his female employees.”

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