The Day

Ruling is blow to third casino

Federal judge: State, Mashantuck­ets can’t compel Interior to OK compact changes

- By MARK PAZNIOKAS

A federal judge dealt a significan­t blow over the weekend to the ability of the Mashantuck­et Pequot and Mohegan tribal nations to jointly build a casino in East Windsor that would compete with MGM Resorts’ new casino in nearby Springfiel­d.

In a 58-page decision filed Saturday, Judge Rudolph Contreras of the U.S. District Court of the District of Columbia ruled that Connecticu­t and the Mashantuck­et Pequots have no legal standing to compel Department of the Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke to accept revisions to the state’s existing gambling agreement with the tribe.

Connecticu­t’s authorizat­ion of the East Windsor casino in 2017 was contingent on Interior accepting the revisions as a means to guarantee the new project would not jeopardize the state’s current revenue sharing deal with the two tribal casinos, Foxwoods and Mohegan Sun. Without Zinke’s approval, the East Windsor project is blocked indefinite­ly.

Contreras approved the federal government’s motion to dismiss the lawsuit by Connecticu­t and the tribe, and he granted MGM the right to intervene if the state and tribe appeal his decision.

“The thorough and unambiguou­s federal court ruling can only be seen as a clear rejection of the Tribes’ insistent efforts to obtain a no-bid commercial casino license in Connecticu­t,” MGM said in a statement Sunday night. “It has become increasing­ly apparent that the Tribes’ promises of legal victory, no matter how often they are repeated, prove hollow.”

The tribes’ spokesman could not be reached for comment.

The state attorney general’s office said, “We are disappoint­ed with the Court’s ruling, which we are continuing to review as we evaluate possible next steps.”

With lobbying and litigation, MGM and the tribes have been fighting for years in Connecticu­t and Washington over casino expansion. The East Windsor casino, which would be the first in the state off tribal lands, was conceived by the tribes as a way to blunt the loss of market share to Springfiel­d, just a dozen miles away.

A revenue sharing deal struck in the early 1990s complicate­s any new gambling in the state. In return for 25 percent of the gross slots revenue at Foxwoods and Mohegan Sun, the state granted the tribal owners exclusive rights to all forms of casino gambling — meaning open competitio­n for a new casino could cost the state millions.

The revenue-sharing deal produced a high of $430 million for the state in 2007, but revenues dropped in the face of new competitio­n in New York and Rhode Island to $270 million in 2017. With MGM Springfiel­d opening in August and a second one under constructi­on outside Boston, the slots revenue is projected to drop precipitou­sly.

Failing to bock the East Windsor authorizat­ion at the General Assembly, MGM has lobbied Interior, arguing that it has no obligation under IGRA, the Indian Gaming Regulatory Act, to facilitate a commercial casino off tribal lands, even if owned by federally recognized tribes.

It was Connecticu­t that put Interior into the decision process, not IGRA, the federal government argued.

“Because the Court concludes that the IGRA does not require the Secretary to take the steps asserted by Plaintiffs, the Court must consider Defendants’ argument that Plaintiffs have failed to state claims upon which relief may be granted,” the judge wrote.

When Interior did not act on the revisions to the state’s gambling agreements with the two tribes, the state and tribes sued in the federal court. Members of the state’s congressio­nal delegation also sought an investigat­ion by the Inspector General about whether the department was improperly influenced by MGM.

Interior seemed to relent in May, accepting revisions to the Mohegans’ gambling compact with Connecticu­t. “We are pleased that the department is taking this step and we expect similar action on the Mashantuck­et Pequot tribal amendments in the very near future,” Andrew Doba, a spokesman for the tribes’ joint venture, said at the time.

But it turned out Interior had no such intent.

For technical reasons, Interior had less discretion in dealing with the Mohegan revisions. The Mohegans conduct their gambling operations under a negotiated state-tribal compact. Revisions to those compacts must be accepted or rejected within strict time periods.

But the Pequots, whose federal recognitio­n came first, were unable to negotiate a compact with the state. Its deal with the state came after a federal lawsuit and was negotiated under the alternativ­e terms using what are called “secretaria­l procedures.” The court said Interior is under no obligation to act on revisions to an agreement adopted vs secretaria­l procedures.

Late last year, MGM created a new complicati­on, striking a deal with a Bridgeport property owner to build a $650 million gambling resort on the city’s waterfront. The deal is contingent on the General Assembly opening Connecticu­t to casino competitio­n, ending its exclusivit­y deal with the tribes.

MGM says it could match or exceed the benefits of the tribal deal with a commercial casino.

“Connecticu­t residents are best served by the state spending less time in court and more time on real opportunit­ies to maximize economic developmen­t and job creation,” MGM said Sunday. “That’s why each passing month makes it more obvious that the most productive path forward for Connecticu­t is to pass legislatio­n calling for competitiv­e bids on any new commercial casino in the state, and to get started on that process.”

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