The Guardian Australia

Crown casino accused of tampering with pokies as Andrew Wilkie drops bombshell

- Anne Davies

Crown casino deliberate­ly tampered with poker machines, allowed cannabis to be smoked in gaming rooms and avoided money laundering rules, whistleblo­wers have alleged in a video statement tabled in federal parliament.

The video evidence was collected by independen­t MP Andrew Wilkie and Senator Nick Xenophon as part of their “PokieLeaks” campaign to expose illicit practices in the pokies industry. The explosive allegation­s of misconduct by whistleblo­wer staff could raise questions of Crown’s fitness to hold a casino licence.

The allegation­s of tampering were denied by Crown Resorts Ltd in a statement to the ASX on Wednesday. The company called on Wilkie to hand all material he had to the authoritie­s.

Three staff appear on the video, which has been heavily altered to disguise their identity. One describes himself as a technician and another as a gaming attendant.

They make a number of allegation­s including that staff were told to use other people’s IDs to avoid reporting amounts over $10,000.

Any transactio­ns over $10,000 are required to be declared to Austrac, which monitors cash transactio­ns to detect money laundering and illicit activities.

Staff also alleged that marijuana was smoked daily in the Teak Room, the lowest of the VIP gaming rooms, and that they had been told to turn a blind eye to domestic violence by internatio­nal gamblers so they could continue gambling.

One staff member also alleged that Crown management had them “shave down” buttons on gaming machines to allow illegal continuous play on the machines.

Under Victoria’s rules governing poker machines, the practice of allowing a machine to spin without a user pressing a button for each spin is banned.

But staff alleged they were instructed to use tools to shave down buttons on new machines to create space for punters to wedge something in the button, so it could be held in place and keep the machine playing without buttons being pressed.

“The best tool was a Leatherman. I used a file,” one of the whistleblo­wers said on the video.

Wilkie said in a statement to media: “Today very serious allegation­s have been levelled at the poker machine industry.

“Although the allegation­s focus on Crown in Melbourne, they could also suggest a broader pattern of behaviour in the poker machine industry, which would obviously have grave implicatio­ns for people right around Australia.

“If members and senators, law enforcemen­t and regulatory agencies, and the media, scrutinise the video record of the whistleblo­wers’ testimony, I’m sure they’ll agree that the claims warrant an immediate and strong response.”

Wilkie tabled the allegation­s, including a 30-minute recorded interview with the three whistleblo­wers, in what is believed to be the first case of video evidence being tabled in federal parliament.

The Australian Greens, senator Jacqui Lambie, and the Nick Xenophon Team are now pushing for a Senate inquiry into the regulation of Australia’s casino industry.

The Greens leader, Richard Di Natale, said Crown should stop operating its poker machines until a “full and independen­t” audit had occurred.

Victorian Greens MP Colleen Hartland has asked the Victorian ombudsman to investigat­e the Victorian Commission for Gambling and Liquor Regulation, which has responsibi­lity for regulating poker machines.

Jennifer Kanis, a Maurice Blackburn lawyer, who is heading a pro bono case against Crown casino and Aristocrat Technologi­es Australia seeking to draw attention to misleading and deceptive conduct by poker machine manufactur­ers and venues, said the expose had brought to light significan­t new material about alleged misconduct within the industry.

The Victorian government began its five-yearly review of Crown casino’s licence in August.

Crown said it rejected the allegation­s by Wilkie concerning the improper manipulati­on of poker machines and other illegal or improper conduct at Crown casino in Melbourne.

“Crown calls on Mr Wilkie to immediatel­y provide to the relevant authoritie­s all informatio­n relating to the matters alleged,” the brief statement to the ASX said.

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