The Daily Courier

Casino executive resigns after flying to Yukon for vaccine

- By The Canadian Press

TORONTO — Officials with the Yukon government have confirmed the identities of a couple from Vancouver who allegedly travelled to a remote community last week to receive doses of COVID19 vaccine amid media reports that the former president of the Great Canadian Gaming Corp. was one of those charged with breaching the territory's Civil Emergency Measures Act.

Tickets filed with a court registry in Whitehorse last Thursday show 55-yearold Rodney Baker and Ekaterina Baker, who is 32, were each charged with one count of failing to self-isolate for 14 days and one count of failing to act in a manner consistent with their declaratio­ns upon arriving in Yukon.

The tickets were issued on Thursday under Yukon's Civil Emergency Measures Act and both face fines of $1,000, plus fees.

The allegation­s against them have not been proven in court and the tickets indicate the couple can challenge them.

Great Canadian Gaming Corp. president and chief executive Rodney Baker resigned on Sunday and media reports say he is the same person charged in Whitehorse.

Rodney Baker and Ekaterina Baker could not be reached for comment and The Canadian Press could not independen­tly confirm their identities, including that they are married and that Ekaterina is an actress.

Great Canadian Gaming Corp. spokesman Chuck Keeling says in a statement that the company does not comment on personnel matters.

The statement also says the company complies with guidelines from public health authoritie­s in all the jurisdicti­ons where it operates.

“Our overriding focus as a company is doing everything we can to contribute to the containmen­t of COVID-19,” it says.

Great Canadian owns the Playtime Casino in Kelowna and Cascades Casino in Penticton.

Yukon officials could only confirm that the two people charged in Whitehorse had travelled to the small community of Beaver Creek near the border with Alaska.

Yukon Community Services Minister John Streicker said Friday the couple who allegedly chartered a plane to Beaver Creek posed as visiting workers and received shots of COVID-19 vaccine at a mobile clinic.

Territoria­l enforcemen­t officers received a call about the pair who were later intercepte­d at the Whitehorse airport trying to leave Yukon, he said.

Streicker said he was outraged by their actions and members of White River First Nation in Beaver Creek felt violated.

In a statement, White River Chief Angela Demit said the unwanted visitors put elders and vulnerable people at risk for selfish purposes.

“We implore all Canadians to respect the vaccinatio­n rollout process and to not take similar actions.”

White River was prioritize­d to receive vaccine because of its remoteness, elderly population and limited access to health care, Demit added.

Great Canadian said in a statement released Monday that its former CEO has also resigned as a member of the company's board of directors.

It said Terrance Doyle, president of strategic growth and chief compliance officer, has been appointed as interim chief executive.

The company is in the middle of being acquired by a fund affiliated with Apollo Global Management Inc.

Great Canadian shareholde­rs voted to approval the deal late last year.

The Supreme Court of British Columbia has also signed off on the investment fund’s takeover offer.

The gaming company is expected to be delisted from the Toronto Stock Exchange after the deal is finalized in the second quarter of 2021, as long as regulatory and closing conditions come through.

 ?? Facebook ?? Rodney Baker and Ekaterina Baker allegedly flew to Beaver Creek, Yukon, to get a COVID-19 vaccine. He has since resigned from Great Canadian Gaming Corp.
Facebook Rodney Baker and Ekaterina Baker allegedly flew to Beaver Creek, Yukon, to get a COVID-19 vaccine. He has since resigned from Great Canadian Gaming Corp.

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