Las Vegas Review-Journal

Police, owners told to cooperate

Company seeks records seized during raid

- By JEFF GERMAN LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL

A District Court judge ordered Las Vegas police and the closed Club Paradise on Wednesday to work out difference­s that will let the longtime topless club obtain readable copies of key computer evidence seized in a June 6 raid.

The evidence includes business and customer records on hard drives the club needs to reopen, according to club lawyers Dominic Gentile and Vincent Savarese.

Club Paradise, operating for two decades in the shadow of the Hard Rock Hotel on Paradise Road, was one of the busiest and longest-running strip clubs in Las Vegas until it shut down 47 days ago. It went dark after police and IRS agents executed search warrants looking for evidence of credit card fraud by a handful of dancers and managers.

This kind of crime is not common in the lucrative topless club business here, according to people close to the Club Paradise investigat­ion.

Gentile told District Judge James Bixler on Wednesday that the nightclub, which he believes is not a target of the investigat­ion, has lost a total of $645,600 since the police raid. That’s roughly $13,700 a day.

Some employees have been forced to seek unemployme­nt compensati­on, but the club doesn’t have its employment records to substantia­te their claims with the state, Gentile said.

Attorney Kathleen Bliss, who represents the Metropolit­an Police Department, said the department has turned over copies of the confiscate­d hard drives to Club Paradise, but Gentile argued there was no retrievabl­e data on the copies.

“All I need is to be able to get the data back in a form that would permit the club to reopen,” Gentile said.

Bixler ordered the two sides to arrange a meeting of their informatio­n technology experts to figure out a way to retrieve the data on the hard drives and

Warrant sought array of records

report back to him Aug. 13.

Gentile said he was told detectives have not submitted a case for prosecutio­n to the district attorney’s office, but employees were given letters indicating they were grand jury targets.

Las Vegas Review-Journal columnist John L. Smith first reported in June that police and IRS agents were investigat­ing the credit card fraud allegation­s involving the dancers. Customers were alleged to have been overcharge­d thousands of dollars and some may have been drugged in the credit scheme, Smith wrote.

Gentile and Savarese said in court papers they learned from employees interviewe­d by police that the investigat­ion was focusing on two to three dancers, who were independen­t contractor­s, and three male managers who resigned a week before police showed up at the club. The managers stepped down rather than take polygraphs about a $50,000 theft from a safe at the club, the lawyers said.

Police executed a broad search warrant at Club Paradise on June 6 that sought records of dealings with seven customers who may have been affected. Most of these customers were from out of town and several were regarded as very wealthy.

Those close to the investigat­ion said customers angry about credit card overcharge­s reported the irregulari­ties to law enforcemen­t authoritie­s.

The search warrant also sought an array of business records, bank statements, credit card accounts, drugs and drug parapherna­lia, computers and cellphones and other personal property belonging to 21 dancers and employees. Contact Jeff German at jgerman@reviewjour­nal.com or 702-380-8135. Follow @JGermanRJ on Twitter.

 ?? ERIK VERDUZCO/ LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL ?? Club Paradise remains closed as Las Vegas police investigat­e allegation­s of credit card fraud at the club.
ERIK VERDUZCO/ LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL Club Paradise remains closed as Las Vegas police investigat­e allegation­s of credit card fraud at the club.

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