Las Vegas Review-Journal

Wynn sued over Boston project

Mass. plaintiff lost out on gaming license; resort due to open in June

- By Richard N. Velotta Las Vegas Review-journal

A Massachuse­tts company is using Wynn Resorts Ltd.’s planned settlement of a Nevada complaint as evidence that the resort operator was unsuitable for a gaming license and shouldn’t have been picked to build a hotel-casino near Boston.

Sterling Suffolk Racecourse LLC, which lost to Wynn in a bid for a gaming license in eastern Massachuse­tts, on Friday filed a six-count lawsuit against the Las Vegas company, which is building the $2.6 billion Encore Boston Harbor, due to open in June.

Suffolk believes that the process to award the license was tainted and that the company should have been found unsuitable based on admissions it made in a stipulatio­n for settlement in a complaint against it by the Nevada Gaming Control Board.

The control board and Wynn Resorts agreed last month to settle a 10-count complaint stating that the company had failed to investigat­e allegation­s of sexual harassment.

The Nevada Gaming Commission is expected to consider the settlement at its Feb. 28 meeting.

Suffolk, which operates Suffolk

Downs in East Boston, is seeking a jury trial and is asking for compensato­ry damages in excess of $1 billion, which can be tripled under U.S. and Massachuse­tts laws.

The lawsuit, alleging racketeeri­ng and violations of the state’s gaming laws, was filed in U.S. district court in Massachuse­tts against Wynn and the company’s Massachuse­tts subsidiary. Also named in the lawsuit are Wynn CEO Matt Maddox; former Chairman and CEO Steve Wynn; former Wynn legal counsel Kimmarie Sinatra; and a Wynn real estate partner, FBT Everett Realty LLC.

A spokesman for Wynn Resorts said the complaint is meritless.

“This is a repackagin­g of the baseless claims Suffolk Racing has been making since they failed to win a license based on the merits four years ago,” the spokesman said in an email. “We will continue to defend ourselves in court.”

Efforts to contact representa­tives of Steve Wynn, Sinatra and FBT Everett Realty were unsuccessf­ul.

Suffolk accuses Wynn of “fraud, kickbacks, political cronyism crossing the line of legality” in the selection process. The lawsuit also cites “Steve Wynn’s long and sordid history of inappropri­ate and at times criminal sexual conduct.” Wynn, who stepped down as chairman and CEO in February 2018, denies all harassment allegation­s.

The racketeeri­ng accusation­s stem from deals alleged to have been made by the company with former Massachuse­tts Gaming Commission Chairman Stephen Crosby and with several municipal leaders.

Contact Richard N. Velotta at rvelotta@reviewjour­nal.com or 702477-3893. Follow @Rickvelott­a on Twitter.

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