Los Angeles Times

Casino loses big to government

Operators of the Normandie will pay $2.4 million for hiding high rollers’ winnings.

- By Joseph Serna joseph.serna@latimes.com Twitter: @JosephSern­a

The operators of one of Southern California’s oldest casinos have been ordered to pay a $1-million fine and forfeit an additional $1.4 million for cash transactio­ns it failed to report to the government, federal prosecutor­s announced Wednesday.

In January, the Normandie Casino in Gardena pleaded guilty to violating the Bank Secrecy Act by shielding several high rollers from federal reporting requiremen­ts.

The casino failed to properly record and report a series of large-scale cash transactio­ns in 2013, according to documents. In one sixweek period that year, a single high roller won more than $1 million from another gambler, and the casino conspired to shield the high roller’s identity, according to the documents.

“This sentence demonstrat­es the government’s ability to enforce the antimoney laundering laws used to ensure that certain high rollers do not remain below the radar,” Anthony J. Orlando, acting special agent in charge of the Internal Revenue Service’s criminal investigat­ions, said in a statement. “In partnershi­p with the U.S. attorney’s office, [the agency] will continue to protect the United States financial system through the investigat­ion and prosecutio­n of individual­s and organizati­ons that attempt to launder their criminally derived proceeds.”

The casino, which opened on Rosecrans Avenue in the 1940s, also pleaded guilty to failing to maintain an effective program against money laundering.

Federal law requires casinos to record the identities, addresses, Social Security numbers and taxpayer informatio­n of any gambler who cashes out more than $10,000 in winnings.

“The Normandie has cooperated with the government to resolve this case in a positive way that allows the club to move forward from this investigat­ion and to continue doing business as it has for the past 70 years, as the best gambling establishm­ent in Southern California,” Mark Werksman, the attorney representi­ng the casino, said in January after the casino’s guilty plea.

The casino staff helped its most valued players conceal their winnings by breaking up large transactio­ns into smaller amounts, or by listing the names of “independen­t gaming promoters,” rather than the actual gamblers, when filing reports with the U.S. Treasury, documents show.

Federal prosecutor­s also accused the casino of failing to scrutinize cash transactio­ns that it “had reason to suspect” were tantamount to money laundering.

“The United States has an array of anti-money laundering statutes designed to prevent criminals from using the American financial system to launder the large sums of cash generated by illegal activity such as organized crime, drug traffickin­g and human traffickin­g,” U.S. Atty. Eileen M. Decker said in a statement. “Casinos and card rooms such as Normandie are cashintens­ive businesses that are particular­ly attractive for use by criminals seeking to launder their ill-gotten gains, so they must be vigilant in meeting their obligation­s under those laws.”

In recent decades, the casino has lost many of its players to newer facilities such as the Hollywood Park Casino in Inglewood. The Commerce Casino also has become popular with Los Angeles-area poker profession­als who have made their name on the national circuit in recent years.

In July, adult entertainm­ent mogul Larry Flynt purchased the Normandie and reopened it as Larry Flynt’s Lucky Lady Casino.

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