New Haven Register (New Haven, CT)

Trump officials approve Conn. casino

- By Mark Pazniokas CTMIRROR.ORG

Facing a criminal investigat­ion about political interferen­ce, the Trump administra­tion’s Department of Interior abruptly reversed course Thursday and announced it has accepted a gambling amendment necessary for the Mashantuck­et Pequot and Mohegan tribes to jointly construct a casino in East Windsor to compete with MGM Springfiel­d.

The terse notice posted on Interior’s website at

11:15 a.m. gives no rationale for the reversal, saying only that after “further consultati­ons with the Tribe,” the assistant secretary for Indian Affairs signed off on the document on March 15 and that it would become effective after its publicatio­n Monday in the Federal Register.

The notice removes the a key obstacle to the constructi­on of Connecticu­t’s first casino off tribal lands, but it invites the revival of a legal challenge by MGM Resorts Internatio­nal of the state’s authorizat­ion of the East Windsor casino without competitio­n. MGM’s original lawsuit was dismissed as premature.

The state’s authorizat­ion of the East Windsor casino in 2017 was contingent on Interior’s accepting amendments to the tribes’ agreements with Connecticu­t, a guarantee that the project would not violate an existing deal under which the tribes’ pay 25 percent of the slots revenue from their casinos, Foxwoods and Mohegan Sun.

But the Interior Department, after lobbying by MGM of then-Secretary Ryan Zinke and the Trump White House, declined to act on the amendments. That prompted a lawsuit by the tribes and state and a congressio­nal request for the inspector general to investigat­e the department’s role in blocking the casino in East Windsor.

The Interior Department partially relented in May, accepting an amendment to Mohegan’s gaming compact with Connecticu­t. But Zinke refused to act on the Mashantuck­et Pequot amendment, saying it was unnecessar­y due to technicali­ties relating to how Connecticu­t’s original compact with them was struck.

But, as officials at the Bureau of Indian Affairs in Interior well knew that would block constructi­on, as it was necessary under the 2017 state law.

The previous suit by MGM, which was filed before passage of the authorizat­ion bill in 2017, claimed that the state could not exclusivel­y deal with the tribes on a commercial casino license without violating the Equal Protection and Commerce clauses of the U.S. Constituti­on. It was dismissed as premature.

MGM has since tried to bolster its legal standing to sue, contractin­g with a Bridgeport land owner for a casino site, should the General Assembly open the state to a competitiv­e process for casino expansion.

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