Sentinel & Enterprise

Crackdown on overcrowdi­ng launched at Everett casino

- By Colin A. Young

At least eight groups have been evicted from Encore Boston Harbor and fined for violating prohibitio­ns on large gatherings in hotel rooms and other guests have opted to cancel their reservatio­ns when told at the front desk that the casino would strictly enforce rules of its own that are more strict than the state limits, gaming regulators said Thursday.

The Massachuse­tts Gaming Commission got a full rundown of the events at the Everett resort casino late on Saturday, Aug. 16 and into the early hours of Sunday, Aug. 17, when more than 110 mostly-unmasked people were kicked out of a suite at 3 a.m., triggering a disorderly conduct charge for the man who booked the suite and a notice of non-compliance for the casino.

Under Gov. Charlie Baker’s limit, no indoor gathering can exceed 25 people. Encore is now enforcing its own limit on gathering limits for guests in its hotel — no more than four people to a hotel room and no more than 10 people allowed in a suite — by making violators subject to a fine in the range of $3,000, commission officials said.

“In light of recent events at Encore Boston Harbor, I wish to remind all that the MGC’s jurisdicti­on and regulatory responsibi­lities extend to the entire gaming establishm­ent, beyond the gaming floor. It’s imperative that we take all necessary steps to enforce social distancing and all other COVID-19-related measures as outlined in the reopening safety guidelines approved by the Gaming Commission,” Chairwoman Cathy JuddStein said.

She added, “To put it plainly, the stakes are too high for anything but full compliance with those safety standards.” Commission­ers did not take action against Encore on Thursday, but regulatory staff explained the timeline of the well-publicized incident and the steps that the commission and casino have taken since then.

Interim Executive Director Karen Wells said a man who booked the suite on Aug. 16 and another person began “frequently” escorting small groups of people from the lobby up to the suite beginning at around 6:30 p.m. By midnight, hotel management had received a call from a person who said they saw a post on Instagram that showed more than 100 people in an Encore Boston Harbor suite, she said.

About 15 minutes later, a hotel butler told the front desk that he had just delivered something to the suite and saw more than 30 people inside.

The butler told the desk “to clear up the party for violating the maximum hotel occupancy,” Wells said. At 12:30 a.m., the front desk called the suite to notify the guests of the occupancy limit and to give them 15 minutes to clear out the suite.

At that time, Wells said that 36 people left the suite.

There was a reported disturbanc­e at about 3 a.m., Wells said, which got Encore security and the Massachuse­tts State Police Gaming Enforcemen­t Unit to respond. That’s when more than 110 people, most of them not wearing a mask or facecoveri­ng, were kicked out of the suite, Wells said. The 3 a.m. disturbanc­e was the first time the casino’s security team became aware of the situation that the front desk dealt with.

An investigat­ion into the situation led to a notice of non-compliance with required changes to Encore last week, Wells said. JuddStein highlighte­d that while commission­ers and regulators generally agreed that Encore was taking the situation seriously and handling it appropriat­ely, “this is a very serious step.”

“What was most egregious in this instance was not simply the actions of the public ... but what was egregious here for me was that that happened and our licensee got notice over three hours and at least one employee, the butler, did exactly the right thing and went and notified his fellow employees to have action taken,” she said. The chairwoman added that Encore and the state’s other gaming licensees need to “make sure they are hearing their employees when they hear reports of instances that put others at harm.”

Among the commission’s requiremen­ts for Encore was that the casino clearly communicat­es the state limits and the casino’s own restrictio­ns to guests, that the company train employees to identify red flags like frequent entries or exits from a room and raise those to higherups, and that security staff more closely monitor hotel floors and the elevator lobbies to make sure only registered guests are accessing hotel rooms.

“This kind of flouting of these safety measures is unacceptab­le to the property and they have put significan­t action and resources behind it,” Investigat­ions and Enforcemen­t Bureau Deputy Director Loretta Lillios said, adding that the casino had already begun to implement many of the commission’s requiremen­ts by the time the commission sent the notice of non-compliance.

The more explicit communicat­ion of the rules and fines, as well as increased monitoring of social media for chatter about parties at the casino, has deterred others, Lillios and IEB Assistant Director Bruce Band.

“There was a big change at Encore over this past weekend,” Band said. ”

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 ?? PAUL CONNORS / BOSTON HERALD ?? Encore Boston Harbor casino in Everett.
PAUL CONNORS / BOSTON HERALD Encore Boston Harbor casino in Everett.

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