The Gambler Who Blew $127 Million

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LAS VEGAS -- During a year-long gambling binge at the Caesars Palace and Rio casinos in 2007, Terrance Watanabe managed to lose nearly $127 million.
The run is believed to be one of the biggest losing streaks by an individual in Las Vegas history. It devoured much of Mr. Watanabe's personal fortune, he says, which he built up over more than two decades running his family's party-favor import business in Omaha, Neb. It also benefitted the two casinos' parent company, Harrah's Entertainment Inc., which derived about 5.6% of its Las Vegas gambling revenue from Mr. Watanabe that year.

Today, Mr. Watanabe and Harrah's are fighting over another issue: whether the casino company bears some of the responsibility for his losses.
In a civil suit filed in Clark County District Court last month, Mr. Watanabe, 52 years old, says casino staff routinely plied him with liquor and pain medication as part of a systematic plan to keep him gambling.
Nevada's Gaming Control Board has opened a separate investigation into whether Harrah's violated gambling regulations, based on allegations made by Mr. Watanabe.

In April, the Clark County District Attorney's office charged Mr. Watanabe with four felony counts in district court for intent to defraud and steal from Harrah's, stemming from $14.7 million that the casino says it extended to him as credit, and that he lost. Although Mr. Watanabe has paid nearly $112 million to Harrah's, he has refused to pay the rest. He denies the charges, alleging that the casino reneged on promises to give him cash back on some losses, and encouraged him to gamble while intoxicated. If convicted, Mr. Watanabe faces up to 28 years in prison.

Jan Jones, Harrah's senior vice president for communications and government relations, says Mr. Watanabe's civil suit and his defense against the criminal charges are attempts to get out of paying a debt and to avoid accepting responsibility for his own actions. "Mr. Watanabe is a criminal defendant who faces imprisonment," Ms. Jones says. "All of his statements need to be seen in that light."

Several former and current Harrah's employees say their managers told them to let Mr. Watanabe continue betting while he was visibly intoxicated, even though casino rules and state law stipulate that anyone who is clearly drunk shouldn't be allowed to gamble. These employees say they were afraid they would be fired if they did anything to discourage Mr. Watanabe from gambling at the casinos.

Ms. Jones says company policy is to ask intoxicated gamblers to refrain from gambling. She says Harrah's has conducted an internal investigation into how its staff treated Mr. Watanabe but declined to release details because of the ongoing litigation.
Mr. Watanabe declined to be interviewed for this article. His lawyer, Pierce O'Donnell, says Harrah's "preyed" on Mr. Watanabe's condition. But he says his client also acknowledges that he "drank to excess." Mr. Watanabe "takes full responsibility for his condition at the time....He's not saying the devil made me do it."

Full Story Here : http://online.wsj.com/article/SB125996714714577317.html?mod=WSJ_hpp_MIDDLTopStories
 

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:ohno:^<<^^<<^^<<^^<<^^<<^^<<^^<<^^<<^^<<^
340x.jpg
 

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he lost "much" of his fortune but it sounds like he still has more than most of us.
 

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Tough shit for him. Nobody put a gun to his head and forced him to fly to Vegas.
 
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I wonder what he plays.


One reason Mr. Watanabe was seen as so valuable to Harrah's, say Messrs. Deleon and Kunder, two of his handlers, is that he gravitated toward games with low odds, including roulette and slots. "He was considered a 'house' player because slots and roulette are house games -- they have terrible odds for the player," says Mr. Kunder. "And the way he played blackjack, he made it a house game. He made such bad decisions on the blackjack table."
Ms. Jones disputes this interpretation. "I don't put a lot of credibility" in that, she says.
Several employees say Mr. Watanabe would stay at the tables for up to 24 hours, sometimes losing as much as $5 million in a single binge. He was allowed to play three blackjack hands simultaneously with a $50,000 limit for each hand. At one point, the casino raised his credit to $17 million, according to court documents.
 
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I bet he got some killer comps !


In a series of emails signed by Mr. Ning, the Harrah's marketing executive, the casino company laid out the terms that it was willing to offer him, which included "a special formula just for Mr. Watanabe."

Mr. Ning specified such offers as tickets to the Rolling Stones, $12,500 a month for airfare and $500,000 in credit at the gift stores. Harrah's also offered 15% cash back on table losses greater than $500,000, special high-limit games and other incentives. Mr. Watanabe alleges that Harrah's later rolled those terms back.

Mr. Ning didn't respond to requests for comment. Ms. Jones declined to comment on whether the company rolled back any incentives, but says "the practice of offering incentives and discounts to significant players is not unusual."

Harrah's Total Rewards Player's Club system, a loyalty program similar to that of other big casinos, created a special rank for Mr. Watanabe, "chairman," according to the filing and several employees. Before Mr. Watanabe, the most exclusive rank was "Seven Star."
 

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One reason Mr. Watanabe was seen as so valuable to Harrah's, say Messrs. Deleon and Kunder, two of his handlers, is that he gravitated toward games with low odds, including roulette and slots. "He was considered a 'house' player because slots and roulette are house games -- they have terrible odds for the player," says Mr. Kunder. "And the way he played blackjack, he made it a house game. He made such bad decisions on the blackjack table."
Ms. Jones disputes this interpretation. "I don't put a lot of credibility" in that, she says.
Several employees say Mr. Watanabe would stay at the tables for up to 24 hours, sometimes losing as much as $5 million in a single binge. He was allowed to play three blackjack hands simultaneously with a $50,000 limit for each hand. At one point, the casino raised his credit to $17 million, according to court documents.

LOL if you have that much money WTF are you playing Slots for? I can see playing Roulette or BlackJack, but not the slots.
 

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Several former and current Harrah's employees say their managers told them to let Mr. Watanabe continue betting while he was visibly intoxicated, even though casino rules and state law stipulate that anyone who is clearly drunk shouldn't be allowed to gamble


This is an absolute joke, I cannot tell you how many times I have seen players absolutely trashed at tables and allowed to continue.
 

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Most people would think "I'd better stop betting" after losing a MILLION dollars!
 

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This is an absolute joke, I cannot tell you how many times I have seen players absolutely trashed at tables and allowed to continue.

I have no problem with casinos allowing people to gamble when they are drunk. No one made them drink and no one made them drink at or near a casino. What I do have a problem with is casinos allowing drunk annoying people to stay on the floor. If your a silent drunk that's one thing, but loud obnoxious drunks are a whole different thing.
 

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I have no problem with casinos allowing people to gamble when they are drunk. No one made them drink and no one made them drink at or near a casino. What I do have a problem with is casinos allowing drunk annoying people to stay on the floor. If your a silent drunk that's one thing, but loud obnoxious drunks are a whole different thing.

I have no problem with it either, but dont pretend that it is a LAW, thats all. All i am saying is that Casinos break this gambling commission LAW and allow Intoxicated gamblers to play all the time, in fact, they encourage it.
 

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He deserved everything he got. He shouldn't get a penny back and I think he is a loser. Plain and simple. A pathetic loser. It's all so comical.
 

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Over past month I ran up a $280 debt to my Credit Out using the 5Dimes software.

I contend that the 5D software offers too many variations and therefore enticed me to make wagers I would normally not have been able to make using other popular Outs like Greek, Betjam, BetVegasVic, Beted and Skybook

Plus I was offered absolutely no booze or intoxicating pills which means I had to endure my $280 in losses with no drugs to numb my pain unless I paid out even MORE $$ on my own at the local liquor store and neighborhood drug dealer.

I am sending an email to my Credit Out and sharing the above complaints with him. I will let you know how it turns out
 
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I have no problem with casinos allowing people to gamble when they are drunk. No one made them drink and no one made them drink at or near a casino. What I do have a problem with is casinos allowing drunk annoying people to stay on the floor. If your a silent drunk that's one thing, but loud obnoxious drunks are a whole different thing.


Well Here is My Problem with the Drinking thing....Because !!! It's in the System !!! Every Casino Has this Info !!

In 2006, Mr. Watanabe resided primarily at Wynn Resorts' Wynn Las Vegas casino. But, he says, his heavy betting drew the attention of Chief Executive Steve Wynn. After meeting with him in June 2007, Mr. Wynn concluded that he was a compulsive gambler and alcoholic, and barred him from the casino, according to a letter to the Nevada Gaming Control Board drafted by Mr. Watanabe's attorney, Pierce O'Donnell.

Ms. Jones, the Harrah's vice president, says, "It was not our understanding that he was kicked out of Wynn because of problem gambling." = LIE
 

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I have no problem with letting someone gamble when drunk, but no way in hell should they be able to negotiate credit lines when one party is hammered. Contracts don't hold up if someone is drunk and all credit lines requires a signature.
 

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This is an absolute joke, I cannot tell you how many times I have seen players absolutely trashed at tables and allowed to continue.

The laws are to protect the house from drunk assholes, not protect the drunk guy from reckless gambling

The guy is just trying to avoid total ruin, seeing as he has already paid out over $100 million, hopefully they can let the last $14 million slide. I'm guessing his only chance at living is to find a less self-destructive addiction to replace his current one
 

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In Florida a contract is unenforceable if a party is intoxicated when executing it

I don't feel so bad about the 15k I dropped in the last 8 days
 

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