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Thursday, January 9, 2014

Genting's Florida Slots Barn

Genting is the financial Sugar Daddy for the penniless Mashpee Wampanoag Tribe in Massachusetts in their desperate attempt to reward sloth after mortgaging their future. There's simply too much information available to post individually. Don't be fooled!Here's some of what's available: Reel WampsWampaleaksGenting Agreement With Track Yet Another Gambling Bait and SwitchFlorida: Genting gets real - Stiffs and Georges David McKee
Genting Group's Godzilla-sized proposal for a $3 billion resort on the Miami waterfront has gone into the shredder. Instead, the Malaysian developer ...

Anti-gambling film stars Miami mega-casino drive Miami Today
Malaysian-based conglomerate Genting led the charge with a proposal to build a giant casino dubbed Resorts World Miami at the former site of the ...

Malaysian giant stakes casino gambit on illegal foreign labor Miami Today
If you harbor even a sliver of doubt about how promises Genting made in seeking a Miami mega-casino would play out, its pleas in federal court last ...

Genting Group Bets On Novel Permit Deal For Miami Casino Law360 (subscription)
Law360, New York (January 08, 2014, 7:03 PM ET) -- A Genting Group unit has struck a tentative deal to use a Florida racetrack's permit to bring slot ...

Gov. Rick Scott doesn't have opinion on latest gambling expansion ... Sun-Sentinel (blog)
It stems from a deal, announced Monday, between Gulfstream Park Racing and Casino and international gambling operator Genting, which wants a ...

Genting's New Plan: Slots Only Casino at Miami Herald Site Miami New Times (blog)
Ever since Genting Corporation's aggressive plans to bring a full service casino and mega-resort to the old Miami Herald site went boom they ...
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Genting announces plan to offer slots-only resort MiamiHerald.com
Genting announces plan to offer slots-only resort ... would allow Genting's Resorts World Miami to open 2,000 slot machines and off-track betting.


FYI Miami: January 09, 2014


Written by on January 8, 2014

HOW MUCH DO WE GET?: How much revenue Miami-Dade County has received from pari-mutuels from their slot machines since they were legalized in the county and what obligations the pari-mutuels have to the county would be the subject of a report sought by Commissioner Bruno Barreiro. He’s asking the county’s Economic Development & Port Miami Committee on Monday to vote to direct Mayor Carlos Gimenez to report to the committee within 60 days on the revenues generated for the county from the slot machines, how those funds have been used and what resolutions the commission has made regarding those funds. The request has been before the committee before. In November the committee lacked a quorum to act. In December, committee Chairman Esteban Bovo, who is employed by pari-mutuel Hialeah Park, abstained from a vote, leaving the committee without a quorum once again.

http://www.miamitodaynews.com/2014/01/08/fyi-miami-january-09-2014/

Deal for slot machines in South Florida scaled back


By Dara Kam, The News Service of Florida
Gambling operator Resorts World Omni has struck a deal with Gulfstream Park in the hope of getting slot machines rolling at a downtown Miami property.

The proposal is a dramatically scaled-back version of the glamorous casino resort once pitched to — and rejected by — Florida lawmakers, and it hinges on a controversial permit at the horse track.
 
The agreement between Resorts World, a division of Malaysia-based Genting Group, and Gulfstream, along with breeders and thoroughbred horse owners and trainers, involves relocating a permit to the Miami bayfront property purchased by Genting in 2011 for $236 million.
 
Backers of the deal are hoping lawmakers will sign off on the plan, which they contend would be a major boon for the horse-racing industry in Florida, as the Legislature undertakes a sweeping review of gambling during the 2014 session.
 
But others in the pari-mutuel industry say that, if approved, it would be a major shift in the state's gambling landscape and essentially "decouple" horse and dog racing from slot machine operations.
 
The permit at the heart of the deal was issued to the Gulfstream Park Thoroughbred Aftercare Retirement Program, a nonprofit linked to The Stronach Group, which also owns Gulfstream.
 
Proceeds from the nonprofit go toward caring for horses after they retire from racing, financing benefits for disabled jockeys and increases in purses.
 
But the permit has been entangled in a battle over whether the permit issued to the nonprofit, now called the Gulfstream Park After Racing Program, is in Broward County, where Gulfstream's permit is located, or in Miami-Dade County, as Gulfstream and its lawyers contend.
 
The plan would give Resorts World entrée into the gambling world in South Florida although on a much smaller scale than the $3 billion luxury casino once envisioned at the 14-acre property, home to
 
The Miami Herald for four decades.
 
Gulfstream President and General Manager Tim Ritvo called the agreement between the track, the casino operator and the horse industry "the single most important thing that's happened to thoroughbred racing in a long time."
 
Frank Stronach, one of the state's largest landowners and largest horse breeders, is backing the deal with Resorts World because the deal could pump millions into the horse industry, Ritvo said.
 
"Our ownership is heavily, heavily invested in horse racing," Ritvo said. "He's interested for his legacy to be a positive impact on thoroughbred racing and this permit does that."
 
South Florida tracks, including Gulfstream, at one time viewed "destination resort" proposals pitched by Resorts World and other out-of-state gambling operators skeptically, saying they already had a difficult time competing with Seminole Indian casinos.
 
 
 

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