NJ hands over Tropicana control to Icahn

NJ ends its control of Tropicana; Carl Icahn can take charge of the struggling casino

Staff
AP News

Mar 03, 2010 18:14 EST

New Jersey on Wednesday ended its conservatorship of Tropicana Casino and Resort after 27 months and gave final approval of its sale to billionaire Carl Icahn.

Struggling Casino Industry Drags Atlantic City's Economy Down
ATLANTIC CITY, NJ - APRIL 29: A man runs by the Tropicana Casino Resort on April 29, 2009 in Atlantic City, New Jersey. It was announced on Wednesday that New Jersey regulators have approved plans to auction the Tropicana Casino Resort in Atlantic City through a bankruptcy court. Many Atlantic City residents are dependent on the struggling gaming industry for employment. Since the beginning of the year, the 11 casinos in Atlantic City reportedly have eliminated 1,270 jobs; totaling a loss of 3,092 casino workers since March 2008. (Photo by Spencer Platt/Getty Images)
 

The state Casino Control Commission also gave Icahn interim casino authorization, allowing his company to take over operations. He bought it out of bankruptcy last year for $200 million.

The approval gives Icahn a stronger grip on a quickly expanding empire of casinos he's bought relatively cheap out of bankruptcy.

In January, he received regulatory approval to take control of nine Tropicana Entertainment LLC casinos in Nevada, Indiana, Louisiana and Mississippi as they emerged from a separate bankruptcy.

He's reorganizing them into a publicly traded company and plans to put them eventually under the same umbrella as the Atlantic City landmark.

This year, he also bought the unfinished Fontainebleau Las Vegas casino resort on the strip. On top of all that, last December, he bought the first-lien debt in Trump Entertainment Resort's three Atlantic City casinos. Now, he and banker Andy Beal are slugging it out against a group that includes Donald Trump to become the owners when that company emerges from bankruptcy.

New Jersey regulators took a major role in running the Tropicana after refusing to renew the operating license of then-new owner William J. Yung III in December 2007, when his drastic cost-cutting measures left the casino dirty and understaffed.

Former state Supreme Court Justice Gary Stein became conservator for the state.

Wednesday's action gives Icahn's company authorization to run the casino for nine months — it could be extended to a year — while regulators investigate its suitability to operate the casino permanently.

As part of the interim authorization, the Tropicana Atlantic City Corp. created a new trust overseen by Harold First, who has worked for Icahn in the past.

"This is a major step in what has been a more lengthy process than any of us could have anticipated," Casino Control Commission Vice Chairwoman Sharon Anne Harrington said. She said Icahn's return to casinos in New Jersey brings a "sign of rejuvenation and optimism in the market."

From 2000 to 2006, the investor owned the Sands Hotel & Casino.

Atlantic City's casinos have had three consecutive years with falling revenue as they have contended with a recession and increased competition in Pennsylvania and other nearby states.

Source: AP News