Encore Boston Harbor Fate to Be Decided By Year End, Massachusetts Regulators Will Rule in December

Posted on: October 26, 2018, 06:59h. 

Last updated on: October 26, 2018, 06:59h.

The fate of Encore Boston Harbor will be determined before the end of the year, as the Massachusetts Gaming Commission (MGC) said this week that its investigation into the suitability of Wynn Resorts is approaching a conclusion.

Encore Boston Harbor Massachusetts casino
The Massachusetts Gaming Commission will soon receive investigative materials into the suitability of Wynn Resorts for Encore Boston Harbor. (Image: Encore Boston Harbor/NECN/Casino.org)

The MGC directed its Investigations and Enforcement Bureau to explore allegations that first came to light in January that former CEO Steve Wynn sexually harassed and assaulted female employees for decades. The gaming commission specifically wants to know whether Wynn Resorts purposely concealed information of the billionaire’s claimed actions during its application bidding in 2013.

The investigations and enforcement bureau is completing its report. Once the report is complete, there are a few more procedural steps before an actual hearing and the report will be made public,” MGC Executive Director Ed Bedrosian said in an update.

“I anticipate and hope we can have any pre-hearing motions, again if any, heard sometime in November, with the actual hearing happening sometime in the first two weeks of December.”

Wynn has denied the allegations, but stepped down from the company he founded and later sold off his entire ownership stake. Wynn Boston Harbor was renamed Encore Boston Harbor to further distance the project from the disgraced Las Vegas tycoon.

Potential Consequences

Wynn Resorts continues to build its $2.5 billion Encore Boston Harbor casino just across the Mystic River in Everett. The MGC conclusion on the company’s ongoing suitability comes with the potential to throw the project into chaos.

The MGC, which is being temporarily led by Interim Chair Gayle Cameron following the September resignation of Stephen Crosby, has several options.

The agency could fine Wynn Resorts, suspend its license for further review, take no action at all – or the worst-case scenario: revoke the $85 million license and essentially halt construction on the integrated resort.

Wynn says the casino is on track to open in June 2019. MGM Springfield, the other integrated resort authorized under the Massachusetts Expanded Gaming Act passed in 2011, commenced operations in August.

2013 MGC Approval

Steve Wynn was instrumental in convincing Massachusetts gaming regulators that his company was best suitable to win the coveted Boston casino license. The MGC’s suitability report in 2013 summarized the billionaire as “highly ethical,” and “a perfectionist who is passionate about everything he does.”

The MGC unanimously approved Wynn’s license application, and said the company “has satisfied its burden of proving by clear and convincing evidence that it meets the standards for suitability.”

Crosby cited allegations he held a Wynn bias in reasoning for his resignation as MGC chairman. “I simply cannot let my involvement in these critical deliberations be used by others to hamper the commission’s ability to do its work, or to undermine the confidence of the public in that work,” Crosby said in his departure.

“There has never been a shred of truth or accuracy to any charge of bias, favoritism, corrupt practice, ethics violations, or prejudgment in my execution of this job,” Crosby continued. “I have said repeatedly that we protect the integrity of the decision-making process. And I’ve said repeatedly that the appearance of integrity as well as the reality of integrity is critical.”