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- SYDNEY, Oct 8 — Australian casino magnate James Packer said today he may have to cut his stake in his company for it to keep its licence and declared he would never rejoin its board after the “terribly shocking experience” of being accused of dealing with criminals.
- James Packer's casino group, Crown Resorts, presented an A$1 billion+ proposal to Premier Barry O'Farrell in February 2012 to build a hotel, casino and entertainment complex at the site on land that was set aside for open space at Barangaroo Central. O'Farrell initially welcomed the proposal, yet cautioned it would need to gain regulatory.
- Billionaire James Packer was once casino giant Crown Resorts' executive chairman, then later a major shareholder so involved in the company he received daily reports on its finances.
- Packer is the major shareholder and a director of Crown Resorts Limited, one of Australia's largest casino groups. In October 2017, Crown's market capitalisation was over A$8 billion. Every year Crown's Australian resorts attract over 31 million visits.
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- »James Packer’s Legal Team Distance him from Crown Failures
Packer’s Legal Team Looks to Distance him from Crown Failings
The government’s probe will release its report by February 2021 whether Crown and its close associates are suitable to hold a gaming licence for the near-complete Barangaroo casino in Sydney. It has already raised the prospect of investment or voting right caps on Mr Packer’s 34 per cent shareholding in Crown.
Crown Resorts’ numerous failings, as outlined by a New South Wales government inquiry, are not all James Packer’s fault.
That’s the assertion made by lawyers for Consolidated Press Holdings, the private investment company of James Packer.
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The Australian Financial Review reports that CPH’s legal team, headed by Noel Hutley, SC, told inquiry Commissioner Patricia Bergin that she should reject the submission its clients had a “deleterious impact” on the company’s good governance.
“We respond to counsel assisting’s an approach whereby they seek to attribute at least some of the blame of the failings of Crown Resorts to Mr Packer and CPH,” Mr Hutley said.
“This is an unwarranted and unfair characterisation of Mr Packer’s role, which is simply not supported by the evidence before the inquiry.”
The inquiry has heard submissions that the gaming giant was “recklessly indifferent” to money laundering risks and never had robust enough processes to review the integrity of junket partners.
They have put Mr Packer at the centre of these concerns, particularly the push to bring offshore high-rollers to Crown’s Australian casinos through junkets or other means, which also led to the arrest of Crown staff in China in 2016.
Mr Packer said many of the failures outlined before the probe were a total shock to him when giving evidence last month, and Mr Hutley claimed this should be believed as the billionaire was honest and candid in the dock.
The government’s probe will release its report by February 2021 whether Crown and its close associates are suitable to hold a gaming licence for the near-complete Barangaroo casino in Sydney.
It has already raised the prospect of investment or voting right caps on Mr Packer’s 34 per cent shareholding in Crown.
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Counsel assisting have said the casino giant is unsuitable for the Barangaroo licence due to several cultural, governance and risk management failures over the last decade.
These closing submissions come as Crown faces increasing pressure to delay the planned opening of the casino in December and ILGA plans an urgent meeting next week to resolve the issue.
Mr Hutley’s argument appeared to run into an early obstacle when Commissioner Bergin interrupted.
“Mr Packer did say that he accepted some responsibility for the corporate governance failings of Crown,” the Commissioner pointed out.
Mr Hutley accepted this was the case for when Mr Packer was executive chairman of the company until March 2018, yet said he was dealing with the billionaire’s influence from November that year onwards.
By such time, Mr Packer had also left the operational side of CPH and was still receiving confidential Crown information through a controlling shareholder protocol kept secret from other investors.
Via the protocol, Mr Packer sent demanding emails to various Crown executives seeking information and updates on certain matters.
Still, Mr Hutley said those presented before Commissioner Bergin were too small a sample to conclude the billionaire had a profound sway over the company.
Crown has now terminated the controlling shareholder protocol.
Mr Hutley said the period after November 2018, was the only one relevant to Mr Packer’s current suitability to be a close associate of Crown’s licence for its Barangaroo casino in Sydney.
Inquiry Deems Crown not Suitable to Hold Sydney Casino Licence
Crown Resorts has been deemed not suitable to hold the licence for its soon-to-be-opened casino in inner Sydney.
The ABC reported in early November that the Independent Liquor and Gaming Authority has been examining the conduct of Crown in its current casinos in Melbourne and Perth, including its international VIP gaming operations.
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In his closing submissions, counsel assisting Adam Bell SC told the inquiry he believed Crown was not suitable to hold the licence for the new Barangaroo premises.
“In summary, we submit that the evidence presented to this inquiry demonstrates that the licensee is not a suitable person to continue to give effect to the licence and that Crown Resorts is not a suitable person to be a close associate of the licensee,” he said.
The inquiry has raised serious allegations that the company ignored warning signs of money laundering within its casinos, partnered with junket operators despite their links to organised crime and ignored the safety of their staff in China, who were technically working illegally.
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Mr Bell highlighted the arrest of the employees in China four years ago as a significant factor in the company’s failures.
Nineteen employees were arrested and charged for promoting gambling to source VIPs for its high-roller business, 16 who was eventually imprisoned in a Chinese prison.