Las Vegas Injury Lawyers at Bernstein & Poisson File Nevada Personal Injury Lawsuit After Crash

LAS VEGAS, NV--(Marketwire - Feb 28, 2013) - According to the Nevada Department of Transportation, more than 19,000 rear-end car accidents occur in Nevada every year. These types of crashes lead to more than 11,000 injuries and to more than 20 fatalities. The Las Vegas injury lawyers at Bernstein & Poisson represent clients who have been wrongfully injured in all types of traffic accidents, and the firm has recently filed a Nevada personal injury lawsuit on behalf of a client who was allegedly injured when she was hit from behind by the defendant named in the case.

This Nevada personal injury lawsuit was filed on February 7, 2013 and it named an individual female as a plaintiff. The lawsuit also named an individual female as a defendant. The case was filed in the District Court of Clark County, Nevada and it was assigned to Department Number XXI V. The case was also given a case number of A-13-676336-C. The lawsuit is seeking several different forms of damages that relate to the crash and to the alleged negligence of the defendant.

A review of the court documents reveals that the plaintiff was driving her vehicle in Clark County, Nevada when she was approached and ultimately hit from behind by the vehicle being driven by the defendant at the time. The defendant was given a citation by the responding police officer after the incident and the plaintiff suffered severe neck and back injuries that have required extensive medical attention and treatment. The court documents further allege that the plaintiff will need medical attention and treatment in the future.

The lawsuit's documents are alleging negligence on the part of the defendant in failing to stop properly behind the plaintiff, and the pleadings state that the plaintiff is seeking several forms of damages for losses incurred. Examples of losses incurred include medical costs, lost income and pain and suffering, and all of the losses being sought concern those that have already been realized by the plaintiff and those that will be met in the future. The case is currently pending in the court system.

About Bernstein & Poisson
Bernstein & Poisson is a Las Vegas law firm comprised of Las Vegas personal injury lawyers who represent clients who have been injured because of negligent, reckless or intentional actions of others. The attorneys at the firm handle personal injury matters that include medical malpractice matters, slip-and-fall cases, nursing home neglect cases, drunk driving accidents, auto accidents, truck accidents, dog bite attacks, bad faith insurance, wrongful death, sexual abuse, nursing home abuse and several other types of legal matters where a client has been wrongfully injured by the actions of others anywhere in the state of Nevada.


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Workers picket outside Cosmopolitan over lack of contract - Las Vegas Sun

By Ron Sylvester (contact) Ron Sylvester



Lines of workers chanted, carried signs and yelled at people trying to walk into the Cosmopolitan on Friday, protesting the property’s lack of a contract with the Las Vegas Culinary Union.


“One, two, three, four, don’t go through that hotel door,” hundreds yelled whenever someone walked toward the door of the Strip resort.


“No contract, no peace,” another group repeated.


Picketers swarmed in front of the casino on Las Vegas Boulevard, on the side off Harmon Avenue and on foot bridges leading to the Aria and Planet Hollywood. The two sides are at odds over health care coverage, seniority, working hours and pension benefits. It marked the second time in 30 days that workers have taken to the streets in front of the Cosmopolitan. The pickets are the first on the Strip in a decade.


Cosmopolitan officials declined comment beyond a statement earlier this week that it was trying to negotiate “fairly and openly” with the union. Union member, however, say talks have stopped over key issues that have already been resolved at other Strip casinos.


“We are not asking for anything more than the rights that people have worked so hard to establish in other hotels,” said Debra Stokke Golden, an in-room dining server at the Cosmopolitan.


One of the main issue is a guaranteed work schedule, so people with full-time positions can’t have their hours cut without a grievance procedure.


“Right now, I’m full-time, but I’m scheduled at 32 hours a week,” said Andy Spicuglia, a master cook for room service at the Cosmopolitan. “They can cut hours and send people home early, and I have to take vacation time to make up for the lost wages. Then when it comes time to take a vacation, I don’t have any hours left.”


The practices impact customer service, union members say.


“They send people home early to save money, and then we get busy and it makes it harder to serve the customer,” Spicuglia said.


The union also says the Cosmopolitan has stopped talks about health care premiums. At other Strip hotels, culinary service employees do not pay premiums out of their paycheck, and payments are managed by the casinos and union trustees. The union also cited disagreements over contributions to pension funds.


Some picket signs were in German, a nod to the Cosmopolitan’s ownership by Deutsche Bank, and union members point out no one from the bank sits at the negotiating table.


Deutsche Bank officials have said they aren’t in the business of managing casinos. In December, the company put the Cosmopolitan in what it called a “non-core operating unit.”


Executives said the purpose was to separate businesses that were outside of its core banking operations to accelerate plans to sell them.


Employees at the Cosmopolitan elected union representation by card check 18 months ago and have yet to reach a contract.

Cosmopolitan of Las Vegas

The Cosmopolitan of Las Vegas dares to be different. From the hotel’s red reservations desks to fine art found throughout the resort, The Cosmopolitan’s signature style is helping to pave its own path on the Las Vegas Strip.


Upon entering the resort, you’re greeted by pillars of video boards playing video art by Digital Kitchen and David Rockwell Studio exclusively produced for The Cosmopolitan. Just beyond that, you’ll find all your favorite casino games on the resort’s 100,000-square-foot casino floor.


The Cosmopolitan’s rooms standout as the resort’s most unique feature. About 2,220 of The Cosmopolitan’s 2,995 rooms have 6-foot deep terraces that span the length of the room, a first at a modern Strip hotel. Other in-room amenities include soaking tubs, kitchenettes and quirky accessories like artsy coffee table books.


The dining experience at The Cosmopolitan isn’t something you’ll find at other Strip resorts, either. All of The Cosmopolitan’s 13 restaurateurs are new to the Las Vegas market. You’ll find American steakhouse fare in a modern setting at STK, top-notch sushi at Blue Ribbon Sushi Bar & Grill and the freshest fish flown in from the Mediterranean daily at Estiatorio Milos.


Whether the sun is up or down, Marquee Nightclub & Dayclub is the place to find the party at The Cosmopolitan. The venue is a dayclub/nightclub, complete with a pool and cabanas outside and three different rooms with three different vibes inside.


If nightclubs aren’t your thing, you can grab a drink at one of The Cosmopolitan’s five other bars, like The Chandelier, which is encased in 2 million dripping crystals.


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Philanthropic leaders discuss how to help Nevada charities - Las Vegas Sun

By Richard N. Velotta (contact)

Friday, March 1, 2013 | 11:05 a.m.

The community’s philanthropic leaders met at Las Vegas City Hall today to strategize on how to pool funds to assist Southern Nevada’s charitable organizations and develop a sustainable high return on investment for local causes.

The second annual Philanthropy Leaders Summit brought more than 100 leaders to hear panelists and speakers address philanthropic issues and discuss how they can band together to solve mutual problems.

The summit was developed by Moonridge Group Philanthropy Advisors and its president and CEO, Julie Murray.

“Our goal is to bring together the best and brightest new thinking that exists about successful, outcome-based giving,” Murray said in a release. “We want attendees to gain new tools to work with a renewed feeling of optimism for our community and the desire to inspire others.”

Murray, who has worked in Southern Nevada with the Three Square Food Bank, the Andre Agassi College Preparatory Academy, the “I Have a Dream” Foundation, the Las Vegas Fire and Rescue Foundation and the Caesars Foundation, said last year’s summit resulted in the formation of the Greater Good Council to strategize prior to the sunsetting of some major foundations.

The Lincy Foundation, which in 2011 gave $200 million to UCLA’s Dream Fund, and the Reynolds Foundation, are sunsetting, while other organizations are giving less as a result of the recession.

The Greater Good Council is working to pool resources and assist organizations more strategically with foundation resources dwindling.

Other issues were aired in today’s four-hour gathering:

• In a panel discussion on the successes and frustrations of philanthropic work, Tom Thomas, managing partner of Thomas & Mack, said a growing problem is the gradual creep of the federal government into greater oversight of foundations for political reasons. Thomas said the trend presents “a whole new list of problems” for the more than 7,600 philanthropic organizations in the country, if their causes are targeted by political opportunists.

• Panelist Caroline Ciocca, director of corporate citizenship for Cash America Inc., which supports more than 50 non-profit organizations, said reality television portrayals of today’s society give a distorted view of philanthropy and the public needs to be educated about how organizations work.

• Some philanthropic groups are frustrated with non-profit organizations that seek one-time donations to solve an immediate problem. Groups are gearing more toward developing community partnerships to invest in long-term goals.

• Panelist Gael Sylvia Pullen said community giving begins at home and that parents should teach their children about the culture of giving at an early age, so that they better understand the benefits of organizations that foster community giving. It was also suggested that schools pay more attention to rewarding community service projects that students undertake. A group of Bishop Gorman High School students attended this morning’s session.


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Happy Birthday, John Katsilometes -- you're The Kats Meow! - Las Vegas Sun

Image Sam Morris

Columnist John Katsilometes plays comedian Martin Short like a set of bagpipes during Short’s show at the Mirage on Friday, June 29, 2012.

By Don Chareunsy (contact)

Friday, March 1, 2013 | 12:01 a.m.

Today is the birthday of John Katsilometes, editor at large of the Las Vegas Sun, columnist of the award-winning The Kats Report, No. 1 fan of Santa Fe and The Fat City Horns every Monday night, everyone’s favorite Las Vegas and Greek journalist from Idaho and the tall-ish, eyeglasses-wearing man behind #SheckyKats on Twitter.

To mark the occasion, his girlfriend Jennifer Peters Bradley corralled some 50 Las Vegas notables to record short “Happy Birthday” videos compiled here by Ricky Moreno. Kats will feel like three-time Best Actor Oscar winner Daniel Day-Lewis when he watches the video because everyone thinks he’s a winner. (He is.)

There’s sex appeal from Tara Palsha, Dorimar Bonilla, Frankie Moreno, Thunder From Down Under and Chippendales. Sadly, none of them take it all off. There is a lot of singing, from “Jersey Boys” to “Fantasy” cast members -- this is The Entertainment Capital of the World, after all.

The funniest message? From a very pregnant and radiant Holly Madison. The most disturbing? Brad Garrett and Alicia Jacobs are neck-and-neck. And the raciest message? It’s from our colleague Mr. Robin “Lust for Scandal” Leach, naturally.

Happy Birthday, Kats. It’s always a pleasure.

P.S. Kats’ age is revealed in the video. It’s never polite to ask The Kats his age.

P.S.S. My literary gift to you, Kats, first heard at The Smith Center: Baba ganoush? I just met him! #SheckyKats via Don Chareunsy.

Don Chareunsy, editor of Vegas DeLuxe and senior editor for arts and entertainment of the Las Vegas Sun, has been Kats’ editor for more than four years at the Sun.

Robin Leach has been a journalist for more than 50 years and has spent the past decade giving readers the inside scoop on Las Vegas, the world’s premier platinum playground.

Follow VDLX Editor Don Chareunsy on Twitter at Twitter.com/VDLXEditorDon.

Follow Robin Leach on Twitter at Twitter.com/Robin_Leach.

Follow Vegas DeLuxe on Twitter at Twitter.com/vegasdeluxe.

The Strip Las Vegas Boulevard Las Vegas, NV 89109

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Obama says sequester not an apocalypse, 'just dumb' - Las Vegas Sun

Image Pablo Martinez Monsivais / AP

President Barack Obama gestures as he speaks to reporters in the White House briefing room in Washington, Friday, March 1, 2013, following his meeting with congressional leaders regarding the automatic spending cuts.

By Karoun Demirjian (contact) Karoun Demirjian

Friday, March 1, 2013 | 10:39 a.m.

“This is not going to be an apocalypse. It’s just dumb.”

That was how President Barack Obama summed up the sequester Friday, speaking to reporters after an Oval Office meeting with the four congressional leaders — the first official step toward striking a compromise to avoid the full effect of sequestration the team of political frenemies has taken.

Obama scolded Congress repeatedly — reserving his sharpest rebukes for Republicans — for having missed the self-imposed March 1 deadline to prevent an across-the-board budget cut from going into effect at selected federal agencies.

“The greatest nation on earth doesn’t conduct its business in month to month increments, or by careening from crisis to crisis,” Obama said.

“It is absolutely true that this is not going to precipitate the type of crisis with the country defaulting...but people are going to be hurt,” he said. “The economy will not grow as quickly as it would have, unemployment will not go down as quickly as it would have, and there are lives behind that.”

But, Obama suggested, missing the sequester deadline might not be a completely bad thing, because sequester pain can encourage congressional progress.

“My hope is that after some reflection, as members of Congress start hearing from constituents that are being negatively impacted, as we start seeing the impact the sequester’s having, that they step back and say: ‘All right, is there a way for us to move forward?’” Obama said.

But forward for Obama isn’t just finding an alternative set of cuts for the sequester. Obama said his sequester replacement would be a combination of spending cuts, entitlement reform and tax reform.

“I don’t think that’s too much to ask. I don’t think that is partisan,” Obama said, noting that he thinks several Republicans would agree with his approach. “There is a caucus of common sense up on Capitol Hill. It’s just, it’s a silent group right now.”

Obama’s plan actually is less potentially controversial than Sen. Majority Leader Harry Reid’s proposed solution, which would involve raising the tax rate incrementally on the highest wage earners to offset sequester cuts. Obama didn’t talk in those terms Friday, noting that he wants tax reform “without raising rates.”

Emerging from the White House meeting Friday, House Speaker John Boehner, the chief Republican on Capitol Hill, indicated that he was no more willing to talk about collecting more tax revenue after the meeting than before.

But Obama indicated that Republicans were not willing to give any ground just yet on closing tax loopholes, either — a tactic that generates more tax revenue for the government by ending deductions instead of raising rates.

“It’s time to focus on spending,” Boehner’s office said the speaker told the group.

On Thursday, Reid appeared unruffled as he talked about plans to work with Boehner and other Republicans to offset the sequester cuts and tackle the next phase of the federal budget before both come up to a hard-and-fast effective deadline of March 27. Congress is scheduled to be in Washington working through March 25.


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Judge deals setback to New Jersey's sports gambling effort - Las Vegas Sun

By David Porter, Associated Press

Friday, March 1, 2013 | 9:40 a.m.

NEWARK, N.J. — A federal judge upheld a 21-year-old law prohibiting sports betting in all but four states, dealing a setback to New Jersey's attempts to revive its struggling casino industry by grabbing a piece of what has become a multibillion-dollar industry, both legal and illegal.

The ruling published late Thursday night marked the second defeat for New Jersey in a lawsuit filed last year by the four major professional sports leagues and the NCAA. In a December ruling, U.S. District Judge Michael Shipp denied the state's claim that the leagues and the NCAA didn't have standing to bring the suit because they couldn't demonstrate tangible harm to their products if New Jersey were to allow sports betting.

"We believe firmly in the principles of our position on sports betting and that the federal ban is inequitable, violates New Jersey's rights as a state and is unconstitutional," Gov. Chris Christie said in a statement Friday. "Even the trial judge has noted that he was not likely the final arbiter in the matter. We are confident that the federal court of appeals will conclude that New Jersey should be treated equally with other states."

State Sen. Ray Lesniak, the prime sponsor of the sports betting bill, said New Jersey would appeal Shipp's "patent misinterpretation of the Constitution."

"This is a huge disappointment for all of us who continue to believe that New Jersey should have the right to allow sports betting," Lesniak said in a statement. "Along with online gaming, sports betting would allow New Jersey to be in the forefront of the modern gaming industry, creating jobs and providing both immediate and long-term economic benefits."

This week, Christie signed a bill making the state the third in the nation to allow gambling over the Internet. New Jersey's casino industry has seen revenues decline steadily over the last several years in the face of competition from neighboring states. Atlantic City's newest casino, Revel, announced last week that it will file for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection next month, about a year after it opened.

New Jersey voters passed a sports betting referendum in 2011, and last year the Legislature enacted a sports betting law that limited bets to the Atlantic City casinos and the state's horse racing tracks. Bets wouldn't be taken on games involving New Jersey colleges or college games played in the state. Christie said at the time that he hoped to grant sports betting licenses by early this year, but those plans have been put on hold. Christie's spokesman didn't immediately respond to an email Friday seeking comment on the decision.

The NFL, NHL, NBA, Major League Baseball and the NCAA sued the state last year, and the NCAA has moved several of its championship events out of New Jersey because of the sports betting law.

New Jersey, represented by former U.S. Solicitor General Theodore Olson, among others, had attacked the 1992 Professional and Amateur Sports Protection Act, or PASPA, on several constitutional levels. In filings, the state argued the law unfairly "grandfathered" Nevada, Oregon, Montana and Delaware, which already have some form of sports gambling. New Jersey said the law violated state sovereignty and equal protection provisions and trampled the authority of state legislatures under the 10th Amendment.

On Thursday, Shipp said that although some of the questions raised in the case were novel, "judicial intervention is generally unwarranted no matter how unwise a court considers a policy decision of the legislative branch. As such, to the extent the people of New Jersey disagree with PASPA, their remedy is not through passage of a state law or through the judiciary, but through the repeal or amendment of PASPA in Congress."

In arguments earlier this month, U.S. Attorney Paul Fishman, representing the Justice Department, said the Constitution empowers Congress to regulate an interstate industry such as sports gambling and to treat states differently.

Attorneys for the leagues have said that PASPA doesn't supersede the authority of state legislatures because it doesn't require any affirmative actions such as enacting new laws.

New Jersey was given a special dispensation by Congress to approve sports gambling at its casinos within a year in the early '90s, but it didn't do so.

Billions of dollars are bet legally each year on sports in Nevada, and experts estimate tens or even hundreds of billions are wagered illegally through bookmakers. In oral arguments before Shipp earlier this month, Olson decried the loss of sports gambling revenue to Nevada's "permanent monopoly."


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MGM Resorts announces plan for 20000-seat arena - Las Vegas Sun

By Sun Staff (contact)

Published Friday, March 1, 2013 | 9:23 a.m.

Updated 3 hours, 43 minutes ago

Click to enlarge photo Jim Murren

MGM Resorts International announced this morning it wants to build a privately funded, 20,000-seat indoor arena behind the New York-New York and Monte Carlo resorts that would host boxing, top-draw headliners and special events.

Its partner is the preeminent sports and entertainment promoter AEG, whose collection of arenas includes the Staples Center and the Home Depot Center in Southern California, the Best Buy Theater in Times Square, New York, and facilities in Shanghai, Beijing, Sydney, Stockholm and elsewhere.

The project is anticipated to be financed with equity contributions from each of the partners as well as privately funded third-party financing, the company said in a statement.

The MGM-AEG arena plans, the latest entry in the continuing and competing efforts to build a free-standing indoor arena in Las Vegas, will not affect the proposed UNLV Now, the "mega-center" stadium project that would reshape the university campus, Don Snyder, the project leader, said.

"The two proposals are pretty much apples and oranges," Snyder said. "UNLV Now is designed for hosting large events that would draw between 25,000 and 60,000 people. There's always been separate conversation about arenas. All along, I’ve felt that an arena project can be done by individual companies and with private money."

MGM Resorts had initially thrown its support behind UNLV Now but has since said its price tag of $800 million to $900 million was too prohibitive, raising doubts about MGM's $20 million pledge for campus project.

MGM said its arena would be accompanied by retail shops, dining, entertainment and other enterprises between the two properties, stretching from the Strip to Frank Sinatra Drive behind the resorts.

“This new facility would be an extension of our entertainment legacy and continue our leadership position in the worlds of boxing, sports, concerts and other events that drive significant visitation and revenue to Las Vegas,” MGM Resorts Chairman and CEO Jim Murren said. “AEG’s dominant position in arena development, programming and management, makes it an ideal partner for this venture.”

AEG President and CEO Timothy J. Leiweke said his company’s network of venues “will allow us to maximize booking and operations opportunities.”

The partnership with MGM Resorts, he said, “brings together the two largest promoters and operators of live entertainment venues in Las Vegas, guaranteeing the long-term success of the new arena.”

Design and planning is well under way, and the partners will begin seeking appropriate approvals immediately, a company spokesman said.

The Los Angeles-based AEG has several connections with Los Angeles real estate billionaire Ed Roski, who is UNLV Now's private developer partner.

Roski co-owns the Los Angeles Lakers and Los Angeles Kings with AEG, the world's largest operator of sports teams and stadiums. The Staples Center in Los Angeles, which was developed by Roski, is owned and operated by AEG.

Roski's Majestic Realty, which owns the Silverton Casino, has pledged to front 40 percent of the estimated $800 million to $900 million cost of the UNLV Now stadium. UNLV Now developers are hoping to raise the remainder of the cost from resort industry contributions, naming rights and corporate partnerships as well as a  special tax district awaiting approval from the Legislature.


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Two residents displaced by fire at apartment complex - Las Vegas Sun

By Tovin Lapan (contact) Tovin Lapan

Friday, March 1, 2013 | 9:10 a.m.

An apartment fire in east Las Vegas displaced two seniors and did an estimated $50,000 damage, but nobody was injured, Las Vegas Fire and Rescue officials said.

Las Vegas and Clark County firefighters responded about 10:30 p.m. Thursday to a fire at the Villa Monterey Apartments, near East Charleston Boulevard and Eastern Avenue.

Two “senior adults” live at the unit where the fire broke out, officials said.

“One of them was home watching TV when she heard loud popping noises coming from the patio and then she noticed fire on the patio,” a Las Vegas Fire and Rescue statement said.

“When firefighters arrived on scene, heavy flames and smoke were showing from the patio and living room of one unit in the two story wood frame/stucco building. It took firefighters only a few minutes to bring the fire under control,” the statement said.

The patio area, where investigators say the fire started, was gutted, and the fire also damaged the living room and kitchen, Las Vegas fire officials said. The fire did not spread to other units.

The report noted that the patio “was covered with excess belongings and debris and there were several extension cords being used on the patio,” but the cause of the blaze could not be determined.

The residents were being relocated to another apartment at the complex, according to the report.


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As trend wanes, Las Vegas casinos fold poker rooms - Las Vegas Sun

 Last September, less than a year and a half after the room opened, the iconic casino quietly swapped out its green felt tables for slot machines.
The Tropicana hoped to step back into the big leagues when it opened its poker room in the heart of the Las Vegas Strip, touting it as the coolest in town.
But that same morning, federal agents shut down the three biggest online poker sites on the Internet. Last September, less than a year and a half later, the iconic casino quietly swapped out its green felt tables for slot machines.
It's a story that's become increasingly common as the crackdown on Internet gambling weakens poker's appeal, and the casinos that once competed to lure fans of Texas Hold 'Em abandon the waning game in favor of more lucrative alternatives.
Poker has never been a big moneymaker like slot machines or roulette. But when the game's popularity soared during the 2000s, casinos were willing to forgo the extra dollars to get players inside their buildings.
Now the calculus is shifting. In Sin City, epicenter of the poker craze, at least eight rooms have folded in the past two years. The trend is also playing out in Mississippi riverboats, Indian casinos and gambling halls near big cities from California to Florida.
Poker's proponents insist the game remains as popular as ever, and some larger casinos say their rooms are bustling.
In a statement this month announcing the World Series of Poker lineup, executive director Ty Stewart said the summer bonanza in Las Vegas would be an "affirmation about the strength and global appeal of the game."
But the spate of poker room closures on the Strip has some wondering whether the largest gambling trend to sweep the country in 25 years may be losing momentum.
"I just think the allure of poker is lessening," said William Thompson, author of the encyclopedia "Gambling in America" and professor of public administration at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas. "That's one reason the smaller casinos would just say, 'Hey it's not worth all the time to set everything up. A slot machine would do a lot better.'"
Poker revenue has been falling in Nevada since 2007, the year after the federal government first cracked down on virtual gambling and forced online companies to close or relocate offshore.
The recession hobbled casinos across the board, but while winnings from other games began to pick back up in 2010, poker revenue continues to slump by an average of 6 percent a year, according to annual reports from the state Gaming Control Board.
Poker revenues stacked up to $123 million last year, down from a high of $168 million in 2007.
Entries in the World Series of Poker's main event also took tumble in 2007, falling by 28 percent from a high of 8,773. Entries have only topped 7,000 once in the years since.
On April 15, 2011, the federal government took its strongest stand yet against the semi-legal world of internet poker, blacking out three major sites on a date later dubbed "Black Friday."
No longer could fresh crops of poker players develop their games online.
The Tropicana hotel-resort, which was remaking itself with several major renovations at the time, opened its new poker room the same spring day.
"Poker had gone through a dramatic popularity phase. It grew really quickly. And we jumped on board," said Fred Harmon, chief marketing officer for the casino that sits on a busy Strip intersection opposite the MGM Grand and New York New York.
The decision to replace the room with slot machines last fall was pure economics, Harmon said.
"I think every company over the last several years have had to look at what they do and what makes money," he said.
Casinos across the country are making the same calculation.
Sam's Town in Tunica, Mississippi, closed its poker room in January, citing the economy. The Seminole Casino Hollywood near Fort Lauderdale, Fla., replaced its room with slots in September.
Indian casinos in states like Minnesota and the Dakotas are also pulling their rooms, according to marketing consultant Theron "Scarlet Raven" Thompson.
"What you're seeing is the mom and pop-sized poker rooms are closing. The larger properties are monopolizing the poker crowd," he said.
Several smaller Las Vegas casinos decided they no longer wanted to bet on the game in 2012, including Ellis Island, which closed its room just two months after opening it. Casino bosses also removed rooms from the Silverton south of the Strip, Aliante to the north, and Fitzgerald's, which eliminated its room when it rebranded as the D.
The Gold Coast, the Plaza and Tuscany casinos closed their rooms in 2011.
Poker has never been a high-profit game for casinos is because players exchange money with each other, not the house. Rooms must employ a dealer for every table and can only collect portion of what players put down, usually about 5 percent.
Yet at the height of the craze, casinos scrambled to install rooms for a new generation of fans.
The game's meteoric run is generally attributed to the rise of Internet gambling, new technology that let viewers see players' hidden cards in televised tournaments and a watershed moment during the 2003 World Series of Poker when an amateur with the unlikely name Chris Moneymaker claimed the $2.5 million first prize in front of a million television viewers.
After Moneymaker's win, the MGM Grand on the Las Vegas Strip reopened its poker room, which had been closed for years, and Caesars Palace announced plans to open its first room in more than a decade. The Venetian followed suit in 2006.
Mega-casinos continue to invest in the game. The Venetian added 17 tables to its room in September, making it the biggest game in town, Caesars Entertainment added a slot-style progressive jackpot element to its games earlier this year, and the expansive room at the Bellagio is still packed most nights.
Venetian poker director Kathy Raymond said the expansion, which was part of a larger casino floor renovation, has drawn more players to the already popular room.
"I think that the love people have for poker hasn't subsided," she said. "It may be part of the economic environment, but I don't think the interest has subsided at all."
She acknowledged that smaller casinos are struggling to claim their piece of the market.
"You really need volume to operate a successful poker room," she said. "The overhead can't be absorbed by just a few tables."
In the end, the very thing that made poker so appealing — its air of tradition and class — may be its undoing, at least on the gambling floor, William Thompson said. After all, casinos make their billions by giving people new and stimulating ways to lose money.
While slot machine developers can roll out a new "Family Guy" or "oodles of poodles" game ever few months, poker remains unchanged.
"With slot machines, you can keep reinventing them, so it's going to last longer. They're throwing new wrinkles in all the time," he said.

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