Tropicana Files for Chapter 11 Protection
By WAYNE PARRY,
AP
Posted: 2008-05-06 10:29:25
ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (May 6) - The owner of Tropicana casinos in
Atlantic City and Las Vegas has filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy
protection, nearly five months after New Jersey regulators stripped
the Tropicana Casino and Resort of its license.
Greektown Casino LLC filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection Thursday, but is finalizing $150 million in additional financing for operations and is completing the construction of its new 400-room hotel and gambling floor expansion.
Tropicana Entertainment LLC said Monday it plans to continue
operating its remaining properties throughout the country,
including the famed Tropicana Casino and Resort on the Las Vegas
strip, and will keep current staffing levels.
The company was buffeted by a chain of events that began Dec. 12
when the New Jersey Casino Control Commission determined that the
company was incapable of running the "first-class operation"
required by state law and stripped the Tropicana in Atlantic City
of its casino license after less than a year.
That touched off a funding crisis that the company desperately
struggled to fend off until filing for protection in U.S.
Bankruptcy Court in Delaware, listing assets of $2.8 billion and
liabilities of $3.3 billion.
Scott C. Butera, the company's president, called the filing "an
opportunity to take a breathing spell," get its debt under
control, and move forward.
He urged current patrons of the Tropicana and the company's
other casinos to keep coming.
"This is the first step in making things much better," he told
The Associated Press in an interview Monday. "I'd encourage them
to remain a customer of the Tropicana, and I'm sure the customer
will be rewarded as we do better things and invest in our assets."
He said the company generates positive cash flow from its
operations and has lined up $67 million in debtor-in-possession
financing from Greenwich, Conn.-based Silver Point Finance LLC.
"We have more than adequate resources to meet our ongoing
financial needs," Butera said. "We will continue to offer our
visitors and players a full range of lodging, entertainment and
gaming services."
The bankruptcy filing covers nine properties: The Tropicana
Casino & Resort in Las Vegas; Bayou Caddy's Jubilee Casino in
Greenville, Miss.; Casino Aztar in Evansville, Ind.; Horizon Casino
Hotel in Vicksburg, Miss.; Horizon Casino Resort and the MontBleu
Resort Casino & Spa, both in Lake Tahoe, Nev.; the Tropicana
Express Hotel & Casino in Laughlin, Nev.; River Palms Resort &
Casino in Laughlin, Nev.; and the Sheraton Hotel and Belle of Baton
Rogue Casino in Baton Rouge, La.
The filing does not cover the Tropicana in Atlantic City, which
is in the process of being sold by a state-appointed conservator.
The sale was mandated when the former owners lost their license in
December.
The other Tropicana Entertainment property excluded from the
bankruptcy filing is the Lighthouse Point Casino in Greenville,
Miss.
Casinos owned by a corporate affiliate - the Amelia Belle Casino
in Louisiana, and the Westin Casuarina Las Vegas Hotel Casino &
Spa, are also excluded from the filing.
In court documents, Butera decried the decision by New Jersey
regulators to wrest control of the Atlantic City Tropicana from the
company, saying that led directly to the anticipated bankruptcy
filing. He laid out a cascading series of problems that formed a
perfect storm that befell Tropicana's owners almost from the moment
they took over the property on Jan. 3, 2007.
When they bought Aztar Corp. for $2.1 billion after a heated
bidding war, the company unwittingly violated a fundamental
principle of business: buying high just before the market fell.
Using tactics they had successfully employed elsewhere,
management began cost-cutting measures including nearly 1,000
layoffs in Atlantic City, prompting an uproar from unions.
A slowing national economy made gamblers more cautious about
parting with their money, and real estate values plummeted as well.
Then credit markets tightened, leaving Tropicana Entertainment
"very little margin for error," Butera wrote in court filings.
The company simply could not afford any significant setbacks, he
added.
The company suffered a huge setback with the loss of the
Atlantic City casino license. The company is appealing the license
denial, but the bidding process is well under way and a new owner
could be selected within a few weeks.
The company will receive the proceeds from the sale but is
worried that a forced sale in a bad economy will result in a
depressed price.
It is already selling its Evansville and Vicksburg casinos to
help reduce its debt and could decide to sell other assets as the
restructuring process unfolds, Butera said.
The filing asks the court's permission to continue to make wage
and benefits payments to employees, honor customer loyalty
programs, and pay critical vendors and suppliers while continuing
to operate uninterrupted.
The privately held company and its affiliates have 11,000 full
and part-time employees in five states.
Kentucky-based Columbia Sussex Corp., the hotel corporation
founded by Tropicana owner William J. Yung III, shares
administrative and business functions with the Tropicana affiliates
but is not involved in the bankruptcy filing.
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