Binion's Horseshoe, also
known as the Horseshoe Casino or simply
The Horseshoe, was a hotel and casino located in
downtown Las
Vegas
, Nevada
on what is
now the Fremont
Street Experience
. The casino was named for its founder,
Benny Binion and had 366 rooms, three
restaurants and a rooftop
pool.
The property is still open, but
Harrahs owns
the
The Horseshoe brand name.
As of 2008 it is owned
by TLC Corporation and runs under the name Binion's
Gambling Hall and Hotel
.
Binion also instituted high
table
limits. When he first opened the Horseshoe, he set the
craps table limit at $500--ten times higher than any
other casino in Las Vegas at the time. Ultimately, Binion's raised
the table limit to $10,000 and even eliminated table limits
completely at times, which was an immediate hit.
Unlike other casinos, the emphasis at Binion's was on gambling, not
on big performing acts. The casino was also very egalitarian; there
were no private pits for high rollers.
Binion's entire family was involved in the casino. His wife Teddy
Jane managed the
casino cage until her
death in 1994. His sons,
Jack and
Ted, supervised the games. His daughter,
Becky (later
Becky Binion
Behnen), managed the kitchen.
The
Horseshoe brand was used for several casino properties
owned by the Binion family members. While not part of the same
company, the other
Horseshoe Casinos were
owned by
Jack Binion, a co-owner of
Binion's.
History
Benny Binion bought the
Eldorado Club
and
Apache Hotel in 1951, re-opening
them as the
Horseshoe Casino. He styled it like an
old-style
riverboat, with low ceilings and
velvet wallpaper. It was the first casino to have carpeting, as
well as
comps that were offered to
all gamblers. Benny believed that small-time gamblers should get
the same comps as those who bet big money.
Benny
served time in Leavenworth Penitentiary
from 1953 to 1957 for tax evasion. He sold
his share of the casino to fellow gambler
Joe W. Brown to pay
approximately $5 million in legal costs. It was generally
understood, however, that Brown was only a caretaker, and Benny
regained controlling interest in 1957. He did not regain full
control, however, until 1964.
While Brown operated the casino, he installed the famous $1 million
dollar display on the casino floor. He sold the display in 1959 and
it was later recreated using 100 $10,000 bills by Benny in 1964.
The display became one of the casinos attractions.
As a convicted felon, Benny was no longer allowed to hold a gaming
license, so his sons took over day-to-day control when the family
bought out Brown. Jack became president while Ted became casino
manager. Benny remained on the payroll as a "consultant" until his
death in 1989.
In 1970, Jack began hosting the
World Series of Poker (WSOP) at the
Horseshoe. Eventually, the WSOP became the largest set of poker
tournaments in the world. In 1988, the Horseshoe expanded by
acquiring
The Mint, a high-rise
hotel on the west side of the casino. The expansion of the casino
from this purchase provided room for Binion's first
poker room.
Ted was under constant scrutiny from the
Nevada Gaming Commission from 1986
onward for drug problems and associating with known mob figure
"Fat Herbie" Blitzstein. He would
ultimately be banned from even entering his family's casino. In
1998, he was stripped of his gaming license for his continued
association with Blitzstein. He was forced to sell his 20 percent
interest to his younger sister, Becky.
In 1998 Becky Behnen acquired controlling interest in the casino
following a protracted legal battle with her older brother Jack.
The battle ended with Jack being bought out while retaining a 1%
interest in the casino so that he could retain his Nevada gaming
license. Jack moved on to
other gambling
interests. Behnen became president of the Horseshoe while her
husband, Nick, took over as manager.
Behnen implemented several cost-cutting measures, most of which
were unpopular with the gamblers. Among the most notable was the
removal of the Horseshoe exhibit that held $1 million, having been
sold to collector
Jay Parrino, that had
served as a backdrop for free pictures of visitors.
She also made changes in the distribution of the money from the
entry fees in the World Series of Poker that were unpopular with
the casino
dealers, and closed a popular
restaurant in the casino. Benny had used one of the tables in the
restaurant as his office. Despite these measures, the Horseshoe
became bogged down in debt. Under her father and brothers, the
Horseshoe had reportedly been the most profitable casino in Las
Vegas (it was privately held, so it never had to report its
earnings).
Behnen also attracted the attention of the state regulators by
failing to keep sufficient funds available to pay winners in the
casino cage.
Bob Stupak also drew
negative publicity to the casino when he tried to redeem his $5,000
casino tokens, some of which were
stored in the casino's own
safe deposit
boxes, and Becky refused to honor them.
A Binion's poker table signed by numerous professional poker
players and WSOP Champions
Behnen's undoing, however, was a dispute with the unions that
represented some of the Horseshoe's employees. In November 2002,
the
Culinary Workers Union
and Bartenders Union filed a complaint with the
National Labor Relations
Board alleging that Behnen hadn't signed a
collective bargaining
agreement and had fallen behind on medical insurance and
pension payments. The parties reached a settlement in March 2003 in
which the Horseshoe signed the collective bargaining agreement and
agreed to pay the owed money. However, the Horseshoe fell behind on
its payments, leading a federal judge to issue two separate
judgments ordering the Horseshoe to pay over $1.5 million. The
judgments gave the union the right to seize the money if regular
payments weren't being met.
However, the casino stopped making payments in June. After holding
off numerous times, on
December 5 the
Culinary Union obtained a court order authorizing the seizure of up
to $1.9 million from the Horseshoe casino cage. The seizure took
place on
January 9; ultimately
federal marshals and
IRS agents seized $1 million in
order to satisfy debts owed to the Southern Nevada Culinary and
Bartenders Pension Trust Fund and to the Hotel Employees and
Restaurant Employees International Union Welfare Fund. The seizure
effectively depleted the Horseshoe's bankroll, forcing it to close.
A day later, the hotel was shut down as well, and Behnen reached an
agreement with the
Nevada
Gaming Commission to keep the casino closed until its bankroll
was replenished.
A few days later, on January 23, Behnen reached a deal to sell the
Horseshoe to
Harrah's
Entertainment. The deal closed in March 2004. Almost
immediately, on March 11, Harrah's sold the Horseshoe to
MTR Gaming Group. Harrah's retained the
rights to the Horseshoe brand and the
World Series of Poker when it sold the
casino and hotel, but sold the Binion's brand. The land the casino
sits on is still leased from multiple owners.
Binion's reopened in April 2004, with MTR Gaming operating the
hotel and Harrah's Entertainment operating the casino, while MTR
Gaming completed the process of acquiring the required
gaming license.
Harrah's continued to
operate the casino under a temporary contract with MTR Gaming until
March 11, 2005 when MTR Gaming Group officially took control of the
operation of the casino and renamed it Binion's
Gambling Hall and Hotel
.
MTR Gaming remodeled both the casino and hotel after the purchase.
A notable feature of the remodeling was to replace the casino's
worn carpet with surplus carpeting that Benny Binion had stored
since initially carpeting the casino.
It was announced on November 30, 2009 that the property's 365 hotel
rooms would cease operating on December 14,
2009.http://www.lvrj.com/news/breaking_news/Binions-to-close-hotel-tower-lay-off-100-workers-78149717.html
Sources
References