CASINO RESORT DEVELOPER TO SUE BANKS for $3 BILLION
1 May 2009
Tens of billions in bailouts not being used
to help businesses, says developer
A Las Vegas casino resort developer is taking on major
US banks in a multi-billion dollar legal suit against a
decision to renege on $800 million in prearranged
funding.
Fontainebleau Las Vegas LLC, which is
developing a major casino resort on the Las Vegas Strip,
has launched the $3 billion lawsuit against some of the
world's top banks, including the Bank of America,
Merrill Lynch, JPMorgan Chase, Barclays, Royal Bank of
Scotland, Sumitomo Mitsui, and Deutsche Bank.
Fontainebleau claims the banks and other lenders
unjustifiably backtracked on their contractual
commitments to provide the company with almost $ 800
million in prearranged funding.
The lawsuit
makes particular note of the fact that Bank of America,
JP Morgan Chase and certain other lenders involved in
the lawsuit received tens of billions of dollars in
federal bailout money that was meant to increase the
flow of credit to businesses such as Fontainebleau.
The legal papers filed this week in the District
Court of Clark County, Nevada do not mince words: “This
case arises from the breach by a group of unscrupulous
banks of their clear and unequivocal written promise to
Fontainebleau to finance the construction of its
casino-resort, a promise in exchange for which the Banks
have already secured for themselves tens of millions of
dollars in fees,” it charges.
And on Friday a
public statement issued by Fontainbleau was equally
hard-hitting, accusing the banks of misconduct which was
"....calculated, intentional and malicious."
The
statement continued: "Defendants abandoned their lending
commitments solely to try to extricate themselves from a
loan they no longer wish to make, notwithstanding that
those commitments are clear, unequivocal, and binding,
and that Fontainebleu and thousands of employees and
their families are relying on those commitments to be
performed.”
The banks apparently notified
Fontainebleau on Monday that they had unilaterally
“terminated” their commitments under an $ 800 million
revolver loan, the company revealed, claiming that this
unexpected action was “....ostensibly based on ‘one or
more’ unspecified ‘Events of Default,’ but without
outlining any detail or specifics."
According to
the lawsuit, “In fact, there has been no Event of
Default, and there is no contractual basis whatsoever
for the Revolver Banks’ breach of their clear and
unambiguous obligations. The purported termination is
nothing more than the banks’ baseless attempt to walk
away from the Project and abandon their obligations.”
The $800 million loan is in addition to more
than $2 billion in debt and equity that Fontainebleau
has already borrowed and invested to build what is
expected to be a new landmark casino-resort on the Las
Vegas Strip.
The company says that the banks'
“brazen breach of contract” endangers the developer's
ability to complete its casino-resort.
The
project, situated diagonally opposite Circus Circus, is
more than 70 percent completed, and failure at this
point will cause massive harm to both the project and
the local economy, says Fontainbleau, with the jobs of 3
300 construction workers and an additional 1 700 workers
in the final stages of the construction placed at risk.
The new casino-resort is also scheduled to employ some 6
000 locals, and these jobs, too, could be placed in
peril. Damage to construction suppliers and contractors
would also inevitably flow from a failure to complete.
Fontainebleu is partly owned by Australia's gambling
entrepreneur James Packer through his Crown Casinos
firm, which has invested $250 million in Fontainebleu
and holds a 19.60 percent interest in the developer.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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