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Friday, February 7, 2014

Semion Kronenfeld indicted in $12.9M Las Vegas Casino Debt Case


A Toronto real estate businessman and gambling high-roller is sought in Nevada on charges that he failed to repay $12.9 million in debts to two Las Vegas-area casinos more than five years ago, authorities said Thursday.

Semion Kronenfeld, 43, was named in an arrest warrant issued after a Clark County District Court grand jury charged him in a 12-count indictment with felony theft, bad cheques and obtaining money under false pretenses.

The case is among the largest casino debt cases to reach court in Nevada. If he's convicted, Kronenfeld could face decades in state prison.

Kronenfeld's attorney in Las Vegas, Craig Mueller, didn't immediately respond Thursday to messages seeking comment.

Prosecutor Jake Merback, head of the Clark County district attorney's office bad cheque unit, said it wasn't clear where Kronenfeld was.

Ontario real estate firm owner

Authorities said after Kronenfeld's case became public in 2009 that he listed his occupation on casino credit records as the owner of an investment real estate company based in Ontario, and that he had an Israeli passport. He has also spelled his last name Cronenfeld.

The indictment handed up Wednesday accuses him of failing to repay $7.9 million in casino IOUs written in October 2008 at The Venetian resort on the Las Vegas Strip and $5 million less than two weeks later at the Green Valley Ranch resort in Henderson.

Fraudulent cheques

Nevada treats written casino IOUs, known as markers, like fraudulent cheques. State law lets prosecutors collect a 10 per cent processing and prosecution fee with any settlement. Most cases are resolved before charges are filed.

The case against Kronenfeld is one of the largest to reach court since the Nevada state legislature added "credit extended by any licensed gaming establishment" to state bad cheque law in 1995.

In 2009, Terrance "Terry" Watanabe, the wealthy former owner of the Omaha, Neb.-based Oriental Trading Co., was indicted on allegations he failed to pay $14.75 million in casino debts. He counter-sued Harrah's Entertainment Inc., before both sides reached a confidential settlement in July 2010.

Other large casino bad cheque cases include a $2.5 million bad cheque dispute between Girls Gone Wild founder Joe Francis and casinos owned by Las Vegas casino magnate Steve Wynn, and the conviction in 2011 of former NBA All-Star Antoine Walker.

The Francis-Wynn case is pending before the Nevada Supreme Court.

Walker pleaded guilty before trial, was sentenced to five years' probation and ordered to pay about $770,000 in restitution.

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