Navigation

Free Gambling

A criminal investigation into an alleged slots theft ring at Gulfstream Park Racing & Casino has led to the ousting of several employees, including the pari-mutuel's vice president of gaming, according to sources. The Florida Department of Law Enforcement is looking into allegations that at least two lower-level employees were...
Share this:

A criminal investigation into an alleged slots theft ring at Gulfstream Park Racing & Casino has led to the ousting of several employees, including the pari-mutuel's vice president of gaming, according to sources.

The Florida Department of Law Enforcement is looking into allegations that at least two lower-level employees were involved in ripping off slot machines for cash. But a former host at the casino, Steve Dorman, says Gulfstream doesn't want the Florida Department of Law Enforcement (FDLE) to prosecute any wrongdoing, as it fears the adverse publicity.

"They just wanted it to go away," Dorman told me Monday. "They wanted to cover it up completely."

For a time, it looked like the casino might get its way. The Sun-Sentinel was the first publication to get wind of the investigation but killed its story at the last minute, apparently after the newspaper's management was influenced by casino advertising executives.

I broke the story last week on the New Times' web page ("Cripple the Presses"), prompting Dorman to come forward to talk about the emerging scandal.

Gulfstream spokesman Mike Mullaney refused to comment on details of the investigation or the casino's response to it, but he said the pari-mutuel was "playing ball" with FDLE.

"As a gaming enterprise, integrity and dignity and credibility are of utmost importance to us," he said.

Dorman, who handled customer relations on the casino floor, was fired on October 26 for reasons not connected to the criminal investigation. He says the theft ring was limited to a small number of employees, who were allegedly using test cards — meant to make sure the slots were working properly — to steal money from the machines. It isn't known how much money was taken.

Eric Lemerand, Gulfstream's vice president of gaming, was suspended from his job after the investigation began, Dorman says. Mullaney confirmed that Lemerand was no longer working at Gulfstream but wouldn't discuss details. Efforts to reach Lemerand were unsuccessful. It isn't known whether Lemerand was aware of the theft ring.

Dorman, however, says that at least two lower-level employees were caught in the act and were quickly fired. Dorman and other casino sources say rumors are rampant that the thefts were tied to drug use by employees and that a drug dealer was given access to the slot machine test cards.

FDLE spokeswoman Paige Patterson-Hughes confirmed that her agency, which has a regulatory office on Gulfstream grounds in Hallandale Beach, is investigating the casino for criminal wrongdoing, although she declined to provide any details.

Besides the slot machine test cards, there is also speculation that the investigation centers on the use of promotional cards given by the casino to patrons. A look at state filings shows that Gulfstream gave out a whopping $1,051,000 in nonredeemable credits during July and August. In that same period, Mardi Gras Gaming, a larger casino that does about twice the slots business of Gulfstream, reported using only $108,000 of the credits.

But Dorman says that, although he can't speak for all the gratuities given to patrons, most of the promotions were legitimate.

"I'll have to defer to our accounting department about that," Gulfstream's Mullaney said when asked about the state filings. "If there is an investigation, any comment I make could jeopardize it."

Mullaney did offer that he had heard people were speculating that huge amounts of money were involved in the theft. "I can't imagine it's millions of dollars," he said. "That boggles the mind."

This is the first potential scandal for Broward County's fledgling slots industry, which is both heavily regulated and heavily taxed by the state. And it's about the last thing Gulfstream, which has been plagued by low revenues and perceived mismanagement for months, needed.

Dorman is no fan, and he swears that it's not just because he was fired or that he believes the casino owes him $5,000 in bonus money. He says it's obvious even to the casual observer that the entire operation is poorly run. One of those observers, he says, was famed basketball player and cross-dresser Dennis Rodman, who recently hosted a Halloween party at the pari-mutuel.

The former casino host says that during one of Rodman's recent visits, the celebrity beckoned him over to his table and asked: "Why is this place such a joke? There's no fun; there's no atmosphere."

Dorman says he just looked at Rodman and said: "Welcome to Gulfstream."

The casino still seems awash in money, though, with billboards all over town. It's also a large advertiser in the Sun-Sentinel. Whether that played a role in the newspaper's decision to kill its story on the investigation can't be established definitively.

Staff Writer John Holland was the first reporter to get the story. He confirmed the investigation through FDLE and also spoke with Dorman and Mullaney about it.

Mullaney said Holland asked him questions and told him the daily newspaper was going to publish an article about the investigation nearly two weeks ago. "But the days came and went without a story," Mullaney told me. "I wasted two dollars and five cents on the Sentinel looking for that story."

Holland declined to comment. Sources at the Sentinel say his article about the investigation was edited and vetted by a lawyer, then killed at the last minute.

At one point, a high-ranking editor told Holland to speak with a Gulfstream advertising executive who wanted the story spiked, newspaper sources say. Executive Editor Earl Maucker didn't return my phone call asking for comment.

Although some Sentinel reporters believe the decision to spike the story was directly tied to advertising, others say it was based on concerns about the use of unnamed sources and worries that it could harm the gambling industry.

Whatever the reason, the decision doesn't bode well for journalism in Broward County. The newspaper's circulation has been in steady decline. At the same time, it is undergoing what management called "transformative change," which entails a blending of the newsroom with the Sentinel's marketing and advertising departments. For good reason, news reporting has traditionally been kept strictly separate from the interests of advertisers.

The (mis)handling of the Gulfstream story may be a sign that the newspaper is not just bridging departments but that its hunt for revenues in an increasingly grim industry has overtaken its already rather tepid journalistic mission — which would be far worse than whatever happened on the slots floor of a local casino.

KEEP NEW TIMES FREE... Since we started New Times, it has been defined as the free, independent voice of South Florida, and we'd like to keep it that way. Your membership allows us to continue offering readers access to our incisive coverage of local news, food, and culture with no paywalls. You can support us by joining as a member for as little as $1.