There was a recent incident at the Horseshoe in Hammond IN where a group entering the casino found a $25,000 chip in the parking garage. They were having dinner in the steakouse and asked their server if she thought they could cash it in - the server reported to her boss and casino security told trhe group it was casino property. The group gave it up and the casino comped dinner for six. Maybe they should have left when they found it and looked for a lawyer! Mike
> To: vpFREE@yahoogroups.com
> From: wcimo@yahoo.com
> Date: Sat, 4 Aug 2012 13:24:06 -0700
> Subject: Re: [vpFREE] Re: Credits left in machine; Trespass/ wasJean Scott's Frugal V LVA BLOG - 7/29
>
> Here is some more information on ther Michigan case....Romanski v. Detroit Entertainment, LLC.
> , 428 F.3d 629 (6th Cir. 2008): Plaintiff, a seventy-two year old woman, was playing slot machines the defendant's casino when she found a five cent token unattended to in a slot machine tray. The token was not hers, but she noticed no chairs around the slot machine and picked up the five cent token for herself. Four casino employees proceeded to surround her and asked plaintiff to accompany her to the casino's small, windowless "security office" or "interview room." Plaintiff was told she had engaged in a practice disallowed by the casino known as "slot-walking." However, plaintiff could not have known this because the casino did not post this policy anywhere. It is undisputed that plaintiff therefore did not have notice of this policy. One of the defendant security officers claimed she was a police officer, had a badge, and appeared to have handcuffs. Plaintiff was added to the defendant casino's eviction list for six months. While the defendant
> security officers detained plaintiff, they did not allow her to eat lunch, they watched her as she went to the bathroom, and falsely told plaintiff's friends that she had stolen from the casino.
> The Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed the findings of the trial court, holding that the jury instruction that the plaintiff, as the finder of the five cent token left in a slot machine, had superior title to the token than did the casino was not confusing, misleading, or prejudicial, especially in light of the insignificance of the five cent token and the casino's decision to deal with the situation by dispatching a team of security personnel to detain and interrogate the plaintiff.
> The court also found the punitive damage award of $600,000 to the plaintiff, who was detained and interrogated, forced to endure the indignity of having a security officer stand guard outside her restroom stall, and was ejected from the casino to the outdoors in hot and humid weather, after having taken a five cent token from one slot machine, would satisfy the demands of the due process clause. As a result, the plaintiff would be given the option of agreeing to remit $275,000 and accept a $600,000 punitive damages award or proceed with a new trial on damages. The award was 60% of the casino's daily intake and was within the ballpark of punitive damages awarded in other civil rights cases against corporate defendants.
>
>
> ________________________________
> From: "rob.singer1111@yahoo.com" <rob.singer1111@yahoo.com>
> To: vpFREE@yahoogroups.com
> Sent: Saturday, August 4, 2012 7:10 AM
> Subject: Re: [vpFREE] Re: Credits left in machine; Trespass/ wasJean Scott's Frugal V LVA BLOG - 7/29
>
>
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> An ID to cash tickets at the cage? I've never run into that after cashing hundreds of 4-figure tickets, the highest being around $6000, at dozens of Nevada casinos over the years.
>
> ----- Reply message -----
> From: "cdfsrule" <mailto:cdfsrule%40gmail.com>
> To: <mailto:vpFREE%40yahoogroups.com>
> Subject: [vpFREE] Re: Credits left in machine; Trespass/ wasJean Scott's Frugal V LVA BLOG - 7/29
> Date: Thu, Aug 2, 2012 6:17 pm
> --- In mailto:vpFREE%40yahoogroups.com, "labum63" <labum63@...> wrote:
>
> >
>
> > The money does not belong to the casino. There was a Michigan case where an elderly woman was confined for retrieving a nickel and the casino claimed it was the casino's money. Consistent with the law of abandoned property in private property, the lady won her lawsuit and was awarded $600,000 in punitive damages.
>
> Some more interesting "facts" to ponder. When tickets get large enough, casinos require photo ID to cash them. They also match the ID to the information from the ticket the information was actually on your ticket (your players club card was in the machine, wasn't it?). That kinda brings up all kinds of other interesting issues/stories... but they are for another day.
>
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