Imperial Pacific Denounces ‘Fake News’ Bankruptcy Rumors

Imperial Pacific Denounces ‘Fake News’ Bankruptcy Rumors.

Costfoto / NurPhoto / Getty Images

Key Takeaways

Saipan casino developer Imperial Pacific International (IPI) says that rumors circulating on social media regarding the company’s financial status and one of its senior executives are false.

Imperial PacificMark Brown worked in Atlantic City under Donald Trump. Now he’s back in the fold at Imperial Pacific having previously resigned in December 2017. (Image: Imperial Pacific International)

In a press statement released Monday, the company categorically denied it had entered into bankruptcy proceedings, adding that it had initiated legal action against the unnamed source of the rumors for spreading “slanderous, fake news.”

IPI noted that entering bankruptcy would have required an official announcement to the Hong Kong Stock Exchange.

Profit Plunge

The company is building the Imperial Palace Casino on the Pacific island of Saipan, a US overseas territory. The rumors come a month after the company unexpectedly 80 construction workers, despite having missed its deadline to complete the project for a second time.

IPI secured a two-and-a-half-year deadline extension from the island’s government but will still be four and a half years late on delivering, even if it hits its new deadline.

Last week it announced it was seeking to raise $38.3 million through a bond placement, money that will be used for “general corporate purposes.”

In August, the company announced its profits had plummeted 91.3 percent in the first half of 2018, largely because it had been forced to write off $733 million in unrecoverable bad debt, most of which was owed by just ten VIP clients.

Revolving Doors 

But IPI is not just shedding construction workers. Last month, its CEO and chairman, , became the fourth high-level executive to resign in just over a year. Since then, it has reinstated former chairman Mark Brown. Brown – who once managed Donald Trump’s Atlantic City casino empire left in December 2017 in order to “to pursue other projects close to his family.”

Along with the mysterious rumormonger, IPI is also suing Bloomberg, which has alleged the company engaged in financial improprieties with senior officials in the Saipan government. This has been strenuously denied by both IPI and officials on the island.

In 2017, following a death of a laborer, the Imperial Palace construction site was raided by the FBI, which uncovered widespread visa violations among the workers, most of whom had been shipped to Saipan from China.

Several of IPI’s contractors were charged with labor violations, including importing and harboring undocumented workers. They were ordered to pay millions in back wages.

Article Sources
Nebraska Football Legend Tom Osborne Opposes Casinos, Urges Voters to Reject November Referendums editorial policy.
  1. Las Vegas Police Rescue 300 Birds Groomed for Cockfighting, One Person Arrested

Compare Accounts
×
1MDB Fugitive Jho Low Gambled $87M at Venetian Las Vegas, Says LVS Exec
Provider
Name
Description
NHL Partners With Former AGA Executive Sara Slane to Advise on Legal Sports Betting  Former Topless Club Owner, Rick Rizzolo, Enters Plea Agreement on Tax Evasion Charges  FanDuel and BetMGM Ready Super Bowl LVIII Advertisements  MGM Resorts and Caesars Ready to Invest in Atlantic City, Christie Pledges Additional Relief  Bally’s Tiverton Casino Seeks Property Tax Reduction, Cites COVID-19 Pandemic  DraftKings Stock Could Be Post-Earnings Rebound Play  Rush Street Interactive Soars Following Conference Comments  VEGAS MYTHS RE-BUSTED: Linq Garage Illustrates Flooding  DraftKings Joins Ranks of Rookie Super Bowl Advertisers, Budweiser, Coke Sitting Out  Want to Live In a Las Vegas Casino? Station Casinos Internship Provides Opportunity