Las Vegas News, Sports, Business, Entertainment and Classifieds

Las Vegas Review-Journal - News

Tuesday
Mar 16, 2010
Mostly Sunny
Mostly Sunny 74° Weather Forecast

RECENT EDITIONS
Wed Thu Fri Sat Sun Mon Tue

sponsored by
News


JOHN L. SMITH: Questions swirl after fraud probe targets high roller who lost $120 million

From the day a decade ago that Omar Siddiqui emerged as a Strip high roller, speed defined his casino persona.

He might have been a mild-mannered vice president of merchandizing at Fry's Electronics back in San Jose, but in Las Vegas he was a wild man with a seemingly inexhaustible bankroll. Siddiqui liked fast cars, and he played blackjack almost as fast as he drove.


Most Popular Stories
  1. Goodman ditches firing plan
  2. Ex-Green Valley Ranch manager arrested
  3. Arrest report details officers' actions to catch suspects
  4. Mom: Jogger hit by plane was excited to head home
  5. Edwards mistress: 'We love each other very much'
  6. Anti-Reid ads draw criticism
  7. Las Vegas police officer who created 'One Cop's Journey' hangs up holster
  8. Galardi makes case for freedom
  9. Sarah Palin's father backs Tarkanian's Senate run
  10. Task force to tackle education issues




"He was a machine," says one casino industry veteran familiar with his style. "You couldn't deal fast enough."

Bang, bang, bang. He'd red line the house limit.

With a million-dollar credit line and an insatiable desire, the Pakistani man born Ausaf Umar Siddiqui gradually became a known quantity -- at least to the degree casinos are comfortable identifying their customers. Although his Fry's salary was $225,000 a year, Siddiqui often gambled more than that in a matter of minutes. Like all players from the time the first dice were carved from bone, he won big and lost bigger.

And he kept coming back. In recent years, he incurred debts and lawsuits in Las Vegas and elsewhere. He left some casinos leaning.

He was clever. Between forays to Las Vegas, he ran up heavy debts at California casinos. When he attempted to settle his Nevada markers, he must have realized that under California law gambling debts incurred in that state weren't enforceable.

In keeping with Las Vegas custom for high rollers, Siddiqui was occasionally given tens of thousands of dollars in free casino play as an inducement to relocate to a competing property. While some casinos chased him, and others put him on a cash-only status, others continued to court his action as if little had changed. As long as they would have him, he kept returning to take another shot at the tables.

All that's changed now. The human gambling machine slammed into a brick wall shortly before Christmas. The Internal Revenue Service and U.S. attorney's office filed a criminal complaint in the Northern District of California against Siddiqui outlining its jaw-dropping fraud investigation.

Siddiqui is accused of using a straw company called PC International to extort millions in kickbacks from companies seeking to do business with Fry's.

The fact so many vendors kept quiet for so long after being bled for at least $65.6 million in alleged kickbacks from 2005 to 2008 is in itself intriguing.

Now that the machine has broken down, questions about Siddiqui's alleged scheme swirl:

How is it that he managed to borrow a total of $10.4 million from November 2002 to February 2003 from Fry's without raising the suspicions of company officials?

Did Las Vegas casino marketing executives know how far Siddiqui was in over his head and still continue to allow him to gamble on credit?

Although the IRS has tracked $65.6 million through Siddiqui's alleged money laundering and wire fraud setup since 2005, Special Agent Andres Gonzalez noted in his criminal complaint affidavit that $167.8 million passed through PC International.

Some $70.4 million was wire transferred to Venetian subsidiary Venetian Marketing Inc. from 2005 to 2008, according to the complaint. In all, Siddiqui spent approximately $121 million at The Venetian and MGM Grand in three years. He also rang up multimillion-dollar debts at other casinos during that time.

The machine was a busy man.

"Casinos call people like Mr. Siddiqui a 'whale,' " his attorney Eric Sidebotham told the San Jose Mercury News this week. "He's a big carcass you can feed off for a long time. They will pick away at the carcass for every last penny until you are deep in the hole.''

It's a compelling image, but Siddiqui's whale status was also accompanied by lavish perquisites. From penthouse suites and free cash to new automobiles and use of private jets, he was given it all in exchange for his action.

One veteran casino source tells the story of Siddiqui also receiving casino stock as a "gift" from a major resort. The story may be legend, and it seems hard to believe, but it's the kind of tale that's easy to tell when you're dealing with a man capable -- by hook or crook -- of gambling away more than $120 million in less than three years.

Omar Siddiqui, the blackjack machine, is broken for good. But one thing is certain:

He will soon be replaced at the tables by the next machine.

John L. Smith's column appears Sunday, Tuesday, Wednesday, and Friday. E-mail him at Smith@reviewjournal.com or call (702) 383-0295. He also blogs at lvrj.com/blogs/smith/.

Newsvine Digg Fark Technorati reddit StumbleUpon del.icio.us Slashdot Propeller Mixx Furl Twitter MySpace Facebook Google Bookmarks Yahoo! Bookmarks Windows Live Favorites Ask MyStuff myAOL Favorites

Leave Your Comment 17 Reader Comments
Terms & Conditions
The following comments are provided by readers and are the sole responsiblity of the authors. The reviewjournal.com does not review comments before publication nor guarantee their accuracy. By publishing a comment here you agree to abide by the comment policy. If you see a comment that violates the policy, please notify the web editor.

Some comments may not display immediately due to an automatic filter. These comments will be reviewed within 48 hours. Please do not submit a comment more than once.
Current Word Count:

Note: Comments made by reporters and editors of the Las Vegas Review-Journal are presented with a yellow background.

Report abuse

craig wrote on January 19, 2009 08:35 AM: It is funny when I worked in Las Vegas at one the major casinos Siddiqui used to come people there use to fall over themselves to please him. I my was not impressed and ignored him when i saw him. I wouldn't open the door on the Rolls lent to by the casino. I didn't trust him by his looks alone. I hope he gets what fed to him by the FEDS.


Report abuse

oncebittentwiceburnt wrote on January 04, 2009 07:16 PM: Casinos dont care where the money comes from. I was playing bj in the Palms at a 100 min table and these too hispanic "gansters" come in and dump money on the table from a bag. No problem. Deal the cards.


Report abuse

Jimbo wrote on December 31, 2008 03:23 PM: I visited Fry's last year when I was in Vegas. I don't understand how they managed to build such a large business. They have a lot of stuff but prices weren't that great and you can just go online to buy stuff now.


Report abuse

Anon wrote on December 31, 2008 08:26 AM: after working at fry's for many years i was terminated right before the holidays because for not meeting sales goals. now i know the real reason i lost my job because some idiot exec couldnt control his gambling problem and his kickback schemes. thank you Fry's. thank you Omar.


Report abuse

linda wrote on December 31, 2008 12:01 AM: hey wait a minute, he had no money he was a crook and a thief. How can anyone call him a whale and give the respect that goes along with being a whale. Any tom dick or harry can bet huge with stolen money. He is a criminal nothing more nothing less. Don't idolize him
Oh yes, the gaming board should shut the Venetian (MGM) down for a few days (of course employees get full pay), so greedy they are, teach them good


Report abuse

Dave wrote on December 30, 2008 01:50 PM: Yeah Mike, how are the casinos supposed to know when some young punk pulls out a wad of money that you know he don't earn in his sloppy getup? How would the casinos know if this ain't drug money or other ill gotten gains? The casinos attitude has been, and always will be 'hear no evil, see no evil, say no evil.'


Report abuse

casinocon wrote on December 30, 2008 11:57 AM: I'd reckon their a lot fewer whales now . . . the casinos need to focus on re-connecting with Joe Six Pack. Free RFB, and they can keep some players in the properties. The Corps are going to learn the hard way who built Vegas, and it was NOT the high rollers. The Indian casinos know that volume is key. Give away a buffet, free play, and send a bus to pick them up. Like Jay Sarno said treat the little guy like a king. The Indian casinos are doing just fine.


Report abuse

Jen wrote on December 30, 2008 11:16 AM: Hey Mike,

How are casinos to know the money was from an illegal source?? They have no way of knowing the source of the money.

They follow the IRS rules regarding CTR and/or SARC filings - it's up to the feds to investigate if they deem fit, not a casino -


Report abuse

Ken wrote on December 30, 2008 09:12 AM: I always thought that Fry's was a terrorist money laundering front. No proof of course but you ever notice how every time you go to Fry's it seems as if everyone of Arab descent in the valley is there?


Report abuse

Joe Bama wrote on December 30, 2008 08:37 AM: I heard he was trying to win enough money to pay off Hillary's campaign debt because he is in love with her.


Read All Comments