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Liquor licenses denied for nightclubs at Planet Hollywood

Privé, Living Room face closure; resort fined

The Privé nightclub was denied a liquor license and ordered to cease operations by midnight Tuesday for failing "to abide by the duties of a liquor licensee," the county's Business License Department announced Thursday just hours after Planet Hollywood Resort paid a $500,000 fine for not properly overseeing activities at the nightclub.

Privé's ultralounge, the Living Room, which is owned by the same company as the nightclub, also was denied a liquor license and ordered to cease all business operations by midnight July 30.


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  • The nightclub and lounge had been operating under temporary licenses while the Metropolitan Police Department investigated their suitability for licenses after being cited by the county for a series of code violations.

    "The evidence of improper management oversight and disregard for the duties of the licensee is overwhelming and points to only one decision: denial of a liquor license," Clark County Business License Director Jacqueline Holloway said Thursday. "We expect consistent compliance and cooperation from our privileged licensees for the benefit of our citizens."

    The county, which announced the license rejections in a news release, said county regulations require liquor licensees to "strictly enforce" county and state laws that ban "any lewd activity, nudity or topless activity (as well as) disorder, disturbances, or other activities, which endanger the health or safety of the patrons."

    The county noted that Privé and the Living Room had been cited for three violations by the Business License Department, including instances where security managers either stalled or interfered with routine and compliance inspections at the clubs.

    Compliance inspections include ensuring that patrons are being properly carded at the front door and ensuring that employees have work and alcohol awareness cards.

    Privé was cited for allowing topless and lewd activity to take place on site.

    Privé and the Living Room are owned and operated by the Opium Group, a Miami Beach, Fla.-based nightclub owner.

    The Opium Group has 30 days to appeal the license decision to the Clark County Commission, but its clubs will have to remain closed during the appeal process.

    The owners would have to file by the middle of next week to make the county commission's Aug. 4 agenda, county Director of Public Communications Erik Pappa said.

    Calls and e-mails to the Opium Group were not returned.

    Planet Hollywood Resort did not return phone calls or e-mails seeking comment on whether it plans to continue its relationship with the Opium Group. The county announced its decision shortly after Planet Hollywood Resort was before the Nevada Gaming Commission and paid a $500,000 fine "for failing to maintain sufficient control over" Privé, which leases the space from the resort.

    Nevada Deputy Attorney General John Michela, whose office brought the complaint against the hotel-casino, told the Gaming Commission that the resort's failure to maintain oversight of the nightclub "led to numerous incidents, which reflect or tend to reflect poorly on the reputation of gaming" in Nevada and that could deter the future development of the gaming industry.

    The Gaming Commission on Thursday commended the resort for steps it has taken since regulators began their investigation. The Gaming Control Board on July 9 announced the hotel-casino had accepted responsibility for allowing illegal and improper activities to take place at the club.

    The agreement includes a provision that could result in an additional $250,000 fine if a similar complaint is filed against the hotel-casino before July 31, 2011.

    Planet Hollywood had renegotiated its lease with the nightclub to allow hotel-casino personnel to enter the nightclub without having to be escorted by Privé's security, as was the case before.

    Attorney Frank Schreck, who represents the resort, said the new lease gave the hotel-casino authority to terminate the nightclub's lease if there were similar problems.

    Gaming Commission members, who would not comment after the county's decision was announced, said at their meeting earlier Thursday that nightclubs such as Privé are a "good thing for Las Vegas" when properly supervised.

    "They create a vitalized energy, a young adult theme for Las Vegas and Nevada, and they're just a good thing," Gaming Commissioner Tony Alamo said. "Where it went sideways is when the health and safety of the patrons was being sacrificed."

    According to the attorney general's complaint, the Clark County Fire Department responded to 61 calls at the hotel-casino in the 12 months prior to the club's opening. The number of responses jumped to 104 in the eight months after the club opened.

    Las Vegas police also experienced an increase in calls after the club opened.

    The fine against Planet Hollywood came after gaming regulators had expressed concerns about illegal activities, such as minors being allowed in and being served alcohol, at many of the nightclubs and topless pools at the Strip resorts.

    Gaming Control Board member Randall Sayre has acknowledged that as many as nine other clubs, ultralounges and topless swimming pools are being investigated for possible regulatory violations.

    And on Tuesday, the control board sent all gaming licensees a letter warning that regulators have concerns about a number of other issues that could lead to disciplinary action against casinos if they fail to take corrective actions.

    Sayre's letter proposed regulators and gaming licensees meet in a series of workshops to discuss and clarify some of those issues.

    Operators and spokespeople for the other high-profile Strip nightclubs were unavailable or did not have any comments on Thursday's events.

    Spokespersons for Tao at The Venetian and for the N9NE group, which operates clubs at The Palms, declined comment. Pure Management Group, which operates Pure at Caesars Palace and LAX at Luxor did not return calls seeking comment.

    Pure was the subject of an Internal Revenue Service investigation last year; no resulting action has been made public.

    News of the Privé action came as other clubs planned their usual summer activities, and the effects on them remain to be seen. N9NE Group had previously advertised a Kandy Vegas weekend at The Palms today through Sunday. A promotional release touts "a series of decadent events," with women "encouraged to dress in their most delicious Kandy-style lingerie."

    A representative of Kirvin-Doak, the public relations firm that sent the release, noted "there are liberties taken with promotional writing."

    Entertainment reporter Mike Weatherford contributed to this report. Contact reporter Arnold M. Knightly at aknightly@reviewjournal.com or 702-477-3893.

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    Ms. Agro wrote on July 26, 2009 11:59 AM: Any good and motivated detective with Metro or an agent with a federal bureau could nab numerous arrests on a nightly basis at any Las Vegas nightclub. Drugs, prostitution, racketeering, etc. it would be like shooting fish in a barrel. Just go undercover, leran who the players are, and go at it. Hell, I could even give you names to start with.......


    Dark Gable wrote on July 26, 2009 01:59 AM: I guess PH decided not to pay the bribe money after all......


    Grim Reaper wrote on July 25, 2009 06:30 PM: Frank Tucker, Greg J and the Opium Group should be getting their records together since the FEDS will come a knocking.

    The doormen and all the other CASH employees better have really good tax returns.

    This is another Pure/Davidovici type scandal. The casinos need to take responsibility for these night clubs once and for all.


    tim ritter wrote on July 25, 2009 10:57 AM: now that the officials got all the "mean bad strippers and underage drinkers," if they want to do some real police work, why don't they cross the street, go to the city center construction project, round up all the illegal immigrants and send them back to mexico,and give legal american citizens a job !


    threeblindmice wrote on July 24, 2009 07:51 PM: Here's a laundry list of nightclub losers now banished from this town: Stevie D of PURE for Tax Evasion , Greg J and Frank Tucker formerly of PURE now PRIVE for being greedy and idiotic. And watch Victor Drai will be the next one. You can only push Red Drapes, Candles and Uplit Palm Trees for so long and think you are the nightclub king at 60. It's as old and dead as his movie a weekend at Bernies. Steve Wynn doesnt need Victor Drais. His seeing eye dogs have more nightclub sense. Even though he was dead wrong on Le Bette lol and Le Reve lmao. The Blind leading the blind. Wake up Vegas.


    fatfrank wrote on July 24, 2009 07:43 PM: Watch you will see more come from this story. Fat Frank Tucker will be investigated by the IRS. How else can some who makes $140k a year go out and buy a new Maserati for $150k. He will cry like a little girl and roll over on his other loser buddy Greg J who is the managing Director of Prive. These two losers ran PURE into the ground now PRIVE. Watch the lawsuits to follow from investors and other people they screwed over in town. Also be on the look out for all of the criminal charges to come out of it. Like rape, sexual harrasment the list is long. For all the clowns on here who say to get rid of nightclubs you are equally ignorant. Nightclubs provide for a majority of the business in this town. The Luxor only gets 8% of their total Revenue from Gaming. Think about that! This city is prudish I agree. Legalize Marijuana , Legalize Prostitution and lower the drinking and gambling ages to 18. Girls going topless at Prive is hardly the real issue here. The complaints are much nastier.


    Indemand wrote on July 24, 2009 07:34 PM: There are enough drunks in Las Vegas. No more bars.


    Joe wrote on July 24, 2009 07:05 PM: It's funny how losers like Frank Tucker always seem to land a job, despite the train wreck trails he leaves behind. Oh well. Why would they allow a club to stay open even 1 minute after announcing they are yanking the liquor license? You don't think those employees are going to be wild and loose until the doors close? Better keep an eye on them gaming commission.


    tempest wrote on July 24, 2009 02:38 PM: Prive Managers Greg J and Fat Frank Tucker are the reasons behind this downfall. Just like they were behind the Tax Evasions at PURE. Fat Frank was responsible for other sinking ships like RUM JUNGLE, LE BETTE (now tryst) , PURE and now PRIVE! There will be more to come. Watch! Fat Frank Tucker will have the IRS pay him a visit. He will roll on his girlfriend Greg J. Lawsuits will surface. Charges of Rape, Sexual Harrasment etc. Trust me. No one gets fined $750k for nothing. You will see!


    Joey wrote on July 24, 2009 12:58 PM: Come on Glenver - Laughlin? Any self respecting gambler wouldn't be caught dead in a dump like Laughlin!


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