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Fontainebleau Resorts' top executive leaves company

The former Mandalay Resort Group executive who was brought in to oversee development and bring executive gaming experience to the Fontainebleau Las Vegas project has left the company.

Glenn Schaeffer, Fontainebleau Resorts’ co-founder and its top executive, recently departed the company, a Fontainebleau spokesman confirmed Friday.


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  • “Glenn Schaeffer left Fontainebleau Resorts as chief executive officer, president and member of its board of managers as the company continues to explore its financing alternatives,” spokesman Dave Satterfield said.

    The company would not say if Schaeffer’s position will be filled in the near future.

    Fontainebleau Resorts, the parent company of the financially troubled Fontainebleau Las Vegas project, is focusing on negotiations with banks for funding to complete the $3.1 billion mixed-use project.

    Schaeffer’s departure comes a week after the company began lay offs in the corporate offices and a month after construction work on the 24-acre site was slowed.

    Approximately 250 workers remain on the site, down from the 3,300 workers who working on the project about a month ago, according to a project official who requested anonymity.

    Someone familiar with the situation said Schaeffer’s departure had been rumored for the past few weeks. Attempts to reach Schaeffer for comment were unsuccessful.

    Bill Lerner, a principal analyst with Union Gaming Group, said Schaeffer’s exit could be an ominous sign for the project’s future.

    “Glenn is a talented guy and Fontainebleau (Las Vegas), his concept, is a beautiful project,” Lerner said. “If his departure is a precursor to them stopping the project, it would be a function of timing and difficult capital markets.”

    Schaeffer was a chief financial officer in the gaming industry from 1984 until Mandalay Resort Group was sold to MGM Mirage in April 2005.

    Schaeffer, who was also president and a board member of Mandalay Resort Group, was instrumental in structuring the buyout.

    He cashed out nearly $13 million in company stock after the buyout but it is not known how much he invested in Fontainebleau Resorts.

    Schaeffer co-founded Fontainebleau Resorts in May 2005 with Miami-based developer Jeffrey Soffer. Soffer is majority owner of the company and a principal with condominium developer Turnberry Associates.

    Schaeffer was brought in by Soffer to spearhead development of the Fontainebleau Las Vegas on Las Vegas Boulevard across the street from Circus Circus.

    “Glenn is well-respected on Wall Street and in the financial communities, so he will play a tremendous role in this company,” Soffer told the Review-Journal when Schaeffer joined the company in 2005.

    The project was designed as 3,815-room hotel-condominium-casino project with a large retail center, restaurants, spa and other amenities.

    Fontainebleau’s attorneys filed a lawsuit April 23 against a group of banks after the banks pulled $770 million in financing. The banks said Fountainebleau had defaulted on a loan.

    The developer has also accused Deutsche Bank, which controls $80 million of the loan, of a conflict of interest because of the bank’s ownership of the competing Cosmopolitan project.
     

    Contact reporter Arnold M. Knightly at aknightly@reviewjournal.com or 702-477-3893.
    Business Press reporter Tony Illia contributed to this report.

     

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    Report abuse

    VegasSmitty wrote on June 01, 2009 05:25 PM: Another rat, leaving a sinking ship.


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    diceboy wrote on May 29, 2009 09:30 PM: Glenn Schaeffer did a great job running Mandalay Bay from 1999 to 2005 until MGM Mirage bought them out. It's a shame that he won't get a chance to run Fontainebleau because it looks really cool from the outside and the interior renderings I have seen look excellent.


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    Oscar wrote on May 29, 2009 05:19 PM: That sinking ship is cutting it's costs, by letting employees go, and the rumors throughout the ghost hotel, are, bail out before we dump you. Like dominoes, one by one the hotels are falling. Their own fault for not catering to middleclass, and Locals. It is too easy to turn our backs on the snobs.


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    john B. wrote on May 29, 2009 03:58 PM: Hey Cynical,

    You're making broad assumptions and contradicting what you are saying perhaps because you don't fully understand the order of events that must occur. I hope the audience that reads this is sophisticated enough to tell the difference.

    If there is no default cited (or present) the lenders cannot stop funding. That would be a breach on their part. If there is no default present, there is no need to file Chapter 11. Maybe if the banks would have fulfilled the obligations then there wouldn't be mechanics liens (if there in fact are).


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    CynicalObserver wrote on May 29, 2009 03:33 PM: Two things about Fontainebleu which no one in the press has reported:

    The project is getting blisted with a massive number of mechanics liens.

    The District Court agreed with the lenders that Nevada courts have no jurisdiction over this project, and kicked out of court Fontainebleu's complaint about being knifed by BofA and the other lenders. If Fontaineblue still wants to sue its lenders it has to do so in Federal Court in the city where the contract documents specify, i.e. not Las Vegas.

    If it is true, rather than b.s., that Fontainebleu's lenders breached the contract to fund construction of the project, Fontainebleu's owners should have filed a Chapter 11 a long time ago, and asked the judge to order the lenders to keep funding.

    No Chapter 11 filing probably means that the claims in the District Court lawsuit were just b.s., that the project is in default on its loan, and the owner is out of luck.

    Frankly, it doesn't help the Strip's image, to have two massive, incomplete "ghost towns" sitting there for everyone to see. Maybe to help squeeze these banks to finish funding the project, even if there is a default, the Clark County Commissioners could declare the project "blighted", a "public safety risk" and "order it torn down". That message ought to get these banks off their high horses.


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    jk wrote on May 29, 2009 03:18 PM: John B.

    That is the conclusion I came to, without Schaeffer this project is a dead duck. Wonder how much of a hit he took? Gold Strike was a successful operation back when he ran it.


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    John B. wrote on May 29, 2009 03:03 PM: Anyone that knows Glenn Schaeffer knows that the only reason this project had a shot was under his leadership. The Soffer Litigation Train has so many cars loaded with suits against him and such a bad reputation that without Schaeffer its destined for failure. Unlike the Sheldon Adelson firing of a dispensible patsy (who obviously is getting blamed for what a CFO should be doing anyway) Schaeffer is the ONLY major brain behind the operation of Fontainebleau. Shows how STUPID the Soffer Group is!


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    Dave wrote on May 29, 2009 02:37 PM: Las Vegas Sands chief Sheldon Adelson, in an interview with free-lance writer Steve Friess (VegasHappensHere.com), is blaming the company's crash on former LVS president Bill Weidner, who resigned in March. "Would I have done anything different? Yes, I would've fired Bill Weidner a long time ago. He created a financing situation that was completely inappropriate. Now we're getting financing that's more appropriate." ...

    Typical statment from the leaders of these joints. It's always someone elses fault. It's the economy or, it's the other guys fault. Next time I can't pay my bills, I will just blame my boss. He's the one that won't give me a raise, or those darn oil companies just keep raising gas prices so it's their fault I can't pay my mortgage.


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    David wrote on May 29, 2009 02:24 PM: All the gliiters in this gulch is not gold. There is some serious shake out in las Vegas and the ones who are hurt the most are the frontline low wage workers. Do you think the Fertittas are hurting? How about Gary Loveman and his $38 million dollar wage and benefit package last year? They may not be able to take the heat but it's the employees who are forced out of the kitchen.


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    jk wrote on May 29, 2009 11:30 AM: So much for this project.... another hulk to wilt away in the desert heat....welcome to America's Ghost Town, formerly known as Las Vegas.


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