News

Sports betting theft gets attention of gaming regulators

  • Ezekiel Rubalcada

By Jeff German
LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL
Posted: Aug. 8, 2011 | 7:00 p.m.
Updated: Aug. 9, 2011 | 11:08 a.m.

The theft of $482,883 from a multimillion dollar sports betting operation started by gambler-developer Billy Walters has attracted the attention of state gaming regulators.

Jerry Markling, chief of enforcement for the Nevada Gaming Control Board, said agents are looking into whether Ezekiel Rubalcada, a Las Vegas man charged in the theft, violated state messenger betting laws when placing wagers for the group at sports books.

Agents want to know whether Rubalcada, 35, was paid to place bets, which would be a misdemeanor violation of the state law, Markling said.

The betting operation, ACME Group Trading, a company Walters incorporated in July 2005, considers Rubalcada a partner rather than a paid employee, according to a Henderson police affidavit filed in Rubalcada's arrest.

The affidavit said Rubalcada invested $2,500 in the company in return for a small share of its profits.

"If it turned out that he was in fact an investor with the company, he probably wouldn't meet the elements of messenger betting," Markling said.

Markling said gaming agents are working with Henderson detectives as agents delve further into Rubalcada's activities. He described the state inquiry as preliminary.

Messenger betting is a subject agents have long been watching, Markling explained. "This is not something that is new to us," he said.

Rubalcada, who police allege staged a phony carjacking to cover up the theft, was arrested last week on a 33-count felony complaint. He was freed from the Henderson Detention Center over the weekend on $131,000 bail and has a criminal arraignment today .

The money was stolen between Jan. 18 and April 14 from an M Resort betting account belonging to ACME Group Trading, according to the 10-page complaint against Rubalcada.

Records on file with the Nevada secretary of state's office show that until October, Walters was president, secretary and treasurer of Veg Corp. Inc., the company listed as the sole manager of ACME Group Trading. Walters, regarded as a prolific sports bettor, was featured this year in a "60 Minutes" report.

Police identified Mike Luce, the longtime president of Walters' main investment company, the Walters Group, as an ACME "member." Luce did not return calls for comment Monday.

Rubalcada placed wagers for ACME with money deposited into the M Resort account, the police affidavit said.

Between January and April, the affidavit alleged, Rubalcada withdrew money from the account in amounts ranging from $2,000 to $130,000 on 16 occasions without notifying the company's manager, Robert Ward.

Then, on April 14, in an effort to divert attention from the theft, Rubalcada staged the carjacking and reported it to police, the affidavit alleged.

Rubalcada told officers that as he pulled away from valet parking at M Resort in his 2004 Chevrolet Avalanche, a black four-door sedan pulled in front of him and a man wearing a ski mask got out and pointed a gun at him.

He said the suspect ordered him out of the pickup, then stepped inside and sped away with nearly $360,000 in company sports betting money left in the vehicle.

Henderson police contend the story is a lie. None of the missing money has been recovered.

Contact Jeff German at jgerman@reviewjournal.com or 702-380-8135.

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  1. west coast ram Aug. 9, 2011 | 11:03 a.m. Report Abuse

    @ Bucky, the key is are you betting for someone else and being paid to make the wager.

  2. charles.campbell Aug. 9, 2011 | 10:49 a.m. Report Abuse

    This is some of the dummest things I've ever heard, you mean to tell me, that with all these sophisticated security these casinos employ, they allow these foolish schemes to go on, or are they down with it

  3. Wayne.Kaser Aug. 9, 2011 | 10:37 a.m. Report Abuse

    no Bucky, betting for your riends who live out of town is not messenger betting.

  4. homer Aug. 9, 2011 | 6:55 a.m. Report Abuse

    bucky Your government as you put it has notjing to do with this, this is a state problem which is encouraged by sportsbooks so the better cannot have any edge and never have an advantage.

  5. bucky supersonic Aug. 8, 2011 | 11:56 p.m. Report Abuse

    So when your buddy from out of town wants you to make a bet for him, that's messenger betting? Our government needs to focus on fixing their own financial downfall before they go after these small fish. We are giving Afghanistan 10 billion a month, mostly ot lovely government contractors. YOU tell me who is stealing?

  6. HelplessCitizen Aug. 8, 2011 | 11:16 p.m. Report Abuse

    This story is further evidence that a partnership of gamblers cannot gamble together for long before one will screw over the other (or others). Gamblers are by nature both mentally weak and driven by envy. The betrayal is inevitable. I used to be a professional gambler myself and had to learn the hard way that your WORTHLESS gambler friends can't be trusted. You might partner together for a long time - even years - but eventually, they will each cave in to their weaknesses and their pathetic jealousies, helping themselves to what is yours. Burning bridges - it's what they do best.

  7. VegasDude2010 Aug. 8, 2011 | 10:40 p.m. Report Abuse

    Nice rate of return on his investment. $2500 for $481,000! LOL

  8. Bobbiebeegee Aug. 8, 2011 | 10:10 p.m. Report Abuse

    He was a partner of Billy Walters. Sure he was. Amazing these guys actually believe that. If Billy could make the bets himself he would never have "partners". So if a runner/messenger bettor "invests" in the so-called group that makes it legal. Good one.

  9. ihatelasvegas Aug. 8, 2011 | 9:58 p.m. Report Abuse

    No one knows less about sports betting than the Nevada Gaming Control Board. The only time they ever go in a sportsbook is if they get lost on their way to get their free meals in the hotel restaurants. Messenger betting has been going on since the stone age. Always has. Always will. The next time it's addressed by gaming regulators will be the first.

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