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Question of the Day - 25 February 2008

Q:
In your answer to the question on 2/18/08 about the procedures for dealers in the event of a fire or blackout, your source claims that dealers are instructed to sweep up all the bets on the layouts, then surveillance will do a tape review "to verify what belongs to whom." That seems highly unworkable to me. I mean, how long would it take surveillance to review the bets of hundreds of table-game players? And how would they know who everyone was? Would everyone have to come back to the tables and sit exactly where they were in order to be identified? Are the dealers, floor people, or security supposed to take names and numbers during the evacuation? Wouldn't it be a nightmare? Isn't it easier just to have everyone take back their bets and call it a dead hand? Or is the casino so greedy that they grab the money ("for your own protection, of course!") and hope that people won't bother with their last bets?
Arnie Rothstein
A:

Arnie Rothstein replies:

If the dealers or bosses instructed the players to take their pending wagers -- just the money that's in the middle of being declared winning or losing -- when the emergency struck, the players might be tempted to grab everything they can and run like hell. I would. In fact, I'd probably grab a couple of cocktail waitresses too.

So, the idea is to secure the "in-limbo" money, which could be thousands or tens of thousands of dollars worth of gambling chips when you consider baccarat, craps, and roulette along with blackjack.

I mean, c'mon. We're in an emergency situation here. Fire and smoke. Or dimness from a power blackout. Possible life and death. Can you see panicked people calmly picking through the chips on a loaded roulette layout while the flames are licking at their butts? No way. People freak -- and they're not about to be cordial about grabbing only their own money, then making their way calmly toward the exits.

In fact, some casinos tell their dealers to advise players to leave all their stuff (not just the chips they have in play) in order to speed up the evacuation. I remember hearing a story from one of the bosses who was working at Bally's (the former MGM Grand) when that fire went down. He told us about an old man who grabbed his chips (lots of them) and ran for the door. Halfway there he dropped some and stopped to pick them up. He was trampled to death.

Now here's the insider secret for you QoD readers only. The fact is that surveillance won't be proactive about giving the money back. And not because they're greedy, but because they play the "insurance game": They wait for someone, Mr. A, for example, to make a claim.

Then they use everything in their arsenal, including captured videotape, questioning the floor people what kind of player Mr. A was, asking the dealer what he or she remembers about Mr. A, auditing Mr. A's past trips and wagering styles, and last but not least, asking Mr. A how much he left. Most of the time, you'll get honest answers from everyone.

Also, if one of the casino employees can vouch for a player or players or even the whole table, the casino will always financially settle with them to keep them happy and coming back (if there's anything left of the joint after the disaster).

The moral of the story? If you're ever in a fire in a casino, get out as fast as you can. When the dust settles, come back and make a claim for the bets and/or chips that you left behind.

Update 25 February 2008
Thanks to the reader who wrote in with the following: "Todays QOD made me recall an instance a few years ago when the power blinked at, I think, the Monte Carlo (ironic). Seems about half the machines didn't seem to be fazed at all, while the rest went into a reboot mode for a few seconds. As far as could tell, nobody lost any credits. "[Makes me wonder,] has anybody ever been in a casino that lost power completely? I know the machines will remember what they were doing, but I wonder if the place was evacuated how many players would just say forget that $3.60 I had on Goldfish and not come back? Could be a lot of money. Assuming you couldn't hit the cashout button." Actually, we covered the whole topic of actual casino power outages, including a very costly one for Bellagio, in the QoD for 4/22/06. Check it out in the archives ... There was an interesting real-life story about a patron who didn't want to lose her $1,577 slot jackpot when the Monte Carlo fire broke out in the Business section of yesterday's Las Vegas Review-Journal. To summarize, a quick-thinking security officer alerted the surveillance room upstairs and had them film himself with the winner and an MGM-Mirage executive, so that the win was taped as evidence. We understand the woman returned the next day and collected her winnings.
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