With the rodeo coming to town, maybe we could hear the story of how the Benny Binion statue ended up in South Point?
In 1984, five years before Benny Binion’s death at age 85, sculptor and cowgirl Deborah Copenhaver was commissioned by the Binion family to create a 15-foot-tall 2,800-pound bronze statue of the family patriarch on horseback. It was placed outside a Horseshoe's parking structure at the corner of Casino Center Drive and Ogden (one of the boundaries of Block 16, the original Las Vegas red-light district).
The statue was an apt symbol of the gangster and casino owner, whose nickname was “the Cowboy.” Binion was born on a farm in Texas, learned at a young age from his father how to trade horses, owned ranches in Montana where he raised rodeo horses, and was influential in getting the National Finals Rodeo to move to Las Vegas from Oklahoma City in 1985; that same year, he was named ProRodeo’s Man of Year by the Professional Rodeo Cowboys Association.
The statue remained on the downtown street corner for 23 years. In March 2008, shortly after he purchased the property for $32 million, Terry Caudill (owner of the Four Queens) agreed to a request from Michael Gaughan to move the statue to South Point.
Reportedly, Gaughan, son of another legendary downtown casino owner, Jackie, bought the statue from the Binion family for $1, with the intention of displaying it right outside the Equestrian Center at South Point.
As the South Point arena is in the business of hosting rodeos, barrel racing, horse shows, and related events, it’s perhaps the most appropriate place in Las Vegas for the larger-than-life bronze statue of a mounted Benny “the Cowboy” Binion.
Definitely an interesting character. From a double murderer ,("them folks jest needed killin'") with a suitcase full of cash in his car trunk to a man who had a statue of himself made and prominently displayed. He filled the UNLV stadium for a tribute to him shorty before he died. All reports were that he was an affable dude who really knew how to ruin a casino. He and Vegas were meant for each other.