Lawmakers want US interior secretary grilled over casino agreements inaction

Casino – CalvinAyre.com
Lawmakers want US interior secretary grilled over casino agreements inaction

Four Connecticut lawmakers are demanding for a federal probe on the U.S. Department of Interior’s (DOI) decision to sit on the request of tribal casino operators to expand their operations in the state.

Lawmakers want US interior secretary grilled over casino agreements inactionPolitico reported that U.S. Sens. Richard Blumenthal and Chris Murphy and U.S. Reps. John Larson and Joe Courtney prodded the federal Office of the Inspector General to investigate the DOI for what they described as “highly unusual decision to take no action” on the compact amendments.

Tribal operators Foxwoods Resort Casino and Mohegan Sun needed the DOI’s nod in order for them to be able to proceed with the construction of the first casino off a tribal reservation in East Windsor.

In a letter to the Inspector General, the four lawmakers accused the DOI of refusing to talk to the members of the Connecticut delegation who were tasked to explain the proposed changes in the tribe’s gaming compact while giving direct access to casino operator MGM Resorts International and its allies.

They cited a February 1 Politico article, which reported MGM’s intense lobbying and the meetings Zinke had with Nevada Sen. Dean Heller and Rep. Mark Amodei, while the tribes’ amended compact request gathered dusts on Zinke’s desk.

The legislators are convinced that Zinke’s extensive contact with MGM suggests a strong conflict of interest since “MGM has no connection to the legal trust responsibility Interior has to the Mohegan and Mashantucket Pequot Tribes.”

“These actions suggest that something other than the legal obligations to Indian Tribes was motivation the decision of the Department of the Interior,” the lawmakers said, according to the news outlet.

Last year, the state approved a legislation amending the compacts and approve the new casino, which is to be built off tribal land near the state’s border with Massachusetts.

The new casino is intended as a hedge to keep Connecticut gamblers from flocking across the border to MGM Springfield, the flashy $960 million MGM Resorts property that will open in Massachusetts this year. MGM, for its part, has fought tooth and nail against approval of the new tribal casino.

In December, Connecticut’s two gaming tribes have joined the state in suing the federal government over delays in approving a new casino project.

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