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(Image: VisitMelbourne.com)

Accommodation near Crown Casino. Enjoy a night of glamour at the casino, and return back to your Crowne Plaza accommodation when the magic fades. Combine the casino experience with the fresh air and breathtaking, up-close water views from your room at Crowne Plaza Melbourne. Crown will reopen its Melbourne casino for the first time since March from Thursday as Victoria continues to emerge from its arduous COVID-19 induced lockdown, despite similar regulatory pressures. A Crown Melbourne security guard patrols the casino entrance. (Image: Scott Barbour/AAP Image) Effective 11:59 pm local time July 8, and running for at least six weeks, 5.2 million Victorians will.

Crown to Reopen Melbourne Casino

Crown Resorts' Melbourne casino is planning to reopen its doors on Thursday, November 12 after months of closure.

Vegas Slots Online reports that following the all-clear from health officials, the company will reopen its flagship casino while following strict public health advice.

Only VIP members will be permitted entry as the number of patrons allowed in the venue is capped at 100. The property has been closed since March 23, as Australian authorities tried to contain the virus. There were plans to reopen in July, but this did not eventuate after a second wave of the virus took hold, once again shelving plans for Crown's reopening.

Lockdowns in Australia have been easing in recent weeks as the number of new virus cases comes down. This has paved the way for Crown's reopening. Chief executive officer Ken Barton said the company had been working with the Victorian government and health authorities about how to safely reopen the casino.

Together, they developed extensive hygiene and physical distancing measures.

'We are pleased to be able to commence the process of welcoming back our employees and customers to Crown Melbourne,' Mr Barton said.

As part of the restrictions, only every second electronic table game and poker machine will be open for use. There can also only be up to 10 customers in a maximum of 10 designated VIP areas. All guests may only stay at the facility for up to 90 minutes and there will be a COVID Marshal at every gaming floor to ensure patrons comply with rules.

Crown Resorts has been in the spotlight for all the wrong reasons in recent times. At the conclusion of a seven-week public hearing last week, the New South Wales Independent Liquor and Gaming Authority inquiry said that the casino company was not suitable to maintain a gaming licence in the state.

Some of the reasons mentioned include its links to organised crime, the allowance of money laundering, and putting its employees at risk on assignments in China. There were also concerns about the behaviour of former chief executive and significant shareholder James Packer.

Crown Resorts is planning to open its $2 billion casino and hotel complex in Sydney on December 14. With the inquiry not set to report its final findings until February, there is pressure to delay the opening.

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The Victorian Commission for Gaming and Liquor Regulation is waiting for the NSW authorities to conclude its inquiry before fully investigating Crown's Melbourne operations.

Victorian regulator slow to produce Crown report

Crown Resorts staff who were arrested and imprisoned in China for illegally promoting gambling activities weren't interviewed by Victoria's gambling regulator until years after the watchdog launched an investigation into their arrests.

The Guardian reported in early November that the Victorian Commission for Gambling Regulation's annual report showed the progress the investigation had made, which is not yet complete, despite starting in 2017.

It is likely to further alarm critics of the regulator, who have derided it as a 'toothless tiger' that is captured by Crown and 'worse than useless.'

VCGLR staff only attempted to interview Crown staff who were arrested in China after serious allegations, including that organised crime was involved in junkets that bring high rollers to the group's casinos, were aired by Nine Entertainment outlets in July 2019.

The regulator is responsible for oversight of Crown's biggest casino, which an inquiry in NSW has heard included one junket, Suncity, allegedly linked to organised crime gangs. Nineteen Crown staff were arrested by Chinese authorities in 2016 and subsequently convicted of illegally promoting gambling.

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One of the Crown employees, Jenny Jiang, was heavily featured on Nine's TV current affairs show, 60 Minutes, and in the media groups' newspaper coverage.

A NSW probe into Crown Resorts has heard the casino giant's attack on a young female employee is a ‘very bad blot' on the company's directors. Picture: NCA NewsWire / Steven SaphoreSource:News Corp Australia

Crown Resorts' attack on a young female employee in a full-page advertisement aimed at refuting serious allegations is a 'very bad blot' on the casino giant's directors, an inquiry has heard.

The company ran the ad in July last year following explosive media reports centred on a room at Crown's Melbourne venue exclusively used by Suncity – Macau's biggest operator of high-roller 'junkets' – with leaked footage showing huge wads of cash being exchanged for gambling chips. Shocked to find gambling gif.

Crown Casino Melbourne Closing Time

It has been alleged Crown 'turned a blind eye' to the massive transactions, which were allegedly linked to organised crime.

In the strongly worded ad, which was also issued to the Australian Securities Exchange, Crown said 'much of this unbalanced and sensationalised reporting is based on unsubstantiated allegations, exaggerations, unsupported connections and outright falsehoods'.

It also lashed out at one of 19 staff arrested in China in 2016 for illegally promoting gambling tours on behalf of the casino, Jenny Jiang, who featured in one of the reports on 60 Minutes, suggesting she had been paid to appear.

'Also, the objectivity of the former employee is open to question on the basis that she made an unsuccessful demand for compensation from Crown of over 50 times her final annual salary,' the ad read.

It was revealed during the inquiry she was earning $28,000 annually.

During closing submissions to the NSW Independent Liquor and Gaming Authority inquiry into the allegations, which seeks to determine if Crown should retain the gaming licence for its Barangaroo casino slated to open in December, Commissioner Patricia Bergin was scathing of the comments against Ms Jiang.

NSW Premier Gladys Berejiklian says she can't rule out delaying opening the Barangaroo venue, with the inquiry findings due on February 1. Picture: NCA NewsWire/Jeremy PiperSource:News Corp Australia

Crown Casino Melbourne Closing Time

'It's a blot on the board, as I see it. A very bad blot,' Ms Bergin said on Tuesday.

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It has been revealed during hearings the arrests were kept secret from the board, with Crown's counsel Neil Young admitting it was a failing by senior management to not escalate the matter at the time.

'What they did was attack a young woman who had been detained for a period to suggest she wasn't objective,' Ms Bergin said.

'I mean, once you read it, it's almost incomprehensible to think that directors would have endorsed that paragraph.

'It's really quite shocking, Mr Young.'

Crown chair Helen Coonan previously told the inquiry that the paragraph relating to Ms Jiang should never have been included and the general tone of the statement should have been softer.

Another Crown barrister, Perry Herzfeld, argued at the inquiry that the board felt the ad was necessary and appropriate to respond to the allegations 'swiftly and firmly'.

While Ms Coonan had conceded vetting processes to identify whether Chinese junket operators were linked to organised crime were not 'robust' enough, other executives had felt differently, Mr Herzfeld said.

'What Ms Coonan said was exquisitely appropriate,' Ms Bergin shot back.

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'What I'm looking for is true commitment.'

Crown director Helen Coonan conceded at the inquiry junket vetting could have been more robust.Source:The Australian

Mr Herzfeld said Crown could hardly show stronger commitment (to adhering to anti-money laundering laws) than what it had announced on Tuesday to the ASX – that it would cease all dealings with overseas junket operators.

'Crown will only recommence dealing with a junket operator if that junket operator is licensed or otherwise approved or sanctioned by all gaming regulators in the states in which Crown operates,' the company said in its statement.

Mr Herzfeld also said the language used in the media reports 'may fairly be described as sensationalised'.

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One of the Crown employees, Jenny Jiang, was heavily featured on Nine's TV current affairs show, 60 Minutes, and in the media groups' newspaper coverage.

A NSW probe into Crown Resorts has heard the casino giant's attack on a young female employee is a ‘very bad blot' on the company's directors. Picture: NCA NewsWire / Steven SaphoreSource:News Corp Australia

Crown Resorts' attack on a young female employee in a full-page advertisement aimed at refuting serious allegations is a 'very bad blot' on the casino giant's directors, an inquiry has heard.

The company ran the ad in July last year following explosive media reports centred on a room at Crown's Melbourne venue exclusively used by Suncity – Macau's biggest operator of high-roller 'junkets' – with leaked footage showing huge wads of cash being exchanged for gambling chips. Shocked to find gambling gif.

It has been alleged Crown 'turned a blind eye' to the massive transactions, which were allegedly linked to organised crime.

In the strongly worded ad, which was also issued to the Australian Securities Exchange, Crown said 'much of this unbalanced and sensationalised reporting is based on unsubstantiated allegations, exaggerations, unsupported connections and outright falsehoods'.

It also lashed out at one of 19 staff arrested in China in 2016 for illegally promoting gambling tours on behalf of the casino, Jenny Jiang, who featured in one of the reports on 60 Minutes, suggesting she had been paid to appear.

'Also, the objectivity of the former employee is open to question on the basis that she made an unsuccessful demand for compensation from Crown of over 50 times her final annual salary,' the ad read.

It was revealed during the inquiry she was earning $28,000 annually.

During closing submissions to the NSW Independent Liquor and Gaming Authority inquiry into the allegations, which seeks to determine if Crown should retain the gaming licence for its Barangaroo casino slated to open in December, Commissioner Patricia Bergin was scathing of the comments against Ms Jiang.

NSW Premier Gladys Berejiklian says she can't rule out delaying opening the Barangaroo venue, with the inquiry findings due on February 1. Picture: NCA NewsWire/Jeremy PiperSource:News Corp Australia

'It's a blot on the board, as I see it. A very bad blot,' Ms Bergin said on Tuesday.

It has been revealed during hearings the arrests were kept secret from the board, with Crown's counsel Neil Young admitting it was a failing by senior management to not escalate the matter at the time.

'What they did was attack a young woman who had been detained for a period to suggest she wasn't objective,' Ms Bergin said.

'I mean, once you read it, it's almost incomprehensible to think that directors would have endorsed that paragraph.

'It's really quite shocking, Mr Young.'

Crown chair Helen Coonan previously told the inquiry that the paragraph relating to Ms Jiang should never have been included and the general tone of the statement should have been softer.

Another Crown barrister, Perry Herzfeld, argued at the inquiry that the board felt the ad was necessary and appropriate to respond to the allegations 'swiftly and firmly'.

While Ms Coonan had conceded vetting processes to identify whether Chinese junket operators were linked to organised crime were not 'robust' enough, other executives had felt differently, Mr Herzfeld said.

'What Ms Coonan said was exquisitely appropriate,' Ms Bergin shot back.

Crown Casino Melbourne Time Zone

'What I'm looking for is true commitment.'

Crown director Helen Coonan conceded at the inquiry junket vetting could have been more robust.Source:The Australian

Mr Herzfeld said Crown could hardly show stronger commitment (to adhering to anti-money laundering laws) than what it had announced on Tuesday to the ASX – that it would cease all dealings with overseas junket operators.

'Crown will only recommence dealing with a junket operator if that junket operator is licensed or otherwise approved or sanctioned by all gaming regulators in the states in which Crown operates,' the company said in its statement.

Mr Herzfeld also said the language used in the media reports 'may fairly be described as sensationalised'.

'Some of the most serious specific allegations made in the media are unsupportable,' he said.

One of the reports that prompted the ad, published in The Age, alleged a criminal syndicate known as 'The Company' used Crown to launder its funds, 'with Crown licensing and paying syndicate members to generate turnover in its Melbourne and Perth casinos'.

Crown Casino Melbourne Closing Times

'So far as there are allegations Crown got into bed with The Company or paid commission to The Company … these allegations are not supported by the evidence available to the inquiry,' Mr Herzfeld said.

The report also cited a 'junket representative secretly working for The Company', Roy Moo, as saying he was hired due to his Crown contacts and because laundering money through the casino was 'easier than using a bank'.

Mr Herzfeld said Mr Moo had been approved by the Victorian regulator to be a junket tour operator, but Crown refused to deal with him after he was charged with offences in March 2013.

'Some of the media allegations concern matters of some time ago, and they are of less significance than the matters which occurred more recently,' the barrister said.

Crown said in closing submissions on Monday the board had taken action to rectify the management failures.





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