After ownership change

Indiana regulators approve Terre Haute casino license 

The new casino, which Spectacle Jack will operate with Hard Rock International, will be Indiana’s 13th casino location.
2020-05-18
Reading time 2:11 min
The new casino will be owned by Spectacle Jack, a subsidiary of Spectacle Entertainment controlled by Greg Gibson, a Terre Haute businessman who has been vice-chairman of the company, and Jim Brown, who has been Spectacle Entertainment’s executive vice president. Construction is expected to start this fall and the casino opening would occur in September 2021.

The Indiana Gaming Commission voted on Friday in favor of granting a license for the planned Terre Haute casino despite ties between its ownership and longtime state casino executives entangled in a federal criminal investigation.

The new facility, which Spectacle Jack will operate with Hard Rock International, will be Indiana’s 13th casino location. Terre Haute is the state's first new community to get a casino since 2008.

The approval came nearly four months after the process was put on hold after a political consultant pleaded guilty in Virginia to illegally funneling campaign contributions for an Indianapolis-based casino company, and it was possible because Spectacle Entertainment executives Rod Ratcliff and John Keeler gave up their ownership stake in what had been a Spectacle subsidiary formed for the Terre Haute casino, said Jennifer Reske, the Gaming Commission’s deputy director.

According to the Associated Press, Ratcliff and Keeler were leaders of the former Centaur Gaming and among those who formed Spectacle after selling Centaur’s horse track casinos in Anderson and Shelbyville to Las Vegas-based Caesars Entertainment Corp. in 2018 for $1.7 billion.

Centaur was identified by officials as being involved in a scheme directing more than $15,000 in illegal corporate contributions to an unsuccessful Indiana congressional candidate, but no charges have been filed against the company or its executives.

Reske said the commission wanted to see the planned $125 million casino in Terre Haute advance but could not do so without the ownership changes.

"We still were uncomfortable with all the uncertainty regarding potential actions," Reske said. "We're pleased they were able to propose a remedy that allows the project to move forward."

The new casino will be owned by a company called Spectacle Jack controlled by Greg Gibson, a Terre Haute businessman who has been vice-chairman of Spectacle Entertainment, and Jim Brown, who has been Spectacle Entertainment’s executive vice president.

Gibson didn’t discuss the reasons for the ownership change during his presentation to the commission, which met online because of the coronavirus outbreak.

Gibson and other Spectacle Jack representatives outlined plans for building the new casino on the east side of Terre Haute, with construction starting this fall and the casino opening in September 2021.

Gaming Commission Chairman Michael McMains told Gibson the ownership overhaul was needed for the license approval.

"Had you not made the changes and brought the new application forward, we wouldn’t have considered it," McMains said.

Spectacle Entertainment continues to own the two Gary casinos along Lake Michigan and won state legislative approval last year to close them in favor of building a new $400 million casino at what’s expected to be a more lucrative site along Interstate 80/94 in Gary.

Reske said Ratcliff and Keeler have cooperated with the state commission, but it doesn’t have the authority to investigate their involvement in the political contributions case.

"We really have to rely on watching for information to come from the entities that are," she said. "At this point, we’re just not in a position to reach conclusions and continue to await additional information from the federal authorities."

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