Casino Queen Esop

The Casino Queen is a riverboat casino located near the Mississippi River in East St. Louis, Illinois, just across the river from downtown St. It is owned by Gaming and Leisure Properties and operated. The Eureka is one of two casinos in the United States to be owned through an ESOP, the other being the Casino Queen in East St. Louis, Illinois. Lee remained as the chief executive officer of the Eureka, while. Special-ESOP-Advisor - Casino-Queen A newly formed Employee Stock Ownership Plan has acquired 100% of the common stock of Casino Queen, Inc. Duff & Phelps Served as the Special ESOP Advisor to Casino Queen. Join the fun at DraftKings at Casino Queen, the best casino in Illinois! Located in East St. Louis, IL offering Gaming, Entertainment, Dining, Hotel, RV and More.

December 28, 2012 11:44 amCasino

In what is believed a first of its kind in the USA, the Casino Queen in East St. Louis has been bought for $170 million by 700 of its employees as part of an employee stock ownership plan (ESOP). The ESOP will now be managed by co-trustees Chief Financial Officer Robert Barrows and the Casino Queen’s general manager Jeff Watson who, after the sale was completed, commented:
“To my knowledge, it’s the first ESOP casino in the country. It allows employees to become beneficial owners in the company. The more successful the company is, the more value employees have individually in their retirement accounts.”
In 1995, the Koman family replaced the then riverboat casino with a new $92 million casino development, which in the process became the first Illinois casinos to move from the river to a land-based location. Since then the Koman family have maintained a 20% stake in the Casino Queen, with the rest accounted for by private investors.
Due to the recession and increased competition, however, the Casino Queen has suffered from declining business and back in 2006, a $200 million offer by Columbia Sussex to buy the Queen fell through. So far this year the casino’s revenue has totaled $120.9 million, around one-third down on its 2007 peak of $172.1 million.
The latest deal to buy the Casino Queen includes assuming $31 million of its existing debt. It is also hoped that the new owners will be able to return the 1,100 slot machines and 27 table casino to profitability, and as Loren Rodgers from the National Center for Employee Ownership, explains: “It tends to be a more stable form of ownership. ESOP companies know they have something to lose if there is a change in ownership.”

Originally published on May 7, 2020 5:31 am

EAST ST. LOUIS — Two former Casino Queen employees have filed suit against the casino’s old owners over the 2012 sale of the property that made it employee-owned.

The plaintiffs, Tom Henseik and Jason Gill, allege the former owners of the Casino Queen Inc. sold their stake in the company into an employee stock ownership program (ESOP) at a vastly inflated price and then kept the true value secret for years. The proposed class action lawsuit was filed last month in U.S. District Court in East St. Louis.

“Plaintiffs allege that the Casino Queen ESOP’s fiduciaries concealed for years that the ESOP transaction was intended to benefit the Casino Queen’s prior owners and executives while providing only a hollow promise to employees,” said Michelle C. Yau, a lawyer representing Henseik and Gill. “Employees learned in October 2019 that the Casino Queen stock in their retirement accounts [the only asset held in those accounts] was nearly worthless.”

Casino Queen Esop

None of the defendants responded to requests for comment.

The case

In 2012, the Casino Queen sold for $170 million to an employee stock ownership plan (ESOP), a trust that was supposed to guarantee retirement savings for current employees.

The transaction happened after the owners spent years unsuccessfully trying to sell the company to a third-party buyer, according to the suit.

“Given their inability to find a buyer willing to pay what the selling shareholders wanted for the Casino Queen, the selling board members created their own buyer for the company by establishing the ESOP to buy it outright,” according to the filing.

The case names the former board members of the casino, Charles Bidwill III, Timothy J. Rand, James G. Koman, Jeffrey Watson and Robert Barrows, as defendants. Bidwill, Rand and Koman all held stakes in the company at the time.

The other two, Watson and Barrows, became co-trustees of the ESOP and were charged with approving the 2012 transaction in the interest of the ESOP participants — in this case, employees of the casino — the complaint alleges.

Watson, who is now a circuit judge in St. Clair County, and Barrows were supposed to follow input from an administrative committee set up by the board of directors, which consisted of board members and officers of the company, the plaintiffs allege.

“The board retained the power to dismiss the co-trustees (who continued serving on the board while charged with approving the 2012 transaction) and administrative committee members, and thus controlled their decision-making,” according to the filing.

The plaintiffs allege the board violated their responsibilities to employees of the casino by approving $170 million in debt the ESOP took on to purchase Casino Queen stock.

Casino

The complaint also states that employees of the casino were unaware of any transaction until after it occurred and were forced to invest their employee-sponsored retirement savings into Casino Queen stock.

Casino queen esop stock

'Shortly after the 2012 transaction, the company stopped making employer contributions to other retirement plan(s). Instead, the company contributed solely to the ESOP which holds only Casino Queen stock, a stock that lacks a public market,' according to the filing.

The plaintiffs allege the board misled them to believe their retirement accounts were growing quickly until 2019 when employees learned the value of Casino Queen stock, the only investment in their ESOP accounts, was worth 5% of what they had been told.

Eric Schmid covers the Metro East for St. Louis Public Radio as part of the journalism grant program Report for America, an initiative of the GroundTruth Project. Follow Eric on Twitter: @EricDSchmid

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