When corporate governance prioritizes revenue generation over compliance, organizations become vulnerable to systemic failures that can lead to financial collapse, regulatory penalties, and reputational damage. Resorts World Las Vegas exemplifies this pattern: despite its $4 billion investment and innovative features like cashless gaming and AI-driven loyalty systems, the property suffered from a culture that welcomed illegal bookmakers with criminal records, paid the second-largest gaming fine in Nevada history, burned through three CEOs in 24 months, and faces a federal racketeering lawsuit. The case demonstrates that even well-capitalized ventures can fail when leadership fails to enforce compliance standards, and that regulatory failures often reflect broader industry-wide issues rather than isolated incidents.
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Resorts World Las Vegas Will Collapse Very Soon - Here's WhyAjouté :
There's a $4 billion casino on the Las Vegas strip that has burned through three CEOs in 2 years, paid the second largest gaming fine in this city's history, and quietly become the most expensive disaster in modern Vegas memory. I doubt you've even heard about it. Resorts World opened in 2021. It was supposed to be the future of Las Vegas.
Cashless gaming, techdriven luxury, and Asian-Pacific high roller play that was going to reshape what the strip even meant. What it actually became is a federal moneyaundering scandal that took down the founding executive. A failed Mr. Beast experience that turned into a public humiliation. A new CEO hired from a small Iowa casino fired in 5 months. A boardroom now chaired by the former CEO of MGM Resorts trying to hold the whole thing together. The empty casino floor isn't the story. That's the symptom. The real story is what's been happening upstairs. Resorts World is on the verge of collapse and its collapse will have untold consequences for the rest of the strip when it does finally get sold off or destroyed entirely. The dream that opened in 2021. Let me back up for a second because the rest of this video is going to make a lot more sense once you understand exactly what Resorts World was supposed to be when it opened. In June of 2021, a Malaysian conglomerate called Genting Beerhod opened a $4 bill300 million casino on the north end of the Las Vegas strip. They built it on the patch of land where the Stardust used to sit. That land had been empty for over a decade, a kind of memorial to a north strip that everyone in Vegas had quietly given up on. Resorts World was supposed to fix all of that. It was the first all-new strip resort in over 10 years. Three Hilton brands under one roof, a casino floor over 100,000 square ft, cashless gaming, digital check-in, an AIdriven loyalty system, a theater built for the biggest names in entertainment, and a pitch that was simple. Vegas didn't need nostalgia anymore. The future of the strip was here. The grand opening was everything you'd expect: fireworks, celebrities, influencers live streaming from suites that cost more per night than some people's rent. At the front of all of it, cutting the ribbon, was the founding president and chief operating officer of Resorts World, a longtime Las Vegas executive named Scott Sibella. And on the day Scott Syella stood there cutting that ribbon, he had already broken federal law. He just hadn't been caught yet, the founding president's hidden past. Before Scott Sibella was the founding president of Resorts World, he was the president of one of the most powerful casinos on the strip. From August of 2017 until February of 2019, he ran the MGM Grand. He had been climbing the Vegas executive ladder for decades. The kind of guy who started as a bus boy and ended up cutting ribbons.
And during his time running the MGM Grand, Scott Sabella allowed a man named Wayne Nicks to gamble at the casino with money he was making off an illegal sports bookmaking ring. Wayne Nicks was a former minor league baseball player who ran what federal prosecutors would later describe as a sprawling illegal gambling business out of Southern California. He laundered millions of dollars in illegal proceeds through casinos on the strip. He took bets from professional athletes, from celebrities, from a guy named Maverick Carter, who happens to be LeBron James' longtime business partner. Yel Puig placed bets.
Scottie Pippen reportedly placed bets.
The whole thing was in federal terms a pretty big deal. And Scott Sibella, the man running the MGM Grand, knew about it. We know this because in 2022, Sabella sat down with federal investigators and admitted as much. He told them he believed Wayne Nicks was running an illegal bookmaking operation.
And then he told them why he didn't do anything about it. Here are his exact words quoted directly from court documents that were unsealed in early 2024. I didn't want to know because of my position. If we know, we can't allow them to gamble. I didn't ask. I didn't want to know, I guess, because he wasn't doing anything to cheat the casino.
That's the founding president of Resorts World talking about why he chose not to comply with federal anti-moneyaundering law on the record to the IRS. What makes that quote particularly damning is what Sabella did on top of just letting Nicks gamble. He authorized the casino to comp Nick Nick's meals, room, board, and golf trips with the MGM Grand's wealthy customers. The illegal bookmaker was being brought into the High Roller Club.
so the High Roller Club could recruit more business for him. Sabella pleaded guilty to a federal bank secrecy act violation in January of 2024. He was facing a maximum penalty of 5 years in federal prison and a fine of $250,000.
He ended up only getting one year of probation and a fine of $9,500.
The MGM Grand and the Cosmopolitan, both owned by MGM Resorts International, paid a combined $7.45 $45 million to make the federal investigation go away through nonprosecution agreements. Sibella himself eventually lost his Nevada gaming license in December of 2024 with a 5-year bar from re-entering the state's gaming industry. By then, he was already long gone from Resort's world.
He had been quietly fired in September of 2023 with the company citing what they described as a violation of company policies and the terms of his employment. But here's what everyone assumed at the time and what most people still believe today. Scott Sabella was a problem that Resorts World inherited. A bad apple from his MGM grand days whose past finally caught up with him. The story, according to that telling, was Sabella's story. Resort's World was just the place where the music stopped. The Nevada Gaming Control Board did not see it that way. Now, this is where most viewers think the story should end.
Sabella was the bad apple. He got caught. He paid his fine. The system worked. But this is the part of the video where I tell you the system did not work. Not even close. Because in the next 10 minutes, you are going to watch a $4 billion property pay a fine bigger than what every other casino in Nevada combined has paid in the last 5 years.
You are going to watch it burn through three chief executive officers in 2 years. You are going to watch one of those CEOs end up standing in his own lobby holding a tray of donuts while paying customers scream at him about Tom Brady. And by the end of this video, you are going to understand why none of that was an accident. We are just getting started. The Bookmakers Resorts World Welcome. In August of 2024, almost a year after Sabella was fired, the Nevada Gaming Control Board filed a 31page disciplinary complaint not against Sibella, against Resorts World Las Vegas. The complaint was originally 12 counts. Most of them were variations on the same allegation. Resorts World had been allowing known illegal bookmakers with established federal criminal records and documented ties to organized crime to gamble millions of dollars on its casino floor for more than a year.
The exact language in the complaint is worth reading carefully because it tells you what the regulators believed was happening inside that building. Quote, "Despite having an anti-money laundering program and having apparently trained its employees, Resorts World allowed a culture to exist at its gaming establishment where individuals with suspected and actual ties to illegal bookmaking with histories of federal felony convictions related to illegal gambling businesses and with a history of ties to organized crime are welcomed at Resorts World, provided comps, gifts, and discounts in an effort to obtain their business and allowed to wager and lose substantial sums of money at Resort's World."
That's not a complaint about a few bad apples. That's a complaint about an entire culture. The two main characters in that complaint are people you might actually have heard of, even if you didn't know their names. The first is a man named Matthew Boer. Boer is a Los Angeles-based illegal bookmaker who became famous in 2024 for one specific reason. He was the bookie taking the bets from Epe Mizuhara. Mizuhara was the personal interpreter and friend of Shi Otani, the Japanese baseball superstar.
Mizuhara stole around $17 million from Otani's bank account to feed his gambling addiction. He pleaded guilty to bank fraud and tax fraud. It was the biggest sports scandal in baseball in years. And during all of that, while Buyer was running an illegal gambling business that funneled millions of stolen dollars through his books, Resorts World was letting him play on their casino floor. Six of the 10 final counts in the complaint involved buyer specifically. He was a regular. He won and lost millions there. The second character is a man named Damen Leforbes.
Leforbes is also an illegal bookmaker.
He lost $10 million at Resorts World before the property finally figured out who he was and what he did for a living.
$10 million in losses in a relatively short window before anyone in the building thought to check. And the most disturbing piece of all of this, according to the complaint, a casino host at Resorts World was allegedly referring business to Le Forbes, sending players his way, acting in effect as part of his network. The financial damage was immediate. In the last quarter of 2024, while the investigation was running and word was getting around the gambling community, Resorts World's earnings collapsed. Their quarterly operating income came in at approximately $1.5 million. To put that number in context, the comparable figure for 2023 was an average of 48.8 million per quarter. They lost roughly 97% of their quarterly operating earnings.
gamblers were avoiding the property. In March of 2025, Resorts World agreed to a settlement with the state. The fine was $10.5 million. It is, as of this recording, the second largest fine in the history of Nevada gaming regulation.
The only one that beats it is a $20 million fine that the state hit Win Resorts with in 2019 for failing to investigate sexual harassment allegations against the founder, Steve Wyn himself. That is the company Resorts World is keeping. In terms of regulatory catastrophe, the only casino that has done worse in the entire history of Nevada gaming is the casino that had to push out its own founder over a sexual harassment scandal. One of the commissioners said something at the settlement hearing that I keep coming back to. He acknowledged the $10.5 million fine. He acknowledged the millions more Resorts World had already spent on compliance reforms. And then he said that even with all of it, Resorts World was still going to carry the wound to its brand for a while. He was telling the truth. He just didn't know what was coming next. Genting Burhad had a problem. Not just a $10.5 million problem, a reputational catastrophe that was going to require a very specific kind of fix. And in December of 2024, they made their move when Genting called in the cavalry. When the Nevada Gaming Control Board complaint hit in August of 2024, Genting Berad knew it was in trouble. A $10.5 million fine was the floor, not the ceiling. The federal authorities were still circling, and the late 2024 financial collapse was about to make this a property that needed urgent corporate triage. So, Genting did something Vegas operators rarely do.
They built a board of directors from scratch specifically for Resorts World and they staffed it almost entirely with the regulatory and political establishment of the state of Nevada.
The chairman of the board was named in December of 2024. His name is Jim Murin and before he took the seat at Resorts World, Jim Murin was the chairman and chief executive officer of MGM Resorts International, the largest casino company on the strip. I want you to sit with that for a second because if you remember the entire opening act of this video, Scott Sabeller ran the MGM Grand for 2 years. He was president there from August of 2017 to February of 2019. The illegal gambling activity that took him down in federal court happened during exactly that window. And the company that ran the MGM grant, the company that Sabella was reporting to, the company that ultimately had to pay a $7.45 $45 million fine to settle the federal investigation was MGM Resorts. And the chief executive officer of MGM Resorts during that entire period was Jim Murin.
So the man who is now chairing the board that is supposed to clean up resorts world. The man who was supposed to restore corporate integrity to a strip casino caught laundering money for illegal bookmakers is the same executive who oversaw the company where this exact pattern began where Sibella developed the playbook he would later bring to Resorts World. I'm not telling you Jim Murin is a bad person. I'm not telling you he personally knew about any of this. I am telling you that the optics of his appointment are something else entirely. It would be like a bank getting caught in a money laundering scandal and then hiring the former CEO of the previous bank that got caught doing the same thing to chair the cleanup. The other names on that board are also worth knowing. They include AG Bernett, who is a former chairman of the Nevada Gaming Control Board himself, the same agency that just fined Resorts World $10.5 million. Michelle Dando, a longtime gaming industry human resources executive. Kong Han Tan who is the chief executive officer of parent company Genting Bhad and then in January of 2025 they added one more name former Nevada Governor Brian Sandville. Genting did not hire compliance experts. They did not hire outside auditors. They did not hire some neutral panel of industry reformers. They hired the political and regulatory establishment of the state of Nevada. The people who used to write the rules, the people who used to enforce the rules, and the people who used to lead the largest competitor on the strip. All of them sitting on the same board. There is a casino industry blog called Vital Vegas that put it more bluntly than I ever could. They said the storytelling phase at Resorts World was over. The spreadsheets were in charge now. And there is a quieter theory that has been circulating in the industry ever since this board was announced. The theory is that Min wasn't brought in to save Resorts World. He was brought in to position it for a sale. The kind of distressed asset transaction that requires a very specific kind of executive presence to make the buyer feel comfortable. The kind of presence, the political and regulatory establishment of Nevada provides automatically. I'm not telling you that's what's happening. I'm telling you that's what people inside the industry think is happening. The Iowa CEO and the Mr. Beast disaster. In January of 2025, Genting hired Alex Dixon as the new chief executive officer of Resorts World Las Vegas. The press release was full of the usual things press releases are full of strategic vision. Industry veteran excited about the next chapter. But the part the press release did not advertise was where Alex Dixon had been working before he was offered the keys to a $4.3 billion strip property. Because Dixon's most recent job was running a casino called Q Casino and Resort in Debuke, Iowa. It is a regional property attached to a dog racing track called the Debuke Racing Association. a perfectly fine regional gambling operation by all accounts, but it is not the Las Vegas strip. The leap from a regional Iowa casino to a strip mega resort is the kind of resume jump that makes industry veterans raise an eyebrow. It is not the natural career path, and it makes you wonder what exactly Jenning was looking for when they hired him. The cynical reading would be that they wanted a CEO with a clean record, a willingness to follow direction from the board, and not enough independent Vegas power base to push back on anything Murin and Castro were already planning. Either way, in February of 2025, Dixon did his first major press tour. He talked about entertainment driving the property in 2025, new fine dining concepts coming online, a new chief gaming officer being hired, the brand needing to do a better job telling its story. Two months later, on April 13th of 2025, the brand started telling a very different story. That was the day the Mr. Beast experience opened at Resorts World Las Vegas. If you don't know who Mr. Beast is, his real name is Jimmy Donaldson. He runs the biggest individual YouTube channel in the history of the platform. 385 million subscribers as of this recording. His brand is enormous, well-produced, immersive event content. The kind of thing where he gives away houses and locks people in rooms and films the result. Resorts World partnered with the Mr. Beast organization to put on a three-day event at the property. Tickets cost approximately $1,000 per attendee.
For your $1,000, you got a three-ight stay at the hotel, a mystery bag of exclusive Mr. beast merchandise, immersive on-site activations, exclusive themed menu items and beverages, and a chance to win a $10,000 prize. The promotional copy from Resorts World specifically promised, quote, "An immersive experience for all participants." Fans came in from all over the country. Parents who had spent the money as birthday presents for their Mr. Beast obsessed kids. The expectation was reasonably that they were paying for the kind of curated event content Mr. Beast had built his brand on. What actually happened is that when these fans checked into the property, the front desk staff told them to go up to their rooms and wait for what was called a mystery arrival. Some of them waited in their rooms for two full days. I am not exaggerating. There are local Las Vegas news interviews with people on camera who say they spent 2 days locked inside a hotel room in a strip casino because they had been told that was part of the experience. One mother who came in from Palm Desert, California with her son for his birthday said, quote, "I was just trying to give him the best experience. And unfortunately, as a parent, I feel like I failed him." The mystery bag, when it finally arrived on the second day, contained a few randomsized Mr. Beast t-shirts, a hat, a pair of shorts, and a box of branded chocolate. The same merchandise was available at the time on Mr. Beast's online store for approximately $9. There were no activations, no meet and greet, no exclusive menu items, no themed drinks. Mr. Beast himself was not at the property. As a matter of fact, he was never even planning to be there. Casino staff who attendees tried to ask about the experience reportedly had no idea what they were talking about. On Tuesday, April 15th, the last day of the event, the attendees got fed up. A crowd of them gathered in the lobby of Resorts World and demanded to speak to the chief executive officer. And to Alex Dixon's enormous credit, he came out to face them. He came out with a tray of free donuts. He stood in the lobby of a $4.3 billion casino holding donuts trying to plate a crowd of angry Mr. Beast fans.
One of the attendees, a woman who is now somewhat famous on Vegas YouTube for one particular line, looked at Dixon and said, quote, "When I go to the Tom Brady Experience in Boston, Tom Brady is there." Dixon's first offer was a $50 food and beverage credit. As you can imagine, the crowd felt insulted and absolutely hated that. By that evening, to their credit, Resorts World had agreed to issue full refunds, approximately $1,000 per attendee. Mr. Beast himself responded the next day on Twitter, distancing his organization from the failure and offering attendees a free tour of his actual studio in North Carolina as a make good. His exact public quote was, "This definitely isn't the experience we hope they'd deliver."
The they in that sentence was Resorts World. 3 weeks later, on May 8th of 2025, Resorts World announced that Alex Dixon would be moving into a new role as senior adviser to the board of directors. Carlos Castro, who had only joined the property 2 months earlier as chief operating officer and chief financial officer, would be taking over as president. Alex Dixon had been the chief executive officer of Resorts World Las Vegas for 112 days. In casino industry terminology, what happened to him is called a quiet firing. According to multiple insider accounts, Dixon had been butting heads with Castro from the moment Castro arrived. Castro won.
Carlos Castro and what's left. Carlos Castro is not Alex Dixon. He is not a brand building, storytelling, press tour CEO. He is a corporate operations executive. Before joining Resorts World, he held senior leadership positions at Hilton Hotels, at Caesar's Entertainment, and at MGM Resorts International. He was the chief financial officer of Arya. He has spent decades inside the spreadsheets of every major strip operator. He is, in other words, exactly the kind of executive you bring in to prepare a property for sale.
If the Murin theory I described earlier is correct, the entire current leadership structure at Resorts World makes sense. Muran as the political cover at the top. Castro as the operations leader who can clean up the numbers and present the property to potential buyers in the cleanest possible light. The new compliance officers, the new board of directors, the fines paid, the federal exposure managed. All of it preparing Resorts World for the kind of corporate transaction Genting probably should have been planning since the day the property opened. The problem is this story isn't closing yet. In fact, it's still expanding. In March of 2026, a federal lawsuit was amended and filed in US District Court in Nevada against Resorts World and its executives. The plaintiffs are three men, including a professional gambler, a steel distributor, and a former Resorts World security employee.
The complaint is 107 pages long. It alleges in legal terms a racketeering conspiracy under federal RICO statutes, the kind of legal language that comes with treble damages and jury trials. The complaint draws on everything we have already covered. The anti-money laundering settlement, the illegal bookmakers, the federal Syella case, but it adds a new layer. It alleges that Resorts World shielded specific players who were committing fraud, retaliated against employees who tried to report illegal activity, and operated as what the complaint calls a profit at all costs operation that courted known criminals to gamble at the property.
While it looked the other way, the lawsuit may go nowhere. RICO cases are notoriously difficult to prove. The first version of the complaint was dismissed in 2024 and is on appeal. The amended version filed in 2026 is a much broader effort. But whether it wins or loses in court, the lawsuit means something specific in the context of this video. It means that the regulatory phase of the Resorts World story is over. The civil litigation phase is just beginning. And the people who lost the most money there and the people who tried to expose it from inside the building are not going away quietly.
This is no longer the future of Vegas.
It is the most expensive casino on the strip with the worst regulatory record in modern Nevada history. The highest executive turnover in any active strip property, an active federal lawsuit accusing it of running a racketeering enterprise, and a leadership structure that increasingly looks like a transition team rather than a permanent regime. The question is no longer whether Resorts World will recover. The question is what happens when Genting finally decides to walk away. A preview of the rest of the strip. Resorts World is going to collapse. The actual property in its current form with its current ownership and its current leadership has 2 years left, possibly less. And that is a prediction with hard evidence behind it. A $4 billion casino does not lose 97% of its quarterly operating income, pay the second largest fine in Nevada gaming history, burn through three chief executive officers in 24 months, and end up the name defendant in a federal racketeering lawsuit without something fundamental being broken. The leadership structure Genting has built is not a recovery plan. It is a transition team. The only real question left is what comes next. a sale to a major operator, a bankruptcy proceeding, a brand reset where the Hilton name comes off the front of the building, and something completely different takes its place. One of those three things is going to happen. The schedule is the only variable. And here is what almost nobody covering the story has connected. In April of 2025, one month after Resorts World agreed to its $10.5 million settlement, MGM Resorts International was also fined by the same regulator, $8.5 million for violations that were in legal terms almost identical to what Resorts World had just been punished for, the same Wayne Nicks illegal bookmaking ring, the same anti-moneyaundering failures. Two of the largest casino operators in the United States fined nearly $20 million combined in the span of one month for the same fundamental failure. This was not a Resorts World problem. This was a strip problem. The rod exposed at Resorts World is the natural consequence of a business model that has spent 15 years optimizing for high roller revenue at the expense of everything else. When you push your casino executives to chase whales harder than they chase compliance, eventually some of those whales turn out to be illegal book makers and racketeers and money launderers. The rest of the strip has not been doing anything fundamentally different. They have just been doing it more carefully, more slowly with more political cover. Resorts World is the building where the wheels came off first. Not because it was the worst run, because it executed the corporate Vegas playbook on the wrong customers at the wrong time with the wrong management.
And now it is going to be the first major strip property to disappear in this decade. Go ahead and tell me which strip property that you think is next to collapse in the comments. I'm curious to hear your thoughts. Thanks for sticking around until the end of the video. I hope you enjoyed and I will see you in the next video.
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