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Thread: Rolling Stone Magazine article about Bellagio Biker Bandit

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    Owner Dan Druff's Avatar
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    Rolling Stone Magazine article about Bellagio Biker Bandit


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    Owner Dan Druff's Avatar
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    Carleo still had over a million dollars in $25,000 chips, but these were all but unusable. He fantasized about cutting a deal with a big name poker pro like Phil Ivey, someone the Bellagio could conceivably believe had access to a major bankroll. Carleo wasn't the only one trying to solve the puzzle. On the poker forum TwoPlusTwo.com, someone had started a thread devoted to the Bellagio heist and how the robber might unload the stolen chips. Carleo followed the discussion closely, even going so far as to create an account on the site, choosing for himself the screen name "Oceanspray25" and listing his location as "Cranada."



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    Diamond TheXFactor's Avatar
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    If your doing something even a little shady don't tell a dealer at the Bellagio or make new friends with people who are overly excited to be your new friend.

    And don't post your illegal activities on the internet.

    Then the detectives met the man they would eventually call "Leo." Leo was a poker dealer at the Bellagio, and he said that he knew who the robber was. "Leo was this guy from Jersey," Detective Smith says. "A really intense, really excited-type guy." He reminded the detectives of the Joe Pesci character – Leo – from the Lethal Weapon movies.

    Leo said that in the days leading up to the robbery, he had spoken with a poker player who had fallen on hard times and had shared a fantasy he had of stealing casino chips.

    "Man, I'd like to just run over to that table and grab a bunch of those cranberries," the poker player had said.

    A week later, Leo saw the poker player again, only now he seemed to have come into a lot of money. He was sitting in games he never would have been able to afford before. Leo started playing detective, talking to other dealers and the cashiers to confirm his suspicion that the poker player was buying in with chips and not cash.

    The man's name, Leo told the detectives, was Tony Carleo.


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    Silver The Shrink's Avatar
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    Fantastic article except for that ridiculous last line. As far-fetched as the whole heist was, there is zero point zero chance Carleo actually said that to the author as he was leaving. Why do writers queer up their otherwise fine work with such hackneyed bullshit?

     
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      Sanlmar: The writer's fraud is on par with the robbery
      
      Dan Druff: great point. that last line was totally faggot

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    Plutonium Sanlmar's Avatar
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    What would it have cost the Bellagio to have a new batch of $25k chips manufactured on a rush basis?

    I will wager less than the $50k they fronted the undercover cop for the sting.

    That the same cranberries were still in use 7 weeks later is hard to fathom.

    If I were the perp in a high roller suite I would have decided to identify and befriend another high roller who was losing. The high roller's motivation, his bankroll and his approved limits would seem the bandit's best out. The losing high roller would be tempted to fix his losses quickly.

    A sad story.
    Last edited by Sanlmar; 11-04-2016 at 08:15 AM.

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    Diamond Tellafriend's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Sanlmar View Post
    What would it have cost the Bellagio to have a new batch of $25k chips manufactured on a rush basis?

    I will wager less than the $50k they fronted the undercover cop for the sting.

    That the same cranberries were still in use 7 weeks later is hard to fathom.

    If I were the perp in a high roller suite I would have decided to identify and befriend another high roller who was losing. The high roller's motivation, his bankroll and his approved limits would seem the bandit's best out. The losing high roller would be tempted to fix his losses quickly.

    A sad story.

    They already had a backup batch of chips for such a purpose. I think they changed those chips out pronto and then gave the mandatory notice that they were required to before dishonoring them. If I recall it was a couple of months they gave the notice for. Doesn't really matter though as he would never be able to cash them nor would anyone else who isn't rated as having won them. They keep up with each and every one of them.

    He also stole flags as I recall and could have done more with them in the poker room, but honestly, in the pits he couldn't even get rid of them. He'd of been better off stealing $500 and $1k chips.

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    Owner Dan Druff's Avatar
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    100% he would have been best off stealing $500 and $1k chips.

    Bellagio doesn't give a shit where those came from. I know this from years and years of playing there.

    Flags ($5k) are a different story. Even attempting to cash one of them will usually trigger some questioning.

    One time someone at my 100-200 game asked if I could sell him $5000 worth of $25 chips in exchange for his one flag. I agreed.

    Came back the next day and they told me to wait, and a supervisor came out. Supervisor was really nasty and started accusing me of lying about having played there. This was fucking outrageous because I just played a 20 HOUR SESSION the prior day (when I got the flag). The supervisor claimed he didn't see me and was "sure of it".

    When I got really pissed and insisted they check the cameras if they didn't believe me, he backed down, but not before making a snide comment about how it was my fault for not cashing it in at the end of my session the day before.

    From that point forward, I refused to accept flags from anyone.

    The funny thing is that you can bring all the $1k chips you want there, and they won't raise a bit of suspicion. They do ask for your name if you're cashing out $5k or more, and will force you to do a CTR form for $10k or more, but they won't hassle you as to where you got the chips.

    I can only imagine that they're far more paranoid regarding cranberries, which is why this guy had such a hard time getting rid of them.

     
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      Tellafriend: 100% right

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