Anonymous ID: 4f4bdf Sept. 25, 2022, 6:22 p.m. No.17581638   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1715 >>1808 >>1907 >>2087 >>2096 >>2203 >>2306

Hogg quits as The Star’s acting CEO just days ahead of Queensland casino inquiry findings

 

The depletion of The Star Entertainment Group’s (ASX: SGR) executive ranks has worsened with the announcement today that Geoff Hogg has resigned as acting CEO after less than three months in the role.

 

The move also comes just days ahead of the final report from a Queensland commission of inquiry last month into the group’s casino operations at Brisbane and the Gold Coast. The report is expected to be handed to the Queensland Attorney-General by 30 September 2022.

 

The Star says Hogg, who was appointed in June and has held senior executive roles at the company for more than 13 years, has tendered his resignation as acting CEO and all other positions at company.

 

While Hogg’s final departure date is yet to be determined, chairman Ben Heap will step into the executive chair role until incoming CEO Robbie Cooke assumes the CEO’s position as planned later this year.

 

The Star has yet to finalise a start date for Cooke, who is currently managing director of Tyro Payments (ASX: TYR), leaving an executive vacuum for The Star in the wake of mass resignations from the board and senior ranks earlier this year.

 

The resignations came in the wake of the NSW Independent Liquor and Gaming Authority’s review of The Star’s suitability to hold a casino licence that found significant failures which exposed the group to the risk of money laundering activities.

 

Former CEO Mat Bekier and long-time chairman John O’Neill were among the biggest scalps from the ILGA inquiry, which also led to the resignations of former CFO Harry Theodore, former chief NSW casino officer Greg Hawkins and former chief legal and risk officer and company secretary Paula Martin.

 

Hogg’s evidence to the Queensland inquiry last month offered further evidence of concern for the authorities after he revealed a person banned from gambling at NSW and Queensland casinos for 15 years had been subsequently allowed to gamble at the company’s Queensland properties.

 

The report on the ILGA review, released by the NSW Independent Casino Commission (NICC) earlier this month, was accompanied by a blistering attack on The Star by NICC chief commissioner Philip Crawford who was concerned that despite the weight of damning evidence exposed during the NSW inquiry that nothing had changed at the casino group. Crawford highlighted Hogg’s evidence to the Queensland inquiry among the reasons for his expressed opinion.

 

Prior to being appointed acting CEO of The Star, Hogg was group executive of operations and before that he was managing director of the company’s Queensland operations for more than a decade.

 

The Star says Hogg will work with the board to transition his executive responsibilities ‘in an orderly manner’.

 

Heap has declined to receive additional remuneration for filling in as executive chairman. Meanwhile, The Star says it will let the market know when Cooke is likely to take the reins once a date has been finalised.

 

https://www.businessnewsaustralia.com/articles/hogg-quits-as-the-star-s-acting-ceo-just-days-ahead-of-queensland-casino-inquiry-findings.html

Anonymous ID: 4f4bdf Sept. 25, 2022, 6:33 p.m. No.17581715   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1808 >>1907 >>2087 >>2096 >>2203 >>2306

>>17581638

 

Inquiries have found casinos facilitated money laundering and consorted with criminals — so why haven’t there been charges for executives or directors?

 

Serious allegations have been aired during multiple inquiries into Australia's largest casino groups.

Key points:

 

Star Entertainment has until tomorrow to '"show cause" about why it should not lose its NSW casino licence

Star and Crown Resorts have been exposed for a long list of breaches of the law, particularly with money laundering

State and federal regulators have indicated they do not intend to pursue individual casino executives

 

Crown Resorts was found in the Bergin inquiry to have facilitated money laundering and partnered with operators that had links to organised crime.

 

Star Entertainment was found in another inquiry to have let patrons use credit cards to move money for gambling out of China, disguising the payments as 'hotel expenses' and sending false documents to banks.

 

But no single staff member, executive or board director of either Crown Resorts or Star Entertainment has faced a civil or criminal sanction.

 

Corporate regulator the Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC) and regulators in New South Wales, Victoria and Western Australia have not laid charges — and are unlikely to do so.

 

"It's really extraordinary that no individual has been held accountable," said Dr Charles Livingstone, one of the nation's foremost gambling researchers.

 

Dr Livingstone holds strong views about individual culpability.

 

"Clearly, individuals have been complicit in these companies' breaches of regulation, Australian law, state law and, in some cases, international law, and haven't been held to account.

 

"So it's hard to know what you would have to do to be held accountable"

Star facing licence deadline

 

Tomorrow is the deadline for Star Entertainment to demonstrate why it should not lose its lucrative licence to run Sydney's largest casino.

 

In the findings of his inquiry, Adam Bell SC didn't hold back, describing misconduct at The Star as "dysfunctional", "deceptive", and "brazenly misleading".

 

According to Mr Bell, The Star facilitated money laundering, ignored warnings about links to criminals, treated the gaming regulator with disdain and misled one of the big four banks.

 

Chief executive for the Alliance for Gambling Reform, Carol Bennett, is appalled by what looks like a lack of consequences for individuals at the companies.

 

https://www.abc.net.au/news/2022-09-26/casinos-busted-for-money-laundering-consorting-with-criminals/101462496