The $23 Billion Vegas Family Business Destroyed From Within: The Wynn Family Wars
Автор: Old Money Luxury
Загружено: 2026-01-26
Просмотров: 46467
Описание:
Steve Wynn built a $17 billion dollar Las Vegas casino empire—The Mirage, Bellagio, Wynn, and Encore—only to lose it all through two divorces from his co-founder wife, s*xual misconduct allegations, and an eight-year legal war that ended with his ex-wife seizing control of the company bearing his name.
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TIMESTAMPS:
0:00 Introduction
1:55 Chapter One: The Empire at Seventeen Billion
5:15 Chapter Two: The Bingo Parlor's Son
8:20 Chapter Three: The Mirage Revolution
11:36 Chapter Four: The Co-Founder and the Prenup
14:38 Chapter Five: The Japanese Partner and the Forced Redemption
16:45 Chapter Six: The Fall and What Remains
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Stand at the corner of Las Vegas Boulevard and Sands Avenue, where bronze-glass towers spell out a single name in letters tall enough to be seen from aircraft: WYNN.
The name that revolutionized Las Vegas three times—first with The Mirage in nineteen eighty-nine, then with Bellagio in nineteen ninety-eight, and finally with Wynn Las Vegas in two thousand five.
Then, in twenty-four hours in January two thousand eighteen, that name lost nearly four billion dollars in market value.
The Wall Street Journal published allegations that the man behind the brand had spent decades sexually harassing and assaulting employees.
His resignation letter arrived within weeks.
His stock sales followed within months—two point one billion dollars liquidated in two days, severing all ties to the company bearing his name.
Steve Wynn was born to a father who operated bingo parlors across the Eastern United States and gambled away every dollar they generated.
When his father died during heart surgery at forty-six, he left his twenty-one-year-old son three hundred fifty thousand dollars in gambling debts owed to illegal operators.
Steve declined Yale Law School, married his college girlfriend Elaine Pascal, and moved to Maryland to run the family's struggling bingo parlor.
Elaine counted the money while Steve called the numbers.
Together they built an empire worth seventeen billion dollars at its peak, employing seventy-five thousand workers across two continents.
But the marriage couldn't survive his need for absolute control.
They divorced in nineteen eighty-six after twenty-three years, remarried in nineteen ninety-one, then divorced again in two thousand ten.
The settlement included a poison pill: Elaine had to vote her shares in tandem with Steve, meaning she couldn't vote independently even though her nine percent stake was worth nearly two billion dollars.
In two thousand twelve, Elaine filed a lawsuit to break the shareholder agreement.
The board retaliated by removing her entirely—the co-founder, the only female director.
When the Wall Street Journal investigation dropped in two thousand eighteen, Steve resigned within eleven days.
Elaine regained full voting control of her shares, launched a proxy campaign to remove Steve's allies from the board, and won.
The woman ousted from the board just three years earlier now controlled it.
The Mirage—the property that launched Steve Wynn into the stratosphere—closed in July two thousand twenty-four after thirty-five years.
Hard Rock International plans to demolish it entirely and replace it with a guitar-shaped hotel tower.
When Elaine died in April two thousand twenty-five, her daughters inherited her billion-dollar stake but want nothing to do with operating casinos.
There is no third generation learning the business.
The Wynn family name remains on buildings in Las Vegas, Macau, and Boston, but the Wynn family itself has exited the business entirely.
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