Pro Poker Player Seeks $1.25M In Damages For Lifetime Borgata Ban Pro Poker Player Seeks $1.25M In Damages For Lifetime Borgata Ban
Pro Poker Player Seeks $1.25M In Damages For Lifetime Borgata Ban A professional poker player is suing the Borgata after an apparently offhand comment he made to a desk clerk about jumping out of a window got him banned for life. Scott Robbins of Millbury, Massachusetts is seeking more than $1.25 million, a major portion of which he alleges represents lost earnings from Atlantic City poker tournaments, court papers show. The suit says Robbins, 54, was checking in at the popular hotel and casino for a Borgata $3,500 Main Event in September 2019 when a front desk clerk asked if he wanted a high or low floor for his room. “If I had to jump from a high floor…
VIDEO: Passaic Police Chief Orders Probe After Officer Vows To Arrest Rabbi For Facebook Post VIDEO: Passaic Police Chief Orders Probe After Officer Vows To Arrest Rabbi For Facebook Post
Video: Passaic Police Chief Orders Probe After Officer Vows To Arrest Rabbi For Facebook Post UPDATE: Passaic Police Chief Luis Guzman said Friday that two illegally parked private ambulances were towed early Thursday following warnings issued three days earlier -- and again that morning. Guzman also said that the owner’s 64-year-old mother was taken into custody for refusing several times to stop blocking the vehicles from being removed. At the same time, Mayor Hector Carlos Lora said the chief is conducting an internal affairs investigation arising from a video clip posted on Daily Voice (above) in which an officer threatens to arrest the director of Hotzolah EMS Incorporated, Dov…
REPORT: Paramus Secretary Found Port Authority Recording Her Medical Exam REPORT: Paramus Secretary Found Port Authority Recording Her Medical Exam
Report: Paramus Secretary Found Port Authority Recording Her Medical Exam PARAMUS, N.J. -- A Paramus woman in a class action lawsuit is saying that Port Authority secretly videotapes medical examinations, the New York Post reports. Following an altercation with another employee, Senior Administrative Secretary Charlene Talarico had her hand examined at one of Port Authority's medical offices in August 2016, the report says. When evidence was turned over to her after suing her co-worker, she discovered that there was covert video surveillance of her, The Post says citing Manhattan federal court filing. CLICK HERE FOR MORE.