Catawba Nation’s Former Two Kings Casino Development Partner Sues Tribe

Catawba Nation’s Former Two Kings Casino Development Partner Sues Tribe.

Costfoto / NurPhoto / Getty Images

Key Takeaways

The Catawba Indian Nation s former partner on its $700 million Two Kings Casino development in North Carolina s Kings Mountain has sued the tribe over trespassing and property damage claims.

Catawba Nation Two Kings Casino lawsuitConstruction on the Catawba Nation s permanent Two Kings Casino in North Carolina is underway. The temporary gaming facility that has operated since July 2021 is seen in the distance. (Image: Charlotte Business Journal)

Filed in Cleveland County Civil Superior Court, Kings Mountain Land Development Partners, LLC, (KMLD) is seeking at least $125K in damages for repeated and blatant abuses inflicted by the Catawba Nation.

KMLD alleges that the tribe trampled easement rights, removed dirt and rock, completed unauthorized grading and sloping of the land, and repeatedly trespassed the property owned by the company.

KMLD is seeking a jury trial. The tribe hasn t yet responded to the civil complaint.

Friends to Foes

In 2018, the Catawba Nation agreed to purchase 17 acres of land from KMLD, a company controlled by North Carolina businessman Wallace Cheves. The politically connected Cheves, a Republican megadonor and ally of President-elect Donald Trump, was instrumental in convincing the Interior Department s Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) to take the land into the federal trust to allow a tribal casino to be built on the property.

While the DOI agreed that the tribe had ancestral ties to the land and therefore deemed it sovereign, the National Indian Gaming Commission (NIGC) rejected the business arrangement for Two Kings between the Catawba Nation and Cheves Kings Mountain Sky Boat Gaming, LLC.

The federal agency tasked with enforcing the Indian Gaming Regulatory Act (IGRA) ruled that the Two Kings Casino must primarily benefit the tribe, not a commercial business like Sky Boat. The NIGC also took issue with Cheves having a stake in a tribal casino. Cheves previously paid millions of dollars in civil and criminal fees for operating illegal video poker and electronic bingo casinos in several states.

The NIGC decision forced the Catawbas to sever ties with Cheves. The tribe paid Sky Boat an and paid Cheves an for another 9.4 acres of land adjacent to the original 17 acres.

In exchange, Cheves provided the tribe with two easement rights from the remaining 37.6 acres he owns surrounding the casino development site to allow the permanent resort to be built.

Now, Cheves alleges that the tribe is acting as if it has free rein to do whatever it wishes on the easement property.

Casino Plan 

The Catawba Nation has operated a in Kings Mountain since July 2021. Work on the permanent facility .

The first phase of the permanent resort, set to open in early 2026, is to include a casino floor with 1,350 slot machines, 12 live dealer , a sportsbook, and a restaurant.

If business goes as planned, the tribe says a subsequent development phase will greatly expand the gaming space to house more than 4,000 slots and 100 tables. The expansion also would bring a 400-room hotel to the casino and more dining and drinking venues.

Delaware North, the New York-based gaming and hospitality conglomerate, partnered with the tribe after its relationship with Cheves dissolved. Delaware North helped the Catawba secure new financing for the $700 million undertaking and will operate the property on the tribe s behalf once complete.

Article Sources
Red Rock Could Get Back to Basics, Potentially Benefiting Investors, Says Analyst editorial policy.
  1. Marina Bay Sands, Resorts World Singapore Expansion Ambitions Crimped by Coronavirus

Compare Accounts
×
AGA Introduces New Responsible Gaming Standards for Digital Age
Provider
Name
Description
New Jersey Hopeful for Online Poker Liquidity-Sharing With Nevada and Pennsylvania but Not UK  Everi Excellence Possible as Analyst Boosts Estimates Through 2022 on Fintech, Gaming Beats  Circus Circus Tower Transforms into Dorms for Nevada-Reno Students Affected By Campus Explosion  South Korea’s Paradise City Casino Falling Short of Utopian Projections  Golden State Heavy First Round Favorites over Clippers as NBA Playoffs Start Saturday  New Jersey Lottery Is Form of Gambling, Ticket Purchases By Minors Illegal  VIP Gamblers Win $10 million from Wynn Palace Macau  Hoof Issue Forces Haikal from Derby; Omaha Beach Undergoes Successful Procedure  MGM Springfield First Year Struggles Baffle Former Head of Massachusetts Gaming Commission  Oakland Raiders Booed Out of Town, Next Home Game Will Be in Las Vegas