The owners of The Bell of Orleans riverboat casino, Columbia Sussex
Corporation, may be in a tight squeeze after a federal judge signed an order
granting the casino to be seized from a shipyard in Alabama, where it was
receiving repairs caused by Hurricane Katrina. According to a seizure
order signed by Magistrate William Cassidy, the owners of the riverboat casino
have outstanding leasing fees in excess of $1 million.
The money, which is owed to the Orleans Levee Board, has been growing since
the casino has been out of operation. However, the Orleans Levee Board
showed to Judge Cassidy that the lease agreement explicitly states all leasing
fees will be paid whether the casino is in operation or not. And it looks
as if the Board does not make exceptions to hurricanes or other natural
disasters. On the surface, the actions of the Orleans Levee Board seem to
be greedy and inconsiderate. However, the details of the relationship
between The Belle of Orleans and the Board may have run deeper than the public
majority knows about.
Just whether the casino will be seized remains to
be seen. Some are speculating that the move to obtain a seizure order was
a scare tactic to get Columbia Sussex to pay up. It does not look like the
company is broke or going out of business, which the Levee Board has surely
taken note of.
Although Hurricane Katrina was a huge disaster that nobody was predicting would
happen, The Bell of Orleans has been enormously successful in the past, and so
should have a backup plan at the very least. Casinos are essentially
required to have alternative solutions to bail them out of trouble when
unforeseen circumstances like Katrina arise. The question now is if
Columbia Sussex can bail their riverboat casino out of being seized and
potentially never operating again.