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Old 11-01-2007, 11:27 PM
Nick Rivers Nick Rivers is offline
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Join Date: Apr 2004
Posts: 233
Default Re: Casino ships me extra hundo

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They don't get in trouble for this. Cashiers are bonded, insured against errors like this. It happens all the time, and it's part of the price of doing business for casinos. Some insurance company somewhere will eat that loss.

Everyone here should remember that when you're the recipient of a favorable pay-out error on the part of a casino employee, be it a cashier, a blackjack dealer, or whoever else. In the case of a table game, it will just get lumped in with the table hold (reducing it by whatever amount) and will never be discovered. In the case of a cashier or someone working the floor like a slot change person, the casino is aware humans make mistakes and they are insured against it. The chance that "you get someone fired" because you don't alert them to their pay-out error is virtually nil.

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If this is true then [censored] the casino. It`s owned by the government so consider it a tax rebate.



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It's not.

You'd have to be a pretty scummy person to make someone lose their job over $100.

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It's definitely true in Nevada. I don't know about casinos in Canada or wherever else. In fact, you can't even get an unrestricted gaming license (the type needed for table games) in Nevada without having your cashiers be bonded. Generally speaking, other jurisdictions tend to copy Nevada gaming law in most areas, so I wouldn't be surprised if this were the case more universally than just in Nevada.

Try talking to a cage manager if you don't believe me. That's where I got my information. You'll see.

Beyond that, quit being so histrionic; a cashier isn't going to lose his job over a $100 mistake in any half-way respectable casino (one with a poker room, for instance).
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