ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (AP) A professional poker player has sued a casino that claimed he won $9.6 million by cheating at baccarat, alleging it knew about defects in the cards and then destroyed evidence.
Phil Ivey and his co-defendant, Cheng Yin Sun, filed a countersuit recently against the Borgata Hotel Casino & Spa, which sued the pair last year.
The Borgata suit said Ivey and Sun took advantage of a defect in cards made by Gemaco that enabled them to sort and arrange good cards in baccarat.
Ivey says Gemaco was responsible for producing cards within contractual and industry standards and should be held responsible for any damages.
He also says the Borgata knew the card manufacturing process didn’t produce perfectly symmetrical card backs.
Ivey says in the suit that the Borgata intentionally destroyed the cards at issue “eviscerating the defendants’ ability to prove the lack of any defective cards.”
They demand unspecified compensatory and punitive damages against the Atlantic City casino.
The casino claims the technique called edge sorting that was used by Ivey and Sun violates New Jersey casino gambling regulations.
The lawsuit claims the cards were defective in that the pattern on the back of them was not uniform.
- Posted August 03, 2015
- Tweet This | Share on Facebook
Professional poker player sues casino

headlines Macomb
- Macomb County Meals on Wheels in urgent need of volunteers ahead of holiday season
- MDHHS hosting three, free virtual baby showers in November and December for new or expecting families
- MDHHS secures nearly 100 new juvenile justice placements through partnerships with local communities and providers
- MDHHS seeking proposals for student internship stipend program to enhance behavioral health workforce
- ABA webinar November 30 to explore the state of civil legal aid in America
headlines National
- This Is the Moment
- ACLU and BigLaw firm use ‘Orange is the New Black’ in hashtag effort to promote NY jail reform
- BigLaw partner won’t charge his $3,250 hourly rate to defend New Jersey cities in Trump administration suits
- After second federal judge withdraws error-riddled ruling, litigants seek explanation
- 5 hallucinated cases lead federal judge to kick 3 Butler Snow lawyers off case
- Bondi files ethics complaint against federal judge who reportedly expressed concern about ‘constitutional crisis’