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		Caesars must face $11 billion in 
		lawsuits: U.S. judge 
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		 [August 27, 2016] 
		By Tracy Rucinski 
 CHICAGO (Reuters) - Caesars Entertainment 
		Corp <CZR.O> must face lawsuits from bondholders seeking some $11 
		billion in claims, a U.S. judge ruled on Friday in a decision the casino 
		company had warned could plunge it into bankruptcy alongside its 
		operating unit.
 
 Shares of the Nevada-based gaming company fell 12 percent after-hours.
 
 Caesars Entertainment Operating Co (CEOC), which filed for Chapter 11 
		protection in January 2015, was asking for a third court shield from 
		lawsuits against its parent to protect a multibillion-dollar 
		contribution to its reorganization plan.
 
 The high-stakes CEOC bankruptcy has been plagued by a complex web of 
		litigation pitting some of the most aggressive investors on Wall Street 
		against each other.
 
 A current injunction expires on Aug. 29, a day before Caesars faces a 
		potential ruling in New York on lawsuits from bondholders alleging it 
		reneged on guarantees from bonds issued by CEOC prior to the unit's $18 
		billion bankruptcy.
 
 CEOC had argued that another halt to a decision on those lawsuits was 
		critical to securing a settlement with holdout creditors before its 
		reorganization plan heads to a confirmation trial in January.
 
		 
		"I can't find that an injunction is likely to enhance the prospects for 
		negotiation," U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Benjamin Goldgar in Chicago said in 
		his courtroom ruling.
 Bitter creditors accuse Caesars and its private equity sponsors Apollo 
		Global Management LLC <APO.N> and TPG Capital Management LP [TPG.UL] of 
		stripping the unit of choice assets such as the LINQ Hotel & Casino in 
		Las Vegas and leaving it bankrupt.
 
 Caesars, Apollo and TPG have denied any wrongdoing, though a 
		court-appointed examiner found they could be on the hook for up to $5.1 
		billion in claims.
 
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			Las Vegas Strip casinos are seen from the 550 foot-tall (167.6 m) 
			High Roller observation wheel, the tallest in the world, in Las 
			Vegas, Nevada April 9, 2014. REUTERS/Las Vegas Sun/Steve Marcus 
            
             
			To settle the allegations Caesars has offered to pitch about $4 
			billion into CEOC's reorganization in exchange for releases from the 
			claims. Goldgar asked on Friday why Apollo and TPG were not also 
			contributing, saying the injunctions to date had provided them "a 
			comfortable free ride" on CEOC's "coattails".
 Both Caesars and CEOC said they were disappointed by the decision. 
			The court's refusal to extend the shield puts Caesars' "substantial 
			contribution" to CEOC's reorganization plan "at serious risk," a 
			Caesars spokesman said in an email.
 
 CEOC lawyers said they planned to appeal the ruling.
 
 "It would be hard to reverse Goldgar without dramatically expanding 
			the availability of third-party releases, something that would be 
			out of step with the standards in other circuits," said Douglas 
			Baird, a professor at the University of Chicago Law School.
 
 (Editing by Meredith Mazzilli and Matthew Lewis)
 
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