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Public sale looms for closed Crazy Horse Too strip club

After three years of failed efforts by the government to sell the Crazy Horse Too, the once-notorious strip club is now headed for a court-ordered public sale to help pay off its former owner's debts.

U.S. District Judge Philip Pro on Wednesday issued an order giving the U.S. Marshals Service a May 3 deadline to sell the closed club, once a hangout for movie stars, politicians and mobsters, "by any lawful means, including public auction."

Proceeds from the sale are supposed to go toward paying off the millions of dollars its convicted former owner, Rick Rizzolo, owes the government in back taxes and fines, as well as a $10 million legal settlement for a Kansas man, Kirk Henry, who was paralyzed in a fight over his bar tab at the club in 2001.

Rizzolo, long suspected of having ties to organized crime, pleaded guilty to a felony tax charge in June 2006 to put an end to a decade-long FBI racketeering investigation that often attracted headlines about the already world-famous club.

He served a year in federal prison.

Under his plea agreement with the government, Rizzolo had a year to sell the club, but when he couldn't sell it, the Marshals Service took control of the property and for three years tried to unload it in a declining real estate market.

The club anchors a small business mall on Industrial Road just North of Sahara Avenue near Interstate 15.

Once valued at an estimated $35 million, the club now might be worth no more than $5 million.

In addition to the real estate slump, the value has fallen because the Marshals Service allowed the club's liquor and adult entertainment licenses to lapse. Under current zoning laws, that lapse prevents the club's future use as an adult nightclub.

"It was total mismanagement and incompetency," Rizzolo's lawyer, Dominic Gentile, said. "There was absolutely no good reason for the government not to find an operator who could keep the club alive until it was sold."

Gentile said that Rizzolo has been "damaged beyond repair by the government" and that his financial future now is bleak.

But Gentile added that the Henrys have been harmed even more.

"The Henrys are the biggest victims here," he said. "They should have had their money a long time ago."

The couple, who are suing Rizzolo in federal court and alleging fraud, probably will have to go after him personally to get the cash settlement, which with interest is now more than $12 million. Lawyers for the Henrys could not be reached for comment.

In his order, Pro said, "The time has come" to dispose of the Crazy Horse Too property for whatever it will bring.

"There does not appear to be a reasonable likelihood the United States will be able to sell the property through a negotiated sale in the foreseeable future," Pro wrote.

Pro ordered the government and all parties with an interest in the property to file a joint statement by Jan. 24 outlining how they want to proceed with the public sale.

Natalie Collins, a spokeswoman for the U.S. attorney's office declined immediate comment on Wednesday, saying, "We have not had a chance to review the order yet."

http://www.lvrj.com/news/public-sale-loo…

CORRECTION -- 12/24/10 -- Because of a dropped word, a statement by U.S. attorney's office spokeswoman Natalie Collins regarding the sale of the Crazy Horse Too was unclear in an article that appeared on Page 1B Thursday. Collins said, “We have not had a chance to review the order yet.”

Dec. 23, 2010
Las Vegas Review-Journal

5 comments

  • SuperDude
    14 years ago
    it was allowed to die because government officials don't want the negative press coverage of the U.S. government operating a strip club.
  • inno123
    14 years ago
    I wonder if anybody else here remembers the original Crazy Horse which as I recall was on Paradise Road.

    Real stupid of the US to allow the licenses to expire, not that there is any shortage of clubs on Industrial Rd.
  • georgmicrodong
    14 years ago
    I'll bet money that allowing the licenses to lapse was intentional, if not planned from the moment that government too over.
  • Cheo_D
    14 years ago
    georg, then the question would be if they deliberately lost the licensing as a way to force the compensations to come off Rizzolo's own hide, or out of a feeling that the whole outfit, not just the convicted owner, should go permanently out of business. But ISTM it could also be a matter of a view by the Marshals that it's not their job to maximize asset value, that the defendant in the criminal and civil cases was Rizzolo and to them it's his problem if he winds up short; this ties in with SuperDude's point that had they tried to save the recoverable value by keeping alive its licences, the media would have focused on "your tax dollars supporting strip clubs", not on how that would protect an injured person's interest in recovering his fullest lawful compensation.

    Still, it's hardly surprising there would be no takers - the location was already harmed by association and it is much more efficient to take over (and if necessary rebrand) an ongoing operation, so every month it stayed closed it became less and less attractive.
  • snowtime
    14 years ago
    Inno123, I have not been to Las Vegas in about 15 years but used to enjoy visits to the old Crazy Horse on Paradise. It had a neighborhood feel to it and was open round the clock. I remember almost everyone sat along a long bar and the girls danced on top stopping in front of each customer that wanted to tip. The nice thing was that all of the girls would pull open their thongs and let you deposit the tip way down and get a nice feel at the same time. This was long before private dances, I think.
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