• About Us
  • The Team
  • Newsletter
  • Advertise with Us
GGRAsia
  • Home
  • Macau
  • Philippines
  • Singapore
  • Japan
  • Rest of Asia
  • World
  • Industry Talk
  • Trends & Tech
  • CSR
Reading: Judge slaps US$250k penalty on Sands China over Jacobs
Ad image
  • About Us
  • The Team
  • Newsletter
  • Advertise with Us
GGRAsia
  • Home
  • Macau
  • Philippines
  • Singapore
  • Japan
  • Rest of Asia
  • World
  • Industry Talk
  • Trends & Tech
  • CSR
Reading: Judge slaps US$250k penalty on Sands China over Jacobs
Ad image
Search
  • Home
  • Macau
  • Philippines
  • Singapore
  • Japan
  • Rest of Asia
  • World
  • Industry Talk
  • Trends & Tech
  • CSR
GGRAsia > Latest News > Judge slaps US$250k penalty on Sands China over Jacobs
Latest NewsMacauTop of the deckWorld

Judge slaps US$250k penalty on Sands China over Jacobs

Newsdesk Published March 9, 2015
Share
2 Min Read

A Nevada District Judge has ordered Macau casino operator Sands China Ltd to pay US$250,000 to legal charities. Judge Elizabeth Gonzalez ruled the firm improperly withheld documents relating to a wrongful termination suit brought by Steve Jacobs, a former Sands China president and chief executive.

The judge also ordered Sands China to cover some court costs incurred by Mr Jacobs.

Sands China, the Macau unit of Las Vegas Sands Corp, said it plans to appeal to a higher court to try to overturn the order.

Mr Jacobs was dismissed from his post in July 2010 for what the firm said was “cause”, including an allegation of unauthorised deal making, which the former Sands China CEO denied.

In October 2010,  Mr Jacobs sued Las Vegas Sands and Sands China in Nevada making allegations including breach of contract and breach of good faith.

As part of the suit, his lawyers asked the defendants to produce to the court thousands of emails and other documents related to the Macau business.

But Las Vegas Sands had questioned whether a Nevada court could even claim jurisdiction over Sands China and over the wrongful termination suit.

In a 2012 order, Judge Gonzalez ruled that her court could hear the case, and that neither Sands China nor Las Vegas Sands could cite the Macau Personal Data Protection Act as an objection to disclosure of any documents. She said so after hearing that data from Macau had already been transferred to the United States by the defendants and reviewed by lawyers for the companies.

On January 6 this year, the same judge ruled that an investigation of Macau government officials – allegedly commissioned by Las Vegas Sands’ chairman Sheldon Adelson – could be used in Mr Jacobs’ wrongful termination action, but must not be disclosed to the public. Mr Adelson denies commissioning the report and claims it was Mr Jacobs’ idea.

Share This Article
Facebook Twitter Whatsapp Whatsapp LinkedIn Email Copy Link Print

Latest News

Sands China a global leader for ESG says S&P yearbook 
June 11, 2026
Okada Manila promotes Shirley Tam to CMO for integrated sales and marketing
June 11, 2026
TCS John Huxley supplies 300-plus tables to Resorts World New York City
June 11, 2026

Most Popular

HeadlinesLatest NewsNewsletterNewsletter 3Rest of Asia

China, Sri Lanka step up cooperation against online gambling, telecom fraud

June 8, 2026
HeadlinesLatest NewsMacauNewsletterNewsletter 1

MGM China’s Pansy Ho disposes of her entire stake in parent MGM Resorts, grosses US$140mln

June 8, 2026
HeadlinesLatest NewsMacauNewsletterNewsletter 1

Macau 2026 gaming growth seen slowing as capex rises: CLSA

June 8, 2026
HeadlinesLatest NewsNewsletterNewsletter 3Rest of Asia

South Korea blocking 1,280 ‘illegal’ sports betting sites ahead of FIFA World Cup 2026

June 10, 2026

Code of Ethics

Privacy Policy

Useful Links

Contact Us

Follow US
Copyright 2026 TEAM Publishing and Consultancy Ltd / All rights reserved
Sign up to our FREE Newsletter

Subscribe now and never miss our latest news!

Zero spam, unsubscribe at any time.