Nevada regulators probing Jordan son’s partying
August 31st, 2010 Posted in NCAA basketball news, NCAA college basketballCBSSport MGM Resorts International was under investigation after the underage son of basketball great Michael Jordan bragged on Twitter about partying at a Las Vegas Strip nightclub, Nevada gambling regulators said Monday.
Officials were examining whether the casino operator violated laws prohibiting drinking or gambling by minors, Nevada Gaming Control Board enforcement chief Jerry Markling said.
People under 21 often try to gamble or drink in Las Vegas, but punishment for casino operators depend on the circumstances, Markling said.
Jordans 19-year-old son Marcus Jordan tweeted Aug. 20 about spending $35,000 at Haze at Aria Resort & Casino.
“Last night was stupid… 35K at Haze,” the UCF sophomore guard said. “Totals 50K something the whole day.”
The tweet has since been removed from the site.
Jordan told a Fox Sports website last week that the tweet was a mistake and said he had conversations with both his parents about it.
“I didnt mean it the way it came across,” he said. “My family and friends know the type of person I am.”
Jordan was in Las Vegas for his dads fantasy basketball camp with his brother, Jeffrey, and teammate A.J. Rompza.
A video posted to Twitter by Jeffrey Jordan shows all three players hanging out at the Liquid Pool Lounge, the resorts adults-only pool.
UCF basketball spokesman Doug Richards said the school had no comment.
MGM Resorts spokesman Alan Feldman declined comment. The Aria is the centerpiece casino of CityCenter, the companys joint venture with Dubai World that cost $8.5 billion to build.
Markling said he could not comment specifically about the case. He said the control boards findings would not be made public.
Markling said punishments in general depend on the infractions scope, and could involve verbal warnings, fines, or in extreme cases suspending an operators gambling license.
