A spokesperson for Encore declined to comment on the suit. Encore used the promise of the gas cards as a ‘bait and switch’ to bring patrons into the casino, the suit says. Turley’s suit is filed on behalf of himself and “other individuals” – unnamed in the suit – who also received the gas card promotion e-mail, the suit says. “None of the patrons who arrived that day received a gas card as advertised by Encore,” the suit says. FBT alleges that the Gaming Commission, concerned about the.
Wynn got the lucrative Boston-area casino license, but the Everett property ultimately sold for 35 million. Those vouchers “had no value outside the Encore casino, and which would lose if they lost while betting,” the suit says. FBT Everett Realty agreed in 2012 to sell the land on which Encore Boston Harbor now sits to Wynn Resorts for 75 million if the casino company secured a state casino license.
Turley and “hundreds of other regular patrons” showed up, but received $300 “free pay vouchers” instead of gas cards, the suit says. “No other conditions or requirements were provided in the email,” according to the lawsuit, which was filed in Middlesex Superior Court on Dec. Turley and “hundreds of other regular players” at the casino received an e-mail two days earlier in which Encore said Speedway gas gift cards would be handed out between noon and 6 p.m. Encore Boston Harbor is being sued by a frequent patron, Jason Turley, who says the casino used a “bait and switch” tactic when it promised him – and hundreds of other patrons – a $300 gas card to come to the casino on April 23. Search for Case Number or Case Name with these possible patterns: Case Number e.g.