http://www.courant.com/community/new-london/hc-ap-ct-casinos-cheatingsnov27,0,7696929.story
[h=1]Courant.com[/h][h=1]Courant.com[/h][h=2][/h][h=2]Conn. court upholds casino cheating conviction[/h][h=2]Associated Press
November 27, 2011
NEW LONDON, Conop:
[/h]Associated Press
November 27, 2011
NEW LONDON, Con
An appeals court has upheld a Tennessee man's conviction for leading a craps cheating scam at Connecticut's two casinos with the help of insiders.
Forty-five-year-old Richard S. Taylor of Memphis is serving a 10-year sentence in Connecticut after being convicted in 2009 of orchestrating the 2007 scam, in which he recruited casino dealers to let him place late bets.
A Connecticut Appellate Court panel upheld his conviction in a decision released Friday.
Authorities say Taylor and his group were responsible for nearly $70,000 in losses at Connecticut's Foxwoods Resort Casino and Mohegan Sun.
Taylor dubbed himself "Mr. Casino," and was described in court records as a professional gambler who made his living through high-stakes gambling nationwide.
His public defender could not immediately be reached Sunday for comment.
[h=1]Courant.com[/h][h=1]Courant.com[/h][h=2][/h][h=2]Conn. court upholds casino cheating conviction[/h][h=2]Associated Press
November 27, 2011
NEW LONDON, Conop:
[/h]Associated Press
November 27, 2011
NEW LONDON, Con
An appeals court has upheld a Tennessee man's conviction for leading a craps cheating scam at Connecticut's two casinos with the help of insiders.
Forty-five-year-old Richard S. Taylor of Memphis is serving a 10-year sentence in Connecticut after being convicted in 2009 of orchestrating the 2007 scam, in which he recruited casino dealers to let him place late bets.
A Connecticut Appellate Court panel upheld his conviction in a decision released Friday.
Authorities say Taylor and his group were responsible for nearly $70,000 in losses at Connecticut's Foxwoods Resort Casino and Mohegan Sun.
Taylor dubbed himself "Mr. Casino," and was described in court records as a professional gambler who made his living through high-stakes gambling nationwide.
His public defender could not immediately be reached Sunday for comment.