Atlantic City's acting fire chief says the owner of the former Revel Casino Hotel is set to receive its first fine for not having competent engineers oversee the property's alarms and emergency equipment.
A filing made Tuesday by the new owner of Atlantic City's former Revel casino raises fears of fatal plane crashes, catastrophic fires, massive unemployment and worldwide disgrace if he is forced to buy energy from the building's former utility supplier.
The power is back on at Atlantic City's former Revel casino, but when it will re-open -- and whether it will even still be a casino -- remains up in the air.
The former owners of Atlantic City's Revel casino are acknowledging a long list of mistakes that helped kill the $2.4 billion resort, including an onerous energy contract that strangled the property from the get-go.
Two days after it was bought by a Florida developer, Atlantic City's former Revel casino went dark Thursday as the power plant that is its sole supplier of utilities cut off service.
Three years to the day after Atlantic City's $2.4 billion Revel casino opened -- and seven months to the day after it closed -- a bankruptcy court judge approved its sale to a Florida developer for about 4 cents on the dollar.