Dan Stamm

Bruce Deifik, Former Owner of Atlantic City's Ocean Resort Casino, Killed in Car Crash

The casino's new owner, which the current owner says will make a $70 million investment in Ocean Resort, will need to be licensed by state gambling regulators

What to Know

  • Bruce Deifik, the former owner of Atlantic City's Ocean Resort Casino, has died.
  • His lawyer tells The Associated Press that Bruce Deifik was killed in a single-car crash Sunday in Colorado.
  • Deifik was in the process of turning over his majority ownership of the casino to NY hedge fund Luxor Capital at the time of his death.

Bruce Deifik, the Colorado developer who lost a fortune running a struggling Atlantic City casino for six months, was killed in a single-car crash in Denver. He was 64.

Deifik had been driving home Sunday from a Colorado Rockies baseball game in his hometown of Denver, his lawyer, Paul O'Gara, said Monday.

The medical examiner is still investigating what might have caused the crash, O'Gara said, including the possibility Deifik suffered a medical crisis behind the wheel.

Deifik was in the process of turning over his majority ownership of the casino to New York hedge fund Luxor Capital at the time of his death. That transaction has not yet closed but is likely to be completed soon.

The casino is the former Revel property that Deifik bought and reopened last June.

Deifik, who had several successful developments in Colorado including shopping centers, bought the former Revel property sight unseen from Florida developer Glenn Straub, and reopened it on June 27, 2018, under the new name Ocean Resort.

It began losing money after just two months and continued to bleed red ink as fall gave way to winter. Deifik tried to refinance the property but was unable to do so, finally agreeing to turn over his majority ownership to Luxor, which was one of the project's lenders.

Ocean Resort lost $3.2 million in September; $4.1 million in October; $5.5 million in November; and $5.8 million in December. The casino responded by reducing its cash and reserves and delaying payment on more of its bills.

Luxor is investing $70 million into the casino resort and is developing a new marketing plan to try to pump up business.

A trustee is overseeing the property until the ownership transfer is completed, something that could happen within the next few weeks.

Copyright AP - Associated Press
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