New Years Eve Crown Casino

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New Years Eve Crown Casino Rating: 6,6/10 7047 votes
Years© Provided by The Guardian Photograph: Stephen Coates/Reuters

You must be 18+ years of age and not prohibited from entering the Crown Entertainment Complex or the casino for any reason. Crown practices the responsible service of alcohol and remember that this offer at Crown ends on Tuesday 31st December 2019. You can also join the Crown on New Year’s Eve at Ocean 12 on Tuesday 31 December. Gather your party favourites and join us as Crown comes alive this New Year’s Eve. Enjoy a night of thrills, frills and sparkle with roving entertainers, DJs and a spectacular live theatre show. Start your night with an unforgettable dining experience at one of our premium or casual restaurants and cheers to the new year at one of our many bars. This NEW YEAR’S EVE the party is at Level 3 Nightclubs at Crown Melbourne! Get ready to celebrate the biggest night of the year at Melbourne’s biggest indoor music festival ‘LOVE NYE 2020’ with world class performers. Urban Superstar JEREMIH (USA) who returns to Australia after a 3 year.

Crown Resorts will open “non-gaming operations” at its new high-roller casino at Sydney’s Barangaroo in less than a fortnight after New South Wales authorities granted the company an interim liquor licence.

The Independent Liquor and Gaming Authority announced on Wednesday night that it had granted an interim liquor licence for the company’s Crown Sydney hotel, bars and some restaurants.

It comes just weeks after the ILGA said it would wait until the findings of an inquiry into Crown’s suitability to hold a casino licence were handed down in February before making a decision on whether to approve a range of regulatory items related to the casino’s gaming activities.

© Photograph: Stephen Coates/Reuters A liquor licence issued by the regulator will allow Crown to open its Sydney hotel before New Year’s Eve but the casino will remain dormant until at least February.

The ILGA chair, Philip Crawford, said on Wednesday the authority was also considering two further liquor licences for other “non-gaming areas of the casino” which were due to be decided “within the week”.

Related: Crown delays opening Sydney high roller casino after regulator withholds key approvals

“Last month ILGA decided against approving a range of regulatory items related to the casino’s gaming activities prior to the release of the Bergin inquiry’s findings in February 2021,” Crawford said.

“At the time, ILGA agreed to work with Crown Resorts to enable opening this month of all non-gaming areas including accommodation, restaurants, bars and entertainment areas.”

Crawford said the authority’s position on Crown’s gaming operations had “not changed” and that the interim liquor licence would only apply until 30 April 2021.

“This will enable ILGA to consider any suitability concerns arising from the Bergin inquiry following the handing down of the report due early next year, before making a further decision regarding an extension to the licence,” he said.

In a statement to the Australian Securities Exchange after the ILGA decision, Crown said it was “finalising its pre-opening activities and expects to progressively commence non-gaming operations at Crown Sydney from 28 December 2020”.

The former judge Patricia Bergin has been investigating Crown’s suitability to hold a Sydney gaming licence and heard allegations that the company had ignored warning signs of money laundering within its casinos.

In November the counsel assisting the inquiry, Adam Bell SC, recommended that Crown and its major shareholder James Packer be found unfit to be involved in running the new casino.

Crown had previously indicated it would push ahead with opening parts of the new venue in December despite the inquiry’s findings not yet being handed down, and Crawford had previously said it was open to the company to apply for licences which would allow it to open its hotel and restaurants at Barangaroo.

Related: Crown’s Sydney casino opening has been delayed and its fate hangs in the balance – how did it come to this?

During the inquiry, Crown made a number of concessions on its operations, including saying it said it would not deal with junkets unless they were approved by regulators, something that would require changes to the law in Victoria and NSW.

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In November Crown’s counsel told the inquiry that it had already taken steps since 2017, when allegations of money laundering were raised in Nine media, to improve its anti-money laundering processes and that more steps had been taken since the inquiry had begun.

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The company also made a bombshell admission that dirty cash had probably been laundered through its bank accounts.