Victoryland

VictoryLand
Location Shorter, Alabama
Address 8680 County Road 40
Opening date 1983
Theme Where you can be a Winner Too!
Number of rooms 300
Casino type Land-Based
Renovated in 2009
Website victoryland.com

VictoryLand is a greyhound track, casino, and hotel in Shorter, Alabama.

Facilities

Greyhound racing track

The 1,230-foot greyhound racing track opened over twenty-five years ago and is the home track to over 40 greyhounds.

Quincy's 777 casino

VictoryLand is home to Quincy's 777, a casino, home to over 7,000 different slot machines.[1] Before its closure, Quincy's 777 was the largest electronic bingo casino in the state.[2]

Oasis Hotel

The Oasis Hotel, is a 300-room hotel which was built on the VictoryLand property, and opened on November 1, 2009. The hotel also had a fine-dining restaurant called Whitfield's Steakhouse, O's Lobby Bar, and the O Brew cafe'.[3]

History

On August 12, 2010, VictoryLand closed its casino, restaurant and hotel operations.

On October 4, 2010, VictoryLand owner Milton McGregor was arrested along with 10 state senators and lobbyists after a federal probe relating to the improprieties of state gambling legislation. McGregor was charged with one count of conspiracy, six counts of bribery and 11 counts of honest services fraud.[4][5][6] He was acquitted on all counts in March 2012.[7] The casino floor was reopened in December 2012, over the objection of Attorney General Luther Strange, who argued that VictoryLand's electronic bingo machines were illegal slot machines.[8]

On June 25, 2015, Judge William Shashy dismissed the civil forfeiture case against Victoryland brought after the Attorney General Luther Strange's office executed a search warrant in 2013 seizing $263,105.81 in cash and 1,615 gaming machines. Judge Shashy said “The state could not and did not offer any substantive reason why it permitted this state of affairs to continue at other facilities, while taking its present stance against the same operations at Victoryland…The propriety of the State of Alabama electing to currently pursue action against only one facility is of great concern. It is apparent at the present time that the State of Alabama is cherrypicking which facilities should remain open or closed. This Court refuses to be used an instrument to perpetuate unfair treatment," This would give Victoryland the right to re-open with full operations able to resume.

References

  1. List of Quincy's 777 games
  2. Chandler, Kim (March 8, 2012). "Milton McGregor, 5 others acquitted in Alabama gambling trial". Birmingham News. Retrieved 2012-12-19.
  3. Chandler, Kim (December 18, 2012). "VictoryLand open for business again". Birmingham News. Retrieved 2012-12-19.

External links

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