96°F
weather icon Cloudy

Convicted slot cheat included in Black Book dies

Convicted slot machine cheat Roderick Dee had just a five-month stay on Nevada’s Excluded Person List, commonly referred to as the Black Book.

Dee, who became the first new member of the list in almost four years when the Nevada Gaming Commission made him the 34th entry last July, died in December.

Earlier this month, the commission granted the control board’s request to remove Dee from the list.

Death is the only way a person can be removed from the Black Book, which makes it a felony for that person to enter a Nevada casino.

Dee had at least four felony convictions for attempting to use different devices to rig jackpots or change payouts on a slot machine. Three of the convictions are in Las Vegas and one was from Kansas City, Mo.

According to his obituary from the Review-Journal, Dee died in hospice care on Dec. 30 at age 56 after a four-year bout with cancer. He dealt cards at the Dunes and Stardust and was also a competitive chess player and “an accomplished guitar and saxophone player.”

Contact reporter Howard Stutz at hstutz@reviewjournal.com or 702-477-3871. Follow @howardstutz on Twitter.

Don't miss the big stories. Like us on Facebook.
THE LATEST
 
Will Strip resort closures change the hotel market?

Simple laws of supply and demand might make observers think that losing two resorts within three months would have a significant effect on the Strip market.

 
Why South Point owner bought land near resort for $5.5M

South Point owner Michael Gaughan recently purchased 4.3 acres of undeveloped land near the Las Vegas resort, and he plans to get it developed quickly.