94°F
weather icon Clear

Palms officials working to restore disrupted casino website

Representatives of the Palms hotel-casino are working to restore the resort’s website, after a security breach Tuesday morning.

“We are aware of the disruptions to the Palms Casino website and are working as quickly as possible to determine the cause,” a Palms spokesperson said in a Tuesday afternoon emailed statement. “We’ve engaged outside experts to help us investigate the cause and restore availability to all users as soon as possible.”

Palms officials did not indicate whether any personal customer information was exposed during the website disruption.

Persons who attempted to access the Palms website Tuesday received a Google warning that “visiting this web site may harm your computer!”

The company gave no further details about whether other computer systems were disrupted or how long the site has been inaccessible. The warning message could still be seen on its website Tuesday late afternoon.

Owned and operated by the San Manuel Band of Mission Indians in California, the 766-room property was reopened by the tribe in April after the casino had been closed since March 2020 as a result of the coronavirus pandemic.

The 20-year-old Palms was sold by Red Rock Resorts subsidiary Station Casinos Inc. to the tribe in May 2021 for $650 million.

Contact Richard N. Velotta at rvelotta@reviewjournal.com or 702-477-3893. Follow @RickVelotta on Twitter.

LISTEN TO THE TOP FIVE HERE
SPONSORED BY DIMOPOULOS LAW FIRM
Don't miss the big stories. Like us on Facebook.
THE LATEST
Judge throws out Strip hotel price fixing lawsuit

A class-action lawsuit alleging hotel room price fixing was thrown out, handing a win to the Strip hospitality companies accused of anti-trust behavior.

 
No disruptions reported after 700 walk off job. What’s next?

About 700 hospitality workers at an off-Strip casino have walked off the job and will withhold work for two days while pressing their employer to reach a deal over their five-year contract.

 
Test Exco Article Single Video Two

The historic downtown Las Vegas gambling hall will add two bars, a restaurant and more casino floor space later this year.