85°F
weather icon Clear

Las Vegas Sands websites restored about a week after hacking

Las Vegas Sands Corp., owners of the Venetian and Palazzo on the Strip, has restored its websites about a week after they were apparently taken over by hackers.

The Las Vegas-based gaming company pulled down the sites, including Internet portals to the company’s Strip resorts, on Feb 13. Visitors to the websites were told that the sites were undergoing maintenance.

Ron Reese, a Las Vegas Sands spokesman, said the sites were restored early Monday. The company first became aware of the hacking on Feb. 12 when the company email went down.

Reese declined comment on whether the company’s U.S. internal systems were also operating again. The Nevada Gaming Control Board and FBI are investigating the hacking.

The hackers defaced the sites with images condemning CEO Sheldon Adelson for comments he mde last fall at Yeshiva University in New York about using nuclear weapons on Iran. The incident not only affected Las Vegas Sands’ corporate site and Strip properties, but sites for casinos in China, Singapore and Bethlehem, Pa.

Contact reporter Chris Sieroty @reviewjournal.com or 702-477-3893. Follow @sierotyfeatures on Twitter.

Don't miss the big stories. Like us on Facebook.
THE LATEST
Yucca Mountain: Where GOP Senate candidates stand

Plans to turn Yucca Mountain into the nation’s nuclear waste repository have long received opposition from both sides of the aisle. But, is that changing?

Burning Man removes pro-Palestinian sculpture from website

Debates and protests sparked by Israel’s war in the Gaza Strip have worked their way into seemingly every corner in the world — even the free-spirited desert festival in Nevada known as Burning Man.

Heavy fighting in Gaza’s Rafah keeps aid crossings closed

Heavy fighting between Israeli troops and Palestinian terrorists on the outskirts of the southern Gaza city of Rafah has left aid crossings inaccessible, U.N. officials said.