Showing posts with label Las Vegas Casino. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Las Vegas Casino. Show all posts

Friday, January 29, 2010

From Cambodia’s Killing Fields to $125,000 win in Las Vegas

Kimbo Ung celebrates his victory in the Heartland Poker Tour at Red Rock Resort. (Photo: Red Rock Resort)

Thursday, Jan. 28, 2010
By Robin Leach
Las Vegas Sun (Nevada, USA)


It was a long and difficult journey from “The Killing Fields” of Cambodia for refugee Kimbo Ung, who has now settled in Las Vegas and become a full-time poker player. Kimbo recently defeated World Series of Poker bracelet winners and a Hollywood actor in the Heartland Poker Tour at Red Rock Casino to win the $125,000 pot.

Antonio “The Magician” Esfandiari was there. Layne Flack was there. Lou Diamond Phillips and yours truly were there when 300 players from the Midwest invaded Las Vegas for the celebrity event. But the biggest star was a 42-year-old unknown who spent the past three years on the bubble.

Kimbo, the winner of $125,901, nearly busted out multiple times. He sat at the Final Table as the short stack, and at one point had 80,000 chips when his opponents had millions. But Kimbo is no stranger to starting over, having spent a lifetime overcoming horrifying and unbelievable odds as The Comeback Kid.

Kimbo relates his childhood to the Oscar-winning film The Killing Fields. He explained: “The movie didn’t even do justice to the horror we faced before we reached the United States as refugees.”

One of seven children, he learned English and graduated from high school on the East Coast. Without a college degree, Kimbo worked as a graphic designer in New York City. The daily grind of 14-hour days and traveling by train from Connecticut became too much, so he and his wife, Sokhim, moved to Texas to start over.

Kimbo and Sokhim, also from Cambodia, invested in the dream of owning their own business. Two years after opening a seafood restaurant, the couple realized the hard truths of the service industry and decided, having run out of money, to start over yet again. They packed their belongings in their truck and made the trek to Las Vegas.

During their drive three years ago, they had to stop to fill jugs of water for their overheating truck. Pulling up at Palace Station, the truck died for good. Kimbo and Sokhim started over a third time just as the economic recession began.

Unable to find a job, Kimbo made a living playing poker. “I never considered myself a pro, but I supported myself through poker,” he said. After 18 months of bad beats and missing the money, Kimbo gave up tournaments and played only two to five no-limit games.

On a day off from her job at a Strip casino, Sokhim and her husband were at the movies at Red Rock when she noticed a qualifier round of the Heartland Poker Tour about to start. She urged Kimbo to invest $250 of their last savings in the qualifier. Sokhim had no way of getting home 20 miles away while Kimbo played, and he didn’t want her hovering over the table. So she watched three more movies while he looked for the winning hands.

Kimbo played the qualifier and won his way into the sellout Main Event, returning to battle accomplished poker players such as Theo Tran, Mary Jo Belcore-Zogman and David Singer. Low on chips throughout, a turning point came when he beat Theo. “I reminded myself to never give up,” said Kimbo, who made it to the Final Table.

Heartland Poker Tour producers weren’t surprised when they learned of Kimbo’s honesty shortly after the set was dismantled and shipped back to the Midwest.

“Our players are good people,” HPT President Todd Anderson said. “If a stereotype exists of today’s poker players, Kimbo seems to fit it at first glance. With dark glasses and an Ed Hardy hoodie, he appears emotionless, focused, confident and aggressive.

“At one point he was dangerously low on chips and had to ask another player to make change. Kimbo was given too much and really needed the chips, but said he’d never feel good about stealing from an older man. So he returned the overpay chips, and his luck turned, and he went on to win.”

After the shock of his win started to wear off, Kimbo revealed that he doesn’t normally wear glasses or conceal his face when he plays.

“I didn’t want to embarrass myself by becoming the first player to cry at the Final Table,” he said, crying as he hugged his wife, becoming the first champion of the televised Heartland Poker Tour’s Season 6.

Wednesday, September 19, 2007

Bavet Casino stops forcing Cambodian employees to wear Vietnamese dresses

17 September 2007
By San Suwith
Radio Free Asia

Translated from Khmer by Heng Soy

A report from Bavet, Chantrea district, Svay Rieng province, along the border between Cambodia and Vietnam, indicated that the Star Vegas Casino Company agreed to let Cambodian women employees wear Cambodian clothes as usual again, after they were forced to wear the Vietnamese “ao dai” dresses. The women workers at the casino fiercely protested against this rule imposed by the casino owners who are Koreans, and whose managers are Vietnamese.

Numerous employees were elated that the casino relaxed this order which is not acceptable by the majority of Cambodian people. “I am happy again to return back to work this evening. They told me that they no longer force us to wear (the Vietnamese ao dai dress) again after RFA reported the information on the airwave. Therefore, I am very happy, and all our Cambodian sisters who do not want to wear (the Vietnamese dress) are also very happy.”

Monday, September 17, 2007

HRP to demonstrate if employees will wear VN dress

Monday, September 17, 2007
Everyday.com.kh
Translated from Khmer by Socheata

The HRP issued a statement on Sunday indicating that it will hold a protest demonstration if a Svay Rieng casino, located next to the Vietnamese border, forces its employees to wear Vietnamese dress. In its statement, the HRP said that the Las Vegas Sun Hotel and Casino, located in Bavet commune, Chantrea district, has abused the Cambodian custom, and the employees’ freedom by forcing them to wear Vietnamese dresses. Ly Korm, president of the HRP workers’ movement, told The Cambodia Daily that the HRP plans to hold a demonstration if this hotel issues an order for their employees to dress in this manner. However, an anonymous casino administrator told The Cambodia Daily that he did not order employees to wear Vietnamese dress. He said that, living in Cambodia, the Cambodian law is applicable. Chieng Am, the Svay Rieng provincial governor, said that he does not know about this case, he said that he will initiate an investigation into this case.

Sunday, September 16, 2007

Bavet casino is forcing (Cambodian) women employees to dress up in Vietnamese clothes

Saturday, September 15, 2007
By Seyha
Sralanh Khmer
newspaper

Translated from Khmer by Socheata

The economy in Cambodia has made significant progress, especially in the gambling casinos industry. Rich businessmen who came to invest in Cambodia, all received proper authorizations from the government. However, there are hundreds and thousands of small gambling parlors that the government considers as being illegal, and this week, Keat Chhon’s Ministry of Economy and Finance issued a ruling to conduct raids against these illegal gambling parlors. This is a good action taken by Keat Chhon.

Nevertheless, the big casinos are sprouting up like mushrooms at the beginning of the season, along all border entry gates between Cambodia and its neighbors, for example in Poipet, Banteay Meanchey, Pailin, O’Smach (in Oddar Meanchey province) next to Thailand; Bavet (in Svay Rieng province) and Chrey Thom (Kandal province) next to the Vietnamese border, all have brand new casinos to welcome all nationality guests, at all time of the day, as well as Cambodian guests.

Among the many casinos dotting these border gates, the majority of employees are Cambodian, and Cambodian government officials boasted that these casinos create jobs for several thousands of our Cambodian youth. But, in fact, these casinos are seriously destroying the honor and the Cambodian culture instead, because their employees are being looked down at, especially women employees who are forced to wear indecent clothes to show off their bodies in order to attract the (male) customers.

In addition to forcing them to wear indecent western-style clothes, a source from the Las Vegas Casino in Bavet which is owned by Koreans, indicated that the Korean owners are forcing women employees to wear Vietnamese dress (the “ao-dai”) to serve customers. Women who refuse to wear the Vietnamese dress are kicked out from their jobs. Because the majority of young Cambodian women in this region do not have work, they are forced to accept to wear Vietnamese dresses, with great reluctance, to serve the customers.

When asked why this casino forced Cambodian women to wear Vietnamese clothes, even though it is located well within Cambodian territory, the young women employees told Sralanh Khmer that it is mainly because the majority of the casino’s customers are Vietnamese who cross to border to come to gamble. Everyday, the casino counts a small number of customers who are Chinese, Korean, or Thai, but the majority of them are Vietnamese from Vietnam and from abroad.

However, at the Macao Casino and a number of other casinos in Bavet, there is no rule forcing Cambodian workers to dress up in Vietnamese dress like the rule imposed by the Las Vegas Casino at all, even though the owners of the Macao Casino are also Korean.

In another case, servers at the Faroma Club located near the Veal Vong commune, 7 Makara district, Phnom Penh city, have asked Cambodian leaders, in particular Kep Chuktema, the Phnom Penh governor, to help teach this club owner to allow his employees to wear decent clothes also.

Several of the Faroma Club servers complained to Sralanh Khmer yesterday that the owner of the Club should not order the servers to wear very short and revealing sexy dresses to attract customers.

These women servers said that they were forced to wear revealing dress that almost make their chest bare naked, and they were also forced to wear micro mini-skirts to attract customers. These women said that women working in casinos are being used for their beauty to attract customers.

Even though they put in very long hours in these casinos, their earning is still very little. These women workers said that even though their salary is very low, they only ask that the owners do not force them to wear indecent clothes. It is interesting to note that gambling clubs like the Ly Lay, Peace Hotel, Phnom Penh Casino, the owners do not force the servers to wear indecent clothes like the Faroma Club does. Therefore, the upper echelon, and Kep Chuktema, in particular, should look after the owner of the Faroma Club, so that its foreign owner and the casino’s customers would not look down on Cambodian women any more.