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James Packer's Crown Resorts Employees In China Charged With Promoting Gambling

Fourteen staff, including three Australians, have been in custody since October last year.

Crown Resorts employees arrested in China last year, including three Australians, have now been charged with gambling offences, the James Packer-owned company has confirmed.

Australians Jason O'Connor, Jerry Xuan and Pan Dan are among fourteen Crown employees have been held in Shangai since their arrest last October.

A further four employees who had been released on bail have also been charged on offences relating to the promotion of gambling.

"Their cases have been referred to the Baoshan District Court," Crown confirmed in a statement.

"As the matter is now before the court, no further comments will be made."

The three Australians, Malaysian Alfread Gomez and fourteen Chinese nations were arrested on October 13 and 14 last year in coordinated police raids across several Chinese cities, amid a widespread government anti-corruption drive.

The most senior of those arrested, Australian father-of-two Jason O'Connor, is the company's executive general manager in charge of international VIP relations.

O'Connor was respon­sible for luring high-rolling casino players to Crown Casino in Melbourne. He had been heading the marketing team alongside Shanghai-based employee Jiang Ling on the Chinese mainland for 12 months prior to their arrests, according to The Australian.

James Packer's Crown Resorts is also facing a class action by shareholders after the company's shares plummeted when news of the arrests broke.
Fairfax Media
James Packer's Crown Resorts is also facing a class action by shareholders after the company's shares plummeted when news of the arrests broke.

Gambling is illegal in China (government-run lotteries excluded) except in the special administrative districts of Hong Kong and Macau. Most foreign operators side-step the ban by advertising the resorts and locations where the casinos operate.

If found guilty of promoting gambling on the Chinese mainland, the Crown employees could face up to ten years in a Chinese jail, prominent Shanghai defence lawyer Chen Youxi told the Financial Review.

James Packer's gaming empire is also facing a potential class action over the arrests by shareholders, many of whom exited their stock in the wake of the scandal.

Crown Resorts shared slumped 14 percent in a single day when news of the arrests broke.

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