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Aria Casino in Las Vegas Sees Maryland Attorney File Discrimination Lawsuit | Practice Source – Legal News and Views – Asia Pacific and Beyond


A Maryland attorney alleges in a federal lawsuit that she was racially discriminated against by security personnel at her host casino hotel.

Tamika Hawkins is a Black woman who claims in her lawsuit that she advises “some of the most recognizable global brands” as a lawyer. She lives in Bowie, Md., northeast of the nation’s capital and visited Las Vegas in April 2022 to celebrate a friend’s 50th birthday party.

Hawkins alleges that she and her then-fiancé checked into Aria Resort & Casino on the morning of April 22, 2022. Two days later, on April 24, Hawkins says she got an early start. But after entering the casino’s parking garage around 6:30 a.m. local time to retrieve her vehicle, she claims she was wrongly detained by unidentified Aria security guards.

The guards allegedly told her to come with them to the resort’s security office. Hawkins says she was forced to wait outside the office for more than 45 minutes “in view of numerous other guests as they passed by.”

Mistaken Identity

In her three-count litigation, Hawkins claims she faced unlawful discrimination and false imprisonment. Her suit additionally charges that Aria Resort & Casino Holdings, LLC, a subsidiary of MGM Resorts, which operates Aria on the Las Vegas Strip, was negligent in its training and supervision of security personnel.

Hawkins contends that she was never told she was free to leave and was under the impression that “force would be used against her” if she were to attempt to leave. She added that she was treated “differently from other guests and invitees in a place of public accommodation because of her race.”

Along with Aria, Hawkins’ lawsuit names three unknown security staffers, referred to in the litigation as Karina Doe, Sean Doe, and John Dow, as defendants.

Defendants denied plaintiff the use and enjoyment of the benefits, privileges, terms, and conditions of contracts that they extend to other similarly situated guests who are not African American, with conscious disregard of her state and federal rights,” the lawsuit read.

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