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A week after indicting former state Sen. Andy Sanborn on pandemic aid fraud charges, the Attorney General's Office announced Friday that it has brought identical charges against his casino.
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The NH Attorney General says Sanborn, a former state senator, misrepresented his casino’s finances in order to increase the amount of money he got from a Covid-relief fund.
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A lawyer for the state argued Thursday that the loss to charities if Concord Casino is not sold and reopened is too minimal to justify extending the casino’s deadline to sell.
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Concord casino owner Andy Sanborn now has until July 18 to sell his casino, but the deadline could be much longer.
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Andy Sanborn’s company, Win Win Win, is eligible for a historic horse racing license, which is an area of interest for national gaming companies.
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The Republican lawmaker, implicated in her husband's alleged pandemic relief loan fraud, has yet to attend public State House meetings.
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The Sanborns are under state and federal investigation for allegedly obtaining COVID relief money under false pretenses and enriching themselves with expensive race cars and rent payments to themselves.
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Andy Sanborn, a Republican from Bedford, did not attend the hearing he requested to appeal the NH Lottery Commission's August decision to permanently revoke his gaming operator's license.
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But the Lottery Commission’s underlying “grave” concerns about Sanborn’s suitability to keep his license remain the same.
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A hearing with the NH Lottery Commission on whether Andy Sanborn, a former state senator and the owner of the Concord Casino, should lose his charitable gaming license was postponed for the second time last week after his lawyer obtained a court order delaying the proceeding.