'Hush Money' to John Ensign's Mistress Could Jeopardize Father's Gambling License

bonnie-goldstein

Bonnie Goldstein

Woman Up Editor
Posted:
08/7/09
Thanks to Las Vegas investigator Sally Denton for this guest post:

John Ensign's admission of marital infidelity at a Las Vegas press conference in June has not only left the senator's political future in doubt, it could jeopardize his casino-owner father's gambling aspirations in Kansas.



Kansas Lottery officials and state legislators are probing whether payments totaling $96,000 from Mike and Sharon Ensign, the senator's parents, to their son's mistress, Cindy Hampton, and her family are in violation of federal campaign laws.

When the
Nevada junior senator confessed to his parents in April 2008 that he was having an affair with Cindy Hampton -- the wife of his best friend and top aide -- the loving parents paid the Hamptons what was widely seen in Las Vegas as "hush money." John Ensign's Texas attorney claimed the money was a gift "consistent with a pattern of generosity by the Ensign family."

Mike Ensign is a billionaire and former CEO of Mandalay Resort Group. The senior Ensigns paid their son's girlfriend and her family in bundles of $12,000 -- the maximum allowable per individual in order to avoid a gift tax.

"Right now, we're aware there's an investigation going," Kansas Lottery Commissioner Ed Van Petten told the Wichita Eagle on Aug. 2. "If it is found that there was wrongdoing, that would have an effect on things," he said, referring to Ensign Sr.'s proposal for the $225 million Prairie Sky casino 10 miles south of
Wichita. If warranted, Van Petten said, the Kansas Racing and Gaming Commission would conduct a background investigation of Mike Ensign to determine if there were any breaches of ethics or morality, if not legality. But two days later Van Petten backpedaled, reporting that there were no allegations of wrongdoing on the part of Mike Ensign, and that state officials would forward his proposal to a review board this month.

While it's unclear how
Kansas authorities might proceed in this matter, Nevada gaming authorities remain conspicuously silent about one of that state's leading gambling figures.