Winners Beware: ‘Trick-Roll’ Suspect Is Caught
If you win a big jackpot at a Las Vegas casino, beware of the “trick roll.” Police say this is a common practice among sex workers who get the “trick” heavily intoxicated in order to be invited up to the hotel room. Once in the room, the sex worker will devise a way to steal the “trick’s” winnings.
According to an article written by Caroline Bleakley on 8NewsNow.com, a Las Vegas prostitute named Savannah Cisneros was arrested on Wednesday, April 26th for stealing a duffle bag filled with approximately $103,000 dollars in cash that the “trick” won gambling on sports. She will be “facing a felony charge of grand larceny valued at more than $100K,” per Bleakley’s report.
Cisneros was introduced to the victim back on Saturday, April 8th. It does not seem like the perpetrator or the victim were thinking clearly. This guy was carrying around all that cash in a black duffle bag. He and Cisneros agreed to get a room at the Tropicana Hotel, and this guy tried to hide his big bag of money in the room. Then he attempted to convince her that he needed to retrieve something from his vehicle in the parking lot, to which she complained that he apparently didn’t trust her around his money.
The 8NewsNow.com article continues to tell the story that the victim relented, and left the duffle bag full of his winnings with his new “friend” while he retreated to the bathroom to take a shower. That’s when Cisneros dodged out of the hotel room with the duffle bag. Hotel security camera video shows Cisneros running out of the hotel holding the black duffle bag, dressed only in her underwear. Video surveillance also shows the guy running out of his hotel room to chase her, wearing no clothing!
You may think Savannah Cisneros pulled off a great heist, but police were able to track her down because she gave the “trick” her phone number earlier that evening. You just can’t make this stuff up.
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Larry Martino is the long-time Afternoon Drive personality on 96.3 KKLZ. The views and opinions expressed in this blog are those of Larry Martino and not necessarily those of Beasley Media Group, LLC.
10 Of The Biggest Real-Life Casino Heists Of All Time
From the moment you enter a casino, a thousand strategic choices—from the sounds of slot machines designed to disguise losses as wins to the perfumed air, which, for one Vegas casino, increased slot machine revenue by 45%—have been made to keep you playing, and to keep you just hopeful enough to keep paying. It would be bad business for casinos to bankrupt players on a single hand or pull of a lever, intentionally. And for every dangled carrot that a player eventually grasps, the house has already ensured they’ve earned it back somewhere else.
So how do you ever truly get the upper hand against a system that is mathematically designed—what is known as the house edge—to prevent you from doing so? Well, some people have tried cheating. There’s card counting (which is technically not illegal, according to federal, state, and local laws), card switching, card marking, dice sliding, dealer bribing, and good old-fashioned peeking (or hole carding). But to even have an advantage by cheating, you must play every hand perfectly, like the infamous MIT blackjack team. Determined to beat the house with even more complex math—if just theoretically, for now—researchers at MIT are studying whether quantum entanglement can give players an advantage at the blackjack table.
For the average person without a quantum computer or the skills to count cards flawlessly, any attempt at cheating is almost always noticed, monitored, and in some scenarios, permitted, says data scientist Jeff Jonas. And he should know—he developed the programs casinos use to detect even the subtlest hints of fraud. NORA, or Non-Obvious Relationship Awareness, is a software program of Jonas’ creation, which uses available data to sleuth out connections like whether a dealer and a player are related, live in proximity to one another, or if a casino employee has any connections to known criminals. Any edge that the house hasn’t already secured through tamperproof mathematics, they’ve accounted for through surveillance.
So, if you can’t gain an advantage by playing by the rules or even by breaking the rules, what’s left to do? Any level-headed person would tell you to reset your expectations or avoid the casinos completely. Some people throughout history have decided they simply weren’t going to play the game at all. Instead, they chose to rob them blind.
Casino heists are the ultimate underdog stories, and as such, it is a favorite subgenre in film. While Hollywood has given us its own edge-of-your-seat, romanticized take on the topic, the reality is arguably more dramatic and more impressive when one considers how unlikely success is. OLBG compiled a list of the 10 biggest casino heists ranging from “Ocean’s 11”-style complexity to stunning simplicity.
Larry Martino has been the afternoon drive personality on 96.3 KKLZ since 2007. He is also Music Director and Assistant Program Director. He’s been a professional radio broadcaster since 1980, serving as on-air talent, Program Director, and Music Director during his career. As a content creator for 96.3 KKLZ, Larry specializes in writing articles about music, recording artists, movies, food/restaurants, and hockey.