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Sands denies Beijing gave help on Macau casino license application

Firm controlled by billionaire Sheldon Adelson rebuts claims leadership smoothed licence deal

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A lawyer for Las Vegas Sands Corporation said the Chinese government had no part in the awarding of gaming licences in Macau for the casino operator controlled by billionaire Sheldon Adelson more than 10 years ago.

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The attorney, Richard Sauber, told a Las Vegas jury on Friday that it was "inconceivable" that Chinese leaders violated the Basic Law - which guarantees Macau autonomy in its internal affairs - and "reached down" to make sure Las Vegas Sands got a gaming licence.

Sauber made his closing arguments in the trial of a suit in which Richard Suen, a Hong Kong businessman, has sought US$328 million in damages over claims that the company did not honour a promise to pay him for his help with licensing.

Suen claims that meetings he arranged for Adelson with Chinese officials in 2001 were instrumental in Las Vegas Sands' selection by Macau in 2002 as one of the companies that could operate casinos in the former Portuguese colony.

"I'm not sure what Mr Suen's claim is," Sauber told the jury at the end of the five-week trial in Nevada state court.

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"I'm not sure how this meeting did what he signed up to do, deliver a licence."

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