The family to a man who was deadly killed inside a remotekasin, after inviting two women up to their room has been tuned by the property for negligence and illegal death.
Lawyers representing Bryan Angel Altamirano-Solano’s mother, Nelly Solano-Gazo, and his father, Victor Altamirano-Quijano, aroused a mood against Caesars Entertainment in Clark County District Wednesday.
A housekeeper found Altamirano-Solano dead with a gunshot wound on the chest in a hotel room on the fifth floor Caesars Palace on May 15, 2023, the authorities said. Surveillance films had caught two 20-year-old women, Erika Covington and Arionna Taylor, went into the room with him early in the morning and then drove from the room with a brown bag about half an hour later, showed an arrest report.
In the complaint, lawyers accused Bighorn Law, Joshua Berrett and David Finegold, Caesars Palace for being careless and not maintaining security and security measures that they said would have held Altamirano-Solano Safe.
“The defendant Caesars had policies and procedures for his security personnel to escort sex workers from their property,” the mood reads. “The respondent Caesars failed to report and register interactions with sex workers, as opposed to his own policy and procedures.”
Caesars Entertainment did not immediately respond to comments requests.
The suit also said that Caesars allowed Covington and Taylor, both minors, to remain in the premises while they were in possession of a firearm and failed to hire, train and monitor real estate employees properly, including security guards.
Covington and Taylor relied on murder at second degrees and robbery with a deadly weapon and earlier this year were ordered to serve between 10 and 25 years in prison.
Berrett and Finegold also claim in the trial that the Caesars Palace “Direkt and Proximt” caused Altamirano-Solano’s death, and as a result should pay for his funeral costs as well as damage to grief, loss of support and loss of companies, among other things.
Dailon’s behavior and Adilion.