Wynn Resorts Ltd. will keep its Massachusetts gaming license but pay a $35 million fine to the state, the Massachusetts Gaming Commission ruled Tuesday.

Outdoor terraces, which are part of the Grand Ballroom and meeting/event space, overlooking the Encore Harborwalk at Encore Boston Harbor in Everett, Mass. Friday, Aug. 24, 2018. The resort, scheduled to open June 2019, will have 671 rooms including 104 suites. K.M. Cannon Las Vegas Review-Journal @KMCannonPhoto

Las Vegas-based Wynn Resorts Ltd. plans to open the $2.6 billion Encore Boston Harbor in June in Everett, Massachusetts. (Massachusetts Gaming Commission)

In this April 27, 2018 file photo, Wynn Resort CEO Matthew Maddox speaks to members of the media after a hearing in Boston. (AP Photo/Philip Marcelo, File)

In this Jan. 2, 2019, file photo, construction continues on the Encore Boston Harbor luxury resort and casino in Everett, Mass. (AP Photo/Steven Senne, File)

In this March 15, 2016 file photo casino mogul Steve Wynn appears during a news conference in Medford, Mass. (AP Photo/Charles Krupa, File)

Encore Boston Harbor in Everett, Mass. under construction Friday, Aug. 24, 2018. The resort, scheduled to open June 2019, will have 671 rooms including 104 suites. K.M. Cannon Las Vegas Review-Journal @KMCannonPhoto

Wynn Resorts Ltd. will keep its Massachusetts gaming license but pay a $35 million fine to the state, the Massachusetts Gaming Commission ruled Tuesday.

The company’s suitability was in question after an investigation determined that former Wynn Chairman and CEO Steve Wynn and other executives failed to disclose a $7.5 million settlement payment in 2005 to a woman who said he forced her to have sex with him. Steve Wynn has denied harassing anyone.

The stakes were high for the company because it is planning to open its $2.6 billion resort, Encore Boston Harbor, in June and already has begun hiring employees and taking reservations.

The company issued a brief statement after the decision was announced saying, “We are in the process of reviewing that decision and considering the full range of our next steps.”

Punitive measures

In addition to the fine against the company — $15 million more than a fine assessed against Wynn Resorts by the Nevada Gaming Commission in February — Wynn CEO Matt Maddox was individually assessed a $500,000 fine, commissioners decided.

The company’s board of directors also was directed to hire an executive coach and any additional necessary resources to provide coaching and training to Maddox in four areas: leadership development; internal and company-wide communication; enhanced sensitivity to and awareness of human resource issues arising in workplace environments; and team building and meaningful collaboration.

The sensitivity training relates to diversity issues — including disability, implicit bias, hostile work environments, inherent coercion, sexual harassment and assault, human trafficking, and domestic violence.

The Massachusetts order also could affect the Wynn boardroom in the future. The commission ordered that the company “maintain the separation of chair and CEO for at least the term of the license (15 years).”

Other requirements in the order:

-At Wynn’s expense, the commission will select an independent monitor to conduct a full review and evaluation of all policies and organizational changes adopted by the company as part of the adjudicatory record.

-The board of directors shall provide the commission timely reports of all directors’ attendance records of both board and assigned committee meetings.

-The Massachusetts subsidiary will be required to train all new employees on preventing harassment and discrimination within three months of opening.

-Any civil or criminal complaints or other actions filed in any court or administrative tribunal against a qualifier shall be reported to the commission immediately upon notice of the action.

The commission didn’t order a suggestion offered by the company last month — that Steve Wynn be banned from entering any Wynn Resorts property worldwide.

Commissioners also affirmed that board member Pat Mulroy and top shareholder Elaine Wynn as well as Maddox are suitable for a gaming license and that several new board members, including Chairman Phil Satre, interviewed in April’s hearings in Boston, also are suitable.

The company has been scrutinized for more than a year since media reports surfaced about accusations of sexual harassment involving Steve Wynn.

“Our licensees will be held to the highest standards of compliance, including an obligation to maintain their integrity,” Massachusetts Gaming Commission Chair Cathy Judd-Stein said in a statement announcing the board’s decision. “The law of Massachusetts affords the commission significant breadth in our decision making. With that comes an equally significant duty of fairness. We are confident that we have struck the correct balance and met our legal and ethical burdens.”

Expectations

Analysts had speculated that the company was destined for a big fine after the Nevada Gaming Commission assessed a record $20 million fine over similar allegations in February. Some did not expect that Wynn would retain the license it received in Massachusetts in 2014 or that Maddox would be found suitable for licensure following his testimony April 2-4.

“We expected it to be more,” said John DeCree, a gaming industry analyst with Las Vegas-based Union Gaming. “I think we thought it could’ve been a little more to show how strict and deep the investigation was.”

DeCree said the individual fine assessed on Maddox was a first.

“I can’t think of a scenario where I’ve seen that before,” he said. “He was certainly under a lot of scrutiny under the hearing, so that doesn’t surprise us.”

Overall, DeCree viewed the decision as a positive for the company, which can now focus on ramping up for the scheduled June 23 opening.

“It’s a significant investment and a significant opportunity in Boston,” he said. “In terms of the company, that’s going to be a top priority.”

In a report to investors, DeCree said he expects the company would “quickly shift all of its efforts to getting the new property open on time by the end of June.

Business attorney Aviva Gordon of Gordon Law Las Vegas said because Wynn Resorts is new to Massachusetts, the commission might have been trying to send a message to the company.

“The Massachusetts Gaming Commission went harder because they had the ability, without the history behind them, to send a stronger message,” she said. “You’re coming into our state, we’re going to charge you more harshly.”

Dennis Gutwald, a partner in the Las Vegas office of the McDonald Carano law firm, said the fine against the company was “probably at the lower end of” what he expected.

“The Massachusetts Gaming Commission wanted to show how much stricter they were than Nevada. It was just a matter of how much they would do so,” he said. “I think $35 million is in the ballpark of what was expected. It shouldn’t hurt Wynn too badly.”

The Massachusetts fine of $35 million represents about 4.3 percent of the company’s 2018 net income. The total $55 million in fines assessed by Nevada and Massachusetts represents about 6.7 percent of annual net income.

Wynn Resorts shares closed down $4.32, or 2.9 percent, on the Nasdaq exchange Tuesday on average volume. After hours, the stock rebounded by $3.35, 2.3 percent, to end at $147.80 — about halfway between the high and low points of the stock in the past year.

Contact Richard N. Velotta at rvelotta@reviewjournal.com or 702-477-3893. Review Journal reporter Bailey Schulz contributed to this report. Follow @RickVelotta and @bailey_schulz on Twitter.