LAS VEGAS — The bankruptcy deal is done, Wayne Newton and his family are out, and the majority owner of Newton's former "Casa de Shenandoah" property said Friday he still wants to turn the southeast Las Vegas spread into a tourist attraction.
Whether the name of the crooner dubbed "Mr. Las Vegas" will be associated with the development remained a question mark.
Newton and his lawyers were absent when U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Bruce Markell signed off on a sealed agreement that leaves CSD LLC, headed by investors Lacy and Dorothy Harber, in charge of the 40-acre property several miles southeast of the Las Vegas Strip.
Newton, 71, his wife, Kathleen McCrone Newton, and their family and menagerie of exotic animals moved this month to a downsized nearby property with several homes on about 20 acres.
The Newtons were in Louisiana on Friday, according to a family member, where Newton was due to perform at the Cypress Bayou Casino on Clarenton. They didn't immediately respond to messages.
Their lawyer, J. Stephen Peek, cited the confidentiality of the negotiated settlement and declined to comment.
Outside the courtroom, Lacy Harber and Grant Lyon, the restructuring agent in the estate bankruptcy, offered sometimes cryptic comments to reporters' questions about the deal. They said they were constrained by the confidentiality agreement.
The two men wouldn't say whether the Newton family was forced to move from the home Newton bought in 1968 and spent years filling with art, animals, artifacts and mementoes.