Continental (1980–1999) Located on , It was owned by a group of individuals, including land owner Ira Levy of Los Angeles. In 1981, Levy and two Los Angeles partners, Albert Barouh and Louis Litwin, received approval to expand gaming at the Hotel Continental from 15 slot machines to more than 250. A minority owner was Anthony Robone, In 1987, the
Federal Bureau of Investigation found that skimming had occurred at the casino, without the knowledge of its owners. Michael DiBari, an assistant slot manager, had rigged the machines to pay out phony jackpots, which would be "won" by associate Alphonse Cuozzo and then sent to the
Gambino crime family in New York. DiBari and Couzzo were convicted, and DiBari was added to the state's
Black Book in 1998, becoming the 32nd person to join the list. In 1996, the Continental was sold to Crowne Ventures Inc. for $36 million. The company then transferred ownership to Crowne Gaming, which leased the land to Hotel Continental Inc., a management company for the property. Crowne planned to give the Continental a 1950s theme. This project included the opening of a new restaurant, Big Daddy's Diner, in 1997. Crowne Gaming went into bankruptcy at the end of the year, after American Realty Trust foreclosed on the company. American Realty and the Continental failed to reach an agreement on a new lease, and the property closed on March 31, 1999. The closure affected more than 300 workers, The Continental had only 500 slot machines. The Continental marked an opportunity for the family to open their first gaming property in Las Vegas, as it was too small for locals casino operators
Station Casinos and
Coast Casinos, but too big for other, smaller slot route operators to acquire. The cost of acquisition and renovation was $65 million. as Terrible's Hotel Casino. a bingo hall, a sportsbook, 370 rooms, and several restaurants, including a buffet. Terrible's hoped to attract locals, including workers on the nearby
Las Vegas Strip, with tourists expected to make up 20 percent of the property's clientele. Some hotel rooms were demolished to make way for a parking garage and a hotel tower, completed in 2007. and became Affinity Interactive 10 years later. An 18-month renovation was completed in January 2013, at a cost of $7 million. The project included work on the property's 327 rooms and the sportsbook, and nearly 1,000 new slot machines were added to the casino.
Silver Sevens (2013–present) Shortly after the renovation, Affinity Gaming chose to rename the property as Silver Sevens, a reference to Nevada's nickname as the Silver State, while seven is viewed as a lucky number in gambling. The name change became official on July 1, 2013. The former Terrible's cowboy sign was donated to the city's
Neon Museum. At the time of its rebranding, locals made up 70 percent of the property's clientele. In November 2023, plans were announced to renovate the hotel-casino and rebrand it once again as the Continental in 2025. Part of the plans would include a rooftop lounge and
Pink Taco restaurant to be built on the hotel's
porte-cochère. Affinity suspended the proposed name change a year after announcing it, in order to conduct further market research. ==References==