Star Entertainment chair David Foster to follow CEO Robbie Cooke out the door

Daniel Newell
The Nightly
It is the second inquiry led by Adam Bell SC into the casino’s suitability to hold the licence.
It is the second inquiry led by Adam Bell SC into the casino’s suitability to hold the licence. Credit: AAP

The chair of Star Entertainment Group has quit the top job as the under-fire casino operator battles to convince a NSW inquiry that it should keep its lucrative Sydney gambling licence.

David Foster said on Monday he had given up the role effective immediately but would remain on the board “for an interim period” and continue his executive responsibilities.

He will be succeeded by Anne Ward.

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Mr Foster’s sudden departure comes as the board also races to find a new chief executive, following the bombshell exit of Robbie Cooke late last month.

Mr Cooke, who was accused of fostering exclusion and secrecy at the company, is due to front the inquiry this week.

It is the second inquiry led by Adam Bell SC into the casino’s suitability to hold the licence.

The initial investigation, also led by Mr Bell, found Star unfit to hold a casino licence following revelations of a notorious gang-linked junket operator running an illicit cage within a premium gaming room and Chinese debit-card transactions being disguised as hotel expenses.

The latest inquiry has been told former executives of the casino resigned over disillusionment with the leadership of the business, accusing Mr Cooke of fostering exclusion and secrecy.

Star’s former chief financial officer Christina Katsibouba, who left her position the same day as Mr Cooke, told the inquiry she had felt isolated and was asked to keep company finances from the board.

She told the inquiry Mr Cooke had told her to keep a dire financial situation from the board so as not to “scare” or “impact morale”.

“My view was that we should be fully transparent with them so we could ensure everybody was going in the right direction and the minds in the team could focus on developing a business plan just to address earnings, but we didn’t quite agree on that,” Ms Katsibouba said.

Star’s former chief legal officer Betty Ivanoff said she began considering her resignation just two weeks after she started at the casino.

She told the inquiry she felt “undermined and excluded” by Mr Cooke, who she said would negotiate legal agreements with external law firms before bringing her in part-way through and then leaving her out of the loop.

“I did feel that I would be brought in and out of topics at whim by the CEO, which I found quite awkward,” Ms Ivanoff said.

Messages between Mr Cooke and Mr Foster discussing “war” with the regulator were also aired at an earlier hearing of the latest inquiry.

The two leaders had also discussed getting rid of the casino’s appointed manager Nicholas Weeks and queried grounds for a shareholder class action against him and the regulator.

with AAP

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