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Caesars backs independent bankruptcy examiner

Caesars Entertainment Corp. supports demands by creditors for an independent examiner to review recent deals by the casino company’s bankrupt operating unit, it said in court documents.

A Monday hearing was postponed because of snow in Chicago, where the Chapter 11 bankruptcy was filed last month.

Caesars’ operating unit plans to cut its debt to $8.6 billion from $18.4 billion. The operator of 38 casinos has blamed a saturated U.S. gambling market and sluggish economic recovery for its financial problems.

Creditors led by the Appaloosa Management hedge fund have said Caesars “plundered” billions of dollars in choice assets from the operating unit, including Planet Hollywood and The Linq in Las Vegas.

The creditors asked for the appointment of an examiner to investigate the operating company’s deals dating to 2010.

The parent company said in a filing with Chicago’s U.S. Bankruptcy Court on Sunday that an examiner would confirm the property transfers were fair and provided billions of dollars in cash to the operating unit.

Although the parent supported an examiner, it also asked the court to give the operating unit and creditors a chance to work out the scope of any investigation.

Bankruptcy examiners can have a dramatic effect on Chapter 11 cases. For example, after power company Dynegy Holdings filed Chapter 11 in 2011 amid allegations of improper asset transfers, a critical examiner’s report helped bring those assets into the bankruptcy estate for the creditors’ benefit.

Caesars was created from the $30 billion leveraged buyout of Harrah’s Entertainment in 2008 that was led by the Apollo Global Management and TPG Capital private equity firms.

The private equity backers continue to control the parent company.

Shares of Caesars fell 4 cents, or 0.37 percent, to close on Monday at $10.85.

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