Solved Murders - True Crime Stories - Bally’s Casino Scandal Cover-Up Alleged After Body Left in Bathroom for Three Days #33
Episode Date: August 13, 2025#horrorstories #reddithorrorstories #ScaryStories #creepypasta #horrortales #truecrime #casinoscandal #coverup #mysterydeath #unsolvedcase This narrative uncovers the eerie aftermath of a mysterious... death inside a famous casino. When a body is found abandoned in the restroom for three days, suspicions arise about the casino’s efforts to hide the truth. The story explores themes of corruption, negligence, and the haunting cost of silence. #horrorstories #reddithorrorstories #scarystories #horrorstory #creepypasta #horrortales #truecrime #casinoscandal #mystery #coverup #unsolvedmystery #darksecrets #corruption #crimeinvestigation #scandal #ghoststories #hauntedplaces #urbanlegend #deathmystery #thriller
Transcript
Discussion (0)
It's not every day that you hear something as wild as this coming out of a place that's supposed to be all about fun, lights, and good times.
But here we are, talking about something straight out of a bad movie, except this actually happened.
Bally's Twin River Casino in Rhode Island, a place known for slot machines, late-night gambling, and overpriced drinks,
now has its name tied to one of the most disturbing stories you could imagine.
And no, we're not talking about someone losing their mortgage on blackjack.
We're talking about a dead body in the bathroom.
Left there for three whole days.
Yeah, you read that right.
A few years back, an elderly patron came into the casino, probably just looking to kill a few hours and maybe win a few bucks.
Instead, they died in one of the casino's bathrooms.
And nobody noticed.
For three entire days, this poor soul was in that stall, and somehow, not a single person
thought to check. Let that sink in. How does a person just vanish in a place packed with cameras,
security, cleaning crews, and staff constantly on the move? But wait, it gets even worse. When the
body was finally found, and at this point, we can only imagine the state it was in, the casino
apparently didn't exactly leap into action to own up to their massive failure. Nope. Instead,
Instead, they allegedly did something so jaw-droppingly wrong it almost sounds made up,
they told the paramedics to perform CPR on a clearly deceased individual.
Not because there was any chance of saving them, but because they wanted to make it look
like the person had just died. Let that roll around in your mind for a second.
CPR on a body that had been dead for days. Also the casino could spin a story that didn't
make them look like a pack of heartless, negligent fools. The idea of the idea of
apparently, was to create the illusion that the death had only just happened, as if that would
somehow make it better. Like it'd be easier to explain away someone dying five minutes ago
versus someone being dead for 72 hours in a public restroom. It doesn't take a law degree to know
that this kind of thing crosses a whole bunch of ethical lines, and probably legal ones too.
Falsifying the timing and circumstances of someone's death. That's not just shady. That's straight-up
obstruction of justice. Think about it, the family of that person has every right to know exactly
what happened and when. They deserve the truth, not some cooked-up fairy tale designed to protect
the casino's brand. And what about the people working at that casino? Did any of them feel that
little twinge of guilt in their gut? Did anyone speak up and say, hey, maybe faking CPR on a
decomposing body isn't the move here? Or was everyone too scared to rock the boat, too in
invested in keeping the machine humming and the money rolling in. Because if even one person
tried to stop it and was silenced, that opens up a whole other can of worms. This story,
as twisted and surreal as it is, shines a massive spotlight on how broken some of these systems
are. It asks some uncomfortable questions, how can someone be dead in a casino for three days
without being found? Are the cleaning crews not checking the stalls? Are security cameras not monitored?
Or did someone actually see something and choose to ignore it?
Let's be real, casinos are built to watch everything.
Every movement on the floor is tracked.
Cameras cover every angle.
There are eyes in the sky watching for card counters, pickpockets, and anyone who might try to pull a fast one.
And yet somehow, this body was invisible to them?
That brings us to the bigger picture here.
This whole thing isn't just about one person or one casino.
It exposes a mindset that's deeply ingrained in too many corporate environments, protect the brand at all costs.
Even if it means covering up something horrifying.
Even if it means disrespecting a dead human being.
Even if it means deceiving the public.
There's something truly disgusting about trying to hide behind PR tactics when someone dies on your property.
Imagine being the family member who gets a call saying your loved one died at the casino,
but you don't find out that they were left there for days.
You don't get to know that the place you maybe thought was safe
didn't even notice their disappearance.
Instead, you get handed a cleaned up version of the truth,
one carefully polished to avoid lawsuits or bad press.
And sure, maybe Bally's thought that by fudging the details
they could avoid a media frenzy or a PR nightmare.
But look at how that turned out.
The truth always finds a way to claw its way out.
and when it does, it usually makes everything a thousand times worse.
If they had come clean from the start, maybe people would be angry.
But they might have also had a shred of respect for the honesty.
Now, it's just a whole mountain of mistrust.
What should have happened is simple.
They should have found the body, called it in, and owned the mistake.
Launched a full internal review.
Put the focus on figuring out how this went unnoticed.
and why. Apologized, genuinely, to the family and made real, meaningful changes to their
protocols. But instead, they allegedly tried to rewrite reality with a charade of fake chest
compressions and a, whoops, just happened, narrative. This incident should be a wake-up call
to every casino and business out there. Surveillance systems aren't just for catching cheaters.
Staff protocols aren't just for show. Human lives are not disposable.
If someone can die in your building and go unnoticed for days, your system has failed on every level imaginable.
And if you think the problem ends when the news cycle moves on, think again.
Word travels fast, especially in the age of social media.
People remember this stuff.
They remember where it happened, how it happened, and most importantly, how the business responded.
And let's be real, right now, Bally's Twin River Casino isn't exactly
looking like the model of compassion and integrity.
Here's the part that really gets under the skin,
there probably won't be any official investigation.
No big courtroom drama.
No executives in handcuffs.
Because in the world we live in,
unless someone catches the cover up on tape or leaks a memo,
it's all too easy for this stuff to get swept under the rug.
That's why it matters that we talk about it.
That we remember it.
That we demand better.
casinos make a fortune off their guests.
The least they can do is treat them like people, not liabilities.
Bally's owes more than just a half-baked explanation.
They owe a complete overhaul of their safety and accountability systems.
And they owe the public some honest answers.
Moving forward, this should be the catalyst for change, not just at Bally's but across the whole industry.
Start with the basics, do regular checks of all facilities.
especially bathrooms.
Install alerts for stalls that remain locked for too long.
Train employees to take potential emergencies seriously,
even if it feels awkward to knock on a door.
And most importantly, foster a culture where the truth isn't feared, but embraced.
Because when your default reaction to tragedy is to lie, you've already lost.
Look, no one expects perfection.
Mistakes happen.
Accidents occur.
But how a business reacts when things go wrong.
That's what defines them.
That's what people remember.
And right now, Bally's has a lot of work to do if they ever want to regain public trust.
Let this be the line in the sand.
The moment we stop accepting, we didn't know, as an excuse from places that are built to know everything.
The moment we stop letting PR cover-ups slide without consequences.
The moment we start expecting actual human decency from the
businesses we support. So yeah, Bally's Twin River Casino messed up. Big time. And no amount of
staged CPR or spin doctors can erase that. What they do next will show us whether they're just
another corporate machine, or a place willing to face the music and change for the better.
Time will tell. But for the sake of every guest who walks through those doors, let's hope it
doesn't take another tragedy to get there. The end.
