Abused Las Vegas Woman Heading to Prison After Six Children Also Were Abused

A Las Vegas woman, whose stepchildren were locked in a dog cage and suffered other forms of abuse, was sentenced Thursday to at least seven years in prison.

Amanda Stamper
Amanda Stamper in a mug shot, pictured above. She was sentenced in connection with child abuse. (Image: LVMPD)

Amanda Stamper, 33, could spend as much as 18 years behind bars, under the sentence handed down by Clark County District Court Judge Nadia Krall.

While in court, Stamper apologized for the abusive conditions suffered by each of the six stepchildren.

Defendant Was Scared

“I’m embarrassed to be here,” Stamper told the judge before sentencing. “I know I should have done something sooner.”

I do take full responsibility for it. I was not in the best situation either and I was scared.”

When Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department (LVMPD) officers arrived at their apartment last June after Stamper called 911, two of the six kids were in the locked cage. Four others were in the apartment. All were unattended.

They each suffered from various abuse which took place over the course of a year, prosecutors revealed.

None of the children were enrolled in school, even though they ranged in age from two to 11 years old.

In December, Stamper pleaded guilty to reduced charges of three counts of child abuse, neglect, or endangerment. She had been indicted on seven counts of child abuse and neglect.

Every single day the defendant failed to protect her six stepchildren,” Clark County Chief Deputy District Attorney Dena Rinetti revealed in court. “Her actions and her inactions will affect these children for the rest of their lives.”

Husband Faces 42 Charges

Stamper’s husband, Travis Doss, 32, a rapper known professionally as “Trap Montana,” allegedly abused the children.

One of the kids was forced by Doss to live in the dog cage for five days and apparently was given no food to eat, Rinetti said in court.

At another point, Doss sent Stamper a photo of a kid who appeared deceased after abusive conditions, Rinetti said. The youngster didn’t die.

At least some of the children were beaten to such an extent with a skillet, it had “dents in it from the children’s heads,” Stamper has claimed.

Doss has been indicted on 38 counts of child abuse, two counts of first-degree kidnapping, a count of sex trafficking, and a count of living off of the earnings of a prostitute.

Doss’s case is pending after he pled not guilty to the multiple charges. He’s scheduled to next appear in court on Thursday and remains in the Clark County Detention Center.

Stamper was the victim in the sex trafficking case, according to Las Vegas TV station KLAS.

Because of the abuse she suffered, Stamper should have been given probation rather than time in prison, her attorney, Caesar Almase, argued before the judge.

Very clearly she was not thinking rationally,” Almase said.

The couple were the birth parents of two other children. They were not abused, Stamper revealed.

Both Stamper and Doss have faced charges in other states, KLAS reported. The couple first met in Atlanta in 2017, according to the New York Post.

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Tilman Fertitta Bullish on DraftKings, Wynn Heading Into 2024

Tilman Fertitta controls the growing Golden Nugget casino empire, but he’s constructive on a pair of other gaming equities as 2024 looms.

Fertitta Commanders
Tilman Fertitta in a 2020 interview. He’s bullish on shares of DraftKings and Wynn Resorts. (Image: CNBC)

In an interview with CNBC’s Brian Sullivan, Fertitta waxed bullish on DraftKings(NASDAQ: DKNG) and Wynn Resorts (NASDAQ: WYNN) — two stocks in which he’s among the largest individual investors.

I think Wynn is still your premier gaming company in the United States,” said Fertitta in the interview. “If there’s business in Vegas, which there’s always been, Wynn is going to do the most business.”

On Oct. 31, 2022, it was revealed that the Golden Nugget boss and Houston Rockets owner took a 6.1% stake in Wynn, making him the second-largest individual shareholder in the stock behind only Elaine Wynn. That touched off speculation that Fertitta could eventually move to acquire Wynn outright. Such a transaction hasn’t materialized as of yet, but his desire to own a Las Vegas Strip casino resort is well-documented.

Wynn Could Be Winner for Fertitta

A 2022 Schedule 13G filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) indicates Fertitta Entertainment, Fertitta himself, and another entity purchased 6.91 million shares of Wynn in October 2022.

Depending on exactly when in October 2022 those purchases were made, Fertitta is likely sitting on a modest though unrealized profit in Wynn shares. The stock closed at $87.21 on Oct. 1, 2022 and at $90.42 today. While that suggests lethargic price action in the name over the past year-plus, Fertitta remains optimistic in his outlook on Wynn.

“I’m very bullish on Wynn,” added Fertitta. “It’s been lingering down there in the 80s for the past few months and I expect for it to make a huge move soon.”

According to SEC filing activity, Fertitta has not added to or reduced his Wynn stake.

Fertitta Constructive on DraftKings, Too

Fertitta told Sullivan he’s the largest individual shareholder of DraftKings equity, though that’s likely in reference to the common stock as co-founder and CEO Jason Robins holds more than 90% of another class of shares that possess super voting rights.

Fertitta’s status as major DraftKings investors came about through the online sportsbook operator acquiring his Golden Nugget Online Gaming (GNOG) — a $1.56 billion all-stock deal that closed in May 2022. That transaction paved the way for DraftKings to become one of the leaders by market share in domestic iGaming industry owing to GNOG’s established internet casino footprint in marquee markets such as New Jersey.

He remains bullish on DraftKings even as new competitors, such as ESPN Bet and Fanatics, enter the arena.

“It’s gonna really be four or five companies that are gonna own the sports betting industry,” Fertitta told Sullivan. “What you have to remember about that industry is it’s only in a few states. It’s not in California. It’s not in Texas. So many people are betting offshore now that when these big states get it, the amount of money that’s going to flow to the bottom line for these companies is extremely, extremely huge.”

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