Gerald Winchester, left, chats with Marie Marine, right, as they wait to enter the former Trump Taj Mahal casino in Atlantic City N.J. on Thursday July 6, 2017 for a sale of the casino hotel’s contents. Included in the items for sale were crystal chandeliers from Austria that now-President Donald Trump bought for the casino when he opened it in 1990. The casino shut down last year under different ownership. (AP Photo/Wayne Parry)

Gerald Winchester, left, chats with Marie Marine, right, as they wait to enter the former Trump Taj Mahal casino in Atlantic City N.J. on Thursday July 6, 2017 for a sale of the casino hotel’s contents. Included in the items for sale were crystal chandeliers from Austria that now-President Donald Trump bought for the casino when he opened it in 1990. The casino shut down last year under different ownership. (AP Photo/Wayne Parry)

Art of the steal: Liquidation sale at Trump’s former casino

Associated Press

ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. — For some, it was The Art of the Steal.

Hundreds of people swarmed the lobby of Atlantic City’s Trump Taj Mahal casino Thursday, hoping to score big.

But they weren’t gamblers. They were bargain hunters searching for rock-bottom deals at a liquidation sale of the contents of the ostentatious casino that Donald Trump built in 1990 as a monument to excess and glitz.

And while ornate crystal chandeliers from Austria that the future president and his first wife, Ivana, picked out for the casino were up for sale, more popular items included TVs, chairs and room furnishings.

“I have no use for chandeliers, but I can use a nice TV for my bedroom,” said Gerald Winchester, of Atlantic City. He stayed so frequently at the Taj Mahal, at times playing six days a week, that the hotel furnishings looked familiar to him.

“I’ve been in so many rooms at this place that I probably already watched this TV,” he said, wheeling away a flat-screen TV for $50.

Political junkies were likely to be disappointed: All items with the Trump name on them were removed from the casino before the sale began. (Sad!)

“I would have liked to get a roulette table or a blackjack table with the name ‘Trump’ on it,” said Dr. Jason Bourne, who was on his way to Atlantic City from Bethesda, Maryland, when he learned of the sale.

The three largest chandeliers above the main escalators cost $250,000 apiece when new; they were selling for $35,000 Thursday. And the seven smaller chandeliers in the lobby were already drawing interest at $7,500 apiece, marked down from $40,000.

“We actually have somebody from Texas that’s flying in here to take a look at them,” said Don Hayes of National Content Liquidators, which was conducting the sale. “He’s gonna put ‘em all in his house!”

The company purchased the unwanted contents of the casino and hotel from Hard Rock International, which bought the shuttered property in March for $50 million, or about 4 cents on the dollar from the $1.2 billion Trump spent to open it.

It is then up to the liquidators to get whatever they can for the individual items. Hayes would not say how much the company hoped to make from the sale.

Trump cut most ties with Atlantic City in 2009, having lost control of the casino company in a bankruptcy. His friend and fellow billionaire Carl Icahn shut the Taj Mahal down last October amid a bitter strike with Atlantic City’s main labor union.

Hard Rock plans a May 2018 opening under its own music-related theme, hence the need to get rid of all things Taj Mahal.

Maria Marine, of Egg Harbor City, New Jersey, an Atlantic City suburb, was on the prowl for pool and patio furniture. While waiting for the doors to open, she recalled the casino’s heyday.

“When this first opened, I couldn’t wait to see it,” she said. “The celebrity, the grandeur. Back in the ’90s, this was it. The gold standard.”

But by Thursday’s sale, some of the stock looked every bit like it had been on the job since 1990, including patio tables of varying sturdiness, bar chairs with the odd scratch or chip, and stainless steel circular tables with more than a dent or two.

One buyer snapped up the entire inventory of 30,000 bedsheets before the sale began. The only other things left in the room where they had been stored were two huge racks of hundreds of irons, each selling for $8.

“That’s an awesome price,” said Vinny Miguel, of Philadelphia, who picked up five of them. “I got a lot of family, and a lot of laundry.”

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