CASINOS HAVE good reason to fear Previn Mankodi.
The Louisiana man has a bachelor's from the University of Chicago, an MBA from Stanford and a master's in economics from Cambridge, and he uses that big brain to beat blackjack tables all over the country. The last thing any dealer wants to give him, right off the bat, is an ace.
But that's what happened, Mankodi's attorney said, when Mankodi placed a $3,700 bet at the former Trump Marina casino in Atlantic City on Aug. 3, 2009. Instead of playing out the hand with the ace, though, the floor manager told the dealer to reshuffle and not play out the hand, Mankodi claims. He could have expected a profit of about $1,865 on the hand, and now he's looking for much more in a lawsuit he filed recently in U.S. District Court in Camden, accusing the casino of false imprisonment.