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The Dealer’s Criminal Wage: The Price of the Seat and the Golden Cage

I wrote this book because my voice is not for sale. While this story is currently available for 99 cents on Amazon (the lowest possible sale price), I am releasing the full text here, for free, as a gift to every worker currently trapped in a cycle of corporate gaslighting and institutional neglect.

For years, Texas Card House has operated behind a veil of legal technicalities and ‘safe harbor’ provisions. They have used the DARVO tactic—Deny, Attack, and Reverse Victim and Offender—to silence anyone who dared to oppose the culture of predation. This book is the counter-measure. It is a forensic map of the ‘Misfit Island’ that management turned into a ‘Golden Cage’.

I have rejected their NDAs and their ‘settlements’ because the sunlight of the truth is worth more than their silence. To the dealers, waitresses, and floors still suffering: this is your story, too. Use it as a template. Use it as a shield. The cave only works if we stay in the dark. Welcome to the sun.

The Dealer’s Criminal Wage:

The Price of the Seat

And

The Golden Cage

A Novel by 

Thomas Anderson

Collaborating with 

Reed M. VanderweepPrologué: The Golden Cage

The depths of the pandemic found me buried alive in Wyoming. My town of 1,200 people was looking more and more like a tomb each day. The highways were solid white, snowed in underneath twenty-foot drifts. The single grocery store, the only pillar of civilization, had a handwritten sign in the window that read: “You will not be allowed inside the store with a mask,” followed by haphazard quotes from the Constitution and the Bible. This wasn’t isolation; it was a bizarre, anti-reality.

I was looking for a way out. I watched the traffic cameras and the snowplows at work, pushing my flight back day after day for almost two weeks, waiting for the interstate to clear.

But the internet didn’t just show me the road; it showed me the destination: the Texas Card House Livestream. The waters were chummed.

The True Star and The Foundational Fraud

A player I knew only as “Bildo” was the singular, unbelievable star. For a solid month, he was hemorrhaging money on the stream, losing spectacular sums of money, very quickly, to people who were terrible at poker. They had no discipline, none of them had ever cracked a poker book, and they were dumping vast sums into a game I knew I could conquer. It was the most effective advertisement ever conceived.

The stream’s popularity was also fueled by its commentator, who was almost as exciting as Bildo, a central part of the game’s appeal. He flipped the script on the game’s electrified silence, bringing a new level of energy and enthusiasm that made the livestream explode in popularity. This promising young man started getting big offers, but in a baffling decision that stunted the growth of Dallas poker as a whole, TCH forced him out. The livestream used to get 200,000 views; today it gets less than 5,000. The club showed early on its willingness to sabotage its own success and discard the very talent that brought it acclaim in a quest to maintain absolute control.

I got there as soon as the snow allowed, but the blizzard had cost me my chance. By the time I walked through the door of the club, Bildo was gone. He wasn’t on vacation or taking a break. He was on his way to prison.

The big draw—the game that had lured me out of the snow—had come from a fraudulent COVID testing scheme that billed the federal government for tens of millions of dollars in tests that were never performed. The entire enterprise, the dream I had chased from the tomb, was built on top of a lie. He left lots of chips; money that circulated through the local poker economy blossoming on the floor of the brand new Texas Card House. 

The Corrupt Roots of the Cage

This foundation of fraud was no accident; it was built into the law that allows the club to exist. The first “legal” poker rooms to open in Texas were immediately shut down by authorities, $10 million dollars were seized, and the owners were arrested for felony money laundering. Strange things began to happen to people involved in the case, and all charges were dropped, allowing them to open many more poker rooms across the state. Government officials looked the other way while criminal elements infiltrated and overpowered our institutions.

Gambling is illegal in Texas, the law is very clear on that. There is an exception carved out for private poker games, so long as “no person receives an economic benefit from the game.” These poker room owners have managed to successfully argue that there is no economic benefit to these poker rooms, and that’s why they’re allowed to operate.

This argument is the ultimate corruption of the law:

  • The hundreds of jobs each one of these places creates is not an economic benefit, to anyone.
  • Millions of dollars of rent, utilities, and tax revenue: there is no economic benefit.
  • Texas Card House beat a $620,000 legal assault by the City of Dallas—while simultaneously becoming a global destination offering multi-million dollar prize packages. It’s amazing that they could put together the resources to pull off something like that without ever receiving an economic benefit from their operations.

But the club’s impunity extended far beyond zoning law. The Golden Cage’s true internal architecture was revealed in the firing of a single dealer who, tired of suffering abuse, committed a simple, courageous act. My protected activity was simple: I opposed the blatant sexual harassment experienced by a coworker, who was also a manager.

I followed the chain of command—a corporate policy designed to be a trap—and asked the offending harasser to stop, or else I’m going to tell someone

In response, the club immediately engaged in Title VII retaliation with a series of adverse actions, cutting me from the lucrative shifts, diminishing my responsibilities, and ultimately terminating my employment. The club’s moves were designed to be materially adverse, intended to dissuade any reasonable worker from opposing the harassment.

The club that had spent over a year weaponizing legal technicalities to defy a city court was exposed for flouting the most basic provisions of the Civil Rights Act. They had engineered a business model that was technically immune to local law, only to discover that they had built a fortress around their own federal labor law violations.

My internal report was a protected activity under Title VII’s Opposition Clause, and the club clearly violated the law the moment they retaliated against my statement.

“But-For” the complaint about the harassment, there would have been no employment action. The club’s punishment was so swift and severe that the retaliatory motive was the only credible explanation.

I had emerged from the depths of the pandemic isolation, a tomb containing a parallel reality. The new environment, however, was an ocean of unknowns. It was after I watched the extremely compelling documentary detailing how the mafia is profiting from industries as diverse as counterfeiting olive oil, and stealing sand from the world’s public beaches and selling it back, that I realized I was probably in over my head. I’m grateful at least that Dallas is so far from the ocean, and there’s no sand to steal here.

Victor & Tom

The lie became tangible the moment you breathed the air inside.

There was no mahogany and velvet. The club was a cinder-block box of institutional neglect. The air was thick with the combined scents of cheap beer, stale cigarettes clinging to the threadbare carpet, and an overflowing, perpetually broken bathroom. Look up and you’d see water discolorations mottling the ceiling tiles like a Rorschach test of mismanagement.

The managerial team reinforced this chaotic reality, each man embodying a different, corrosive madness.

Tom was the micromanager—always there, always sticking his nose into everything, but never fixing anything. He was the one hovering, ensuring you worked 45-minutes for 30-minutes pay while ignoring the broken glass in the parking lot from constant break-ins. He looked and behaved exactly like a tired, slightly malicious Dwight Schrute, and he wore the most ridiculous, oversized nametag, screaming his self-appointed title: “Lead Floor.” His obsession with a title the company contended in court wasn’t real confirmed his nature: he was a bureaucratic tyrant. Almost every time I spoke with him, he said something that hurt my brain, literally giving me headaches. E-v-e-r-y-t-h-i-n-g he said was punctuated with a reminder of his authority. Working through the organizational flow charts, he was approximately the Assistant to the Assistant Regional Manager.

He’s told me a million times, he is the lead floor. “You see this name tag? Lead Floor. The Leader, of all of the Floors. Everyone answers to the Floor. The Floors all answer to me. I am in charge.”

I applied once to be a Floor. The company was desperate to fill the position. They solicited applications for months. When asked, “Why do you want this job?” I told him that I wanted to help the company out in their difficult spot. 

Later in the interview he asked, “Where would you see yourself in five years?” I told him if I got the job I would take it seriously and do the best I could, and depending on how things worked out maybe I could see myself being a “Lead Floor” one day.

That’s when Tom’s boss told me that “Lead Floor” is not a real thing, and asked where I had even hear of it. “Floor” isn’t even a real thing. A law firm asked me to join the class action law suit over the thing. They call them “floors” instead of managers because they’re not managers and apparently it’s illegal to insinuate that they might be in charge of anyone or anything. Taken right from their response to the lawsuit, “Victor, Ryan and TCH Dallas contend that these employees (floors) do not meet the statutory and regulatory definitions of ‘managers.’”

Victor operated on an entirely different level. He was the Regional Manager, the figurehead with genuine, untouchable authority. Victor’s madness was the madness of power and petty tyranny. Victor, with his cold, unblinking authority, was the human equivalent of the sand thieves.

I knew he was dangerous, and that danger became personal. I became acutely aware that my being pushed out had everything to do with rejecting his advances. That personal violation, the feeling of being targeted by the club’s most powerful and dangerous figure, fueled a cold, silent struggle.

Victor’s menace created a culture of fear, but his direct subordinate was the one who administered the daily abuse: Mike. Mike was the manager who enforced the arbitrary, petty, and humiliating rules. My conflicts with him were simply the inevitable clashes between a disgusted employee and a system designed to exploit him. 

My initial conflicts weren’t with the untouchable Victor or the executive Mike; they were with the foot soldiers. Jae and Leon were the ones who enforced the club’s arbitrary aesthetic rules, backed by some vague order from above.

The Recruitment

Despite the club’s chaotic environment, my initial involvement came from a place of exhaustion and community. Playing poker was high stress and high reward, and I often found myself burned out, playing 20 days in a row, ten, twelve, or fourteen hours a day. Shuffling, dealing, and not using my brain so hard for two or three days a week started to sound appealing. It was almost like a vacation for me at first.

John and Chris had begged me to come and work with them. I liked them both, and they were adamantly friendly. When I told them I wasn’t interested because I always ended up getting fired for things I didn’t understand, they told me: “We don’t fire anyone.”

The Misfit Island and Weaponized Vulnerability

The club was advertised to me as “Misfit Island,” a place where I fit in really well. It was a tribe for those of us who had struggled to find community elsewhere. Many of the most dedicated employees exhibited traits—such as intense adherence to rules, difficulty with social nuance, and an over-dedication to routine—that made them valuable workers but also perfectly suited for exploitation.

Management expertly weaponized these vulnerabilities. It was these dedicated individuals who could be easily manipulated into working “45-minutes” for only “30-minutes pay”. They are told to show up at 3:50, work until 4:35, at the earliest, and that counts as thirty minutes, one “down.” Their desire for a clear, predictable structure made them less likely to challenge the pervasive petty tyranny. When that clear structure was corrupted—when they were forced to endure abuse and live the institutional lie—they had nowhere to go, transforming the Misfit Island into a Golden Cage.

The Charisma of Defiance

The bizarre, anti-reality of the club extended to the psychological and social environment. The staff and players of Misfit Island were desperate for direction, desperate for a tribe, and perhaps desperate for a leader who was not abusive.

I was shocked on two separate occasions when two different individuals asked me to “form a cult” and asked me to be their leader. I awkwardly declined both times, as I was simply there to play poker.

This odd social magnetism had real repercussions. I was later floored to have a friend confirm that I was a “top three topic of conversation” at the poker room. My success, my defiance of the institutional lies, and my ability to attract followers posed an existential threat to the club’s command structure.

This status put me on a direct collision course with Victor, the club’s shady command figure. Victor always wanted to be the coolest, most dominant guy in the room—the unchallenged authority. My influence, whether desired or not, constantly threatened his claim to that throne. It wasn’t just my poker winnings they wanted to cripple; it was my perceived social power. This psychological rivalry—the quiet war for status—was the true engine driving the petty tyranny that followed.

Victors Veto and The Guitar

Victor’s control was absolute and personal, often fueled by wounded pride. I had rejected his advances and suspected my being pushed out had everything to do with that.

The first time I met Victor, I approached him to ask if I could film a poker VLOG like those that were exploding online. I cited the free, organic advertising it would generate and pointed out my loyalty, having spent $20,000 in membership fees over six months, at thirteen dollars an hour. That’s a lot of hours to spend in his business, but he didn’t even know who I was.

He flatly refused, saying he wasn’t sure how I would “make the place look.” This careless decision stunted the club’s growth; while players like Mariano exploded on other platforms, TCH’s livestream died. “I love the card room and the people and the game,” I told him, “that is why I came here. I’m here every day.” His refusal was based purely on his inability to tolerate any narrative about the club he did not personally craft and control.

His malice was pettiest when I started a short-lived shift at the Las Colinas location. I was out on break, a quarter mile away from the card room, sitting in the shade, smoking pot and playing Pink Floyd on my guitar. Victor came running over to tell me I couldn’t play my guitar on break because it “doesn’t look good in the area.” I decided right then and there that he could never come to see my shows.

I refused to be owned. It was 2 years before I went back to the Las Colinas location. I played guitar at the Dallas location on every break, sometimes spending half my shift smoking pot and playing guitar. I haven’t gotten my poker VLOG, yet, because of Victor’s petty tyranny, but he can’t take my music away from me. My commitment to my art has led me on the most incredible journey that I wouldn’t trade for anything, and his instinctual response is to take something like that away from a man.

Nothing was ever said about the drug use. It was his employees that made sure I stayed stoned everyday, and it was an essential element of the culture. I’d try to clean up my act, and the lieutenant distributors would offer irresistible deals of a lifetime to draw me back into the game. This was a hub for the Texas criminal underworld, a literal marketplace with vendors offering wholesale prices on anything money could buy.

The Predatory Economy

The inflow of new money is essential for a poker game. The ATM’s at the club are in high demand. Some guys make a visit every time they play a hand. It charges a 10% fee for every transaction. They have to restock this thing with cash three times a day. I was told the ATM is the biggest economic benefit generator at the club.

The ATM and the debit card transactions will cut you off, to let people know they’ve lost enough and it’s time to go home. State law makes it illegal to buy lottery tickets with a credit card, because it’s a really bad idea to go into debt to gamble. American Express and Discover explicitly ban the use of their cards for gambling transactions.  

Texas Card House makes it easy to get around all of this, for a twelve percent fee. They’re going to take your ID, and your fingerprints, and it’s going to take forever. We have to wait for the Floor to do it, and there’s no telling how long that could take. No one wants to hang around and miss hands. TCH has upped the rate, it’s now $14 an hour to hold your seat while they take half an hour to process your cash advance for a 12% fee. 

I was able to offer a better solution to the customers. For a 10% fee, they could send me a Zelle or Cash-app transaction and I’d have the money ready and they’d never miss a hand. The demand was through the roof; I’d always “sell out” of the cash I’d bring, and I was making more off of these Zelle transactions than I ever did working a job. It was great for the customer as well, because the Zelle transactions come out of a checking account and do not accumulate interest, whereas the Texas Card House transactions were always credit card cash advances that triggered massive, immediate fees and interest accumulation for the user.

Management got wind that I was undercutting their business. They made a new rule, that I could not do anymore Zelle transactions at the club. This was for my protection, is what he said. In reality, it was a system of control designed to protect their profit margins and to keep me dependent on their system.

There was no new rule for anyone else, and it was a constant occurrence to see people swapping money. They never had much money to swap, however, and they never charged a fee, and it wasn’t long before someone was driven to the ATM and eventually to see the Floor man with his credit card.

TournamentBuy-inHouse FeeEntriesFee Revenue (Per Event)Weekly FrequencyWeekly Revenue
Daily$130$30100$30 times 100 = $3,0006$3,000 times 6 =$18,000
Saturday$360$60400$60 times 400 = $24,0001$24,000 times 1 = $24,000
Monthly$300$652,000$65 times 2,000 = $130,000

The Tournament Racket: Cash and Crippled Staff

The fee structure for poker rooms in Texas is a masterclass in legal evasion and financial exploitation. TCH operates massive tournaments across the day, week, month, and year, all predicated on the idea that none of the house fees count as an “economic benefit” that would violate the law.

These fees, however, generate untraceable cash on an astonishing scale:

  • A single daily tournament nets the house $3,000.
  • The weekly Saturday major event brings in $24,000.
  • The massive monthly tournament alone generates an estimated $130,000 in house fees.

This means the club is pulling in an approximate $238,000 a month from just these three types of events, and none of this massive pile of cash goes to the employees.

The most damning form of exploitation, inspired by sharecropping, is how the labor for these events is paid. The staff is forced to cover the labor cost of the tournaments out of their own pocket. TCH accomplishes this by first raking 8% of their tips from the cash games. Half of this raked money is then broken back up and paid to the dealers in the form of “tournament downs”—the meager, diminishing wages we will discuss at length in a later chapter.

In this system, the labor cost for TCH to make this colossal, untraceable profit is effectively zero. This burden falls entirely on the employees—often the most vulnerable staff who are already struggling. These terrible, exploitative conditions, directly contrasted with the massive money generator for the business, are the reason for the suicide talk in the break rooms. They are trapped: the very people being exploited because of their vulnerable status are the ones working these massive tournament events.

This systemic theft of labor is why I was asked to be part of a class action lawsuit against TCH over raking the tips. Like many others, I declined out of fear of reprisal, but the hope that TCH loses that case remains a potent thought. This exploitation was at the front of my mind every time I was asked, “Why don’t you play any Tournaments?” It felt like a terrible dark secret that I would be punished for revealing, but I never wanted to buy a ticket to take part in the systematic oppression and exploitation of my colleagues and myself.

The Wild Wild West

The veterans joked that the club did “drug testing” to make sure you were “on enough drugs to fit in with everyone else.”

The hot new promotion is free beer: anyone with a membership can drink all day for free. Grown men show up day after day to play drinking games like frat boys, pawning their futures at interest.

The club was criminally dangerous. I was date raped by one of the other employees. The crime wasn’t a secret—it was something you swallowed and endured because the entire organization was based on silence and the lack of accountability. I silently recorded it all in my journal.

Violent crime and confrontations were always a threat. Fights happened often. Not one time did I ever see security step in to break up the fight. They’d move in and watch, but you’re on your own if something happens. 

Some of the other dealers were downright desperate. One of my fellow employees followed a couple home after they visited the club one night. He robbed them at gunpoint and was arrested almost immediately. Word spread quickly through the poker community, but no one in management would make a comment. The employee simply vanished, until one day he resurfaced, working as a dealer at another poker club.

There was a high profile robbery at the club in Austin. A company security guard alerted his accomplice that the big winner was leaving the game with all the money, now is the time to swoop in and rob him. They shot that young man over a few thousand dollars.

A Culture of Predation and Complicity

The criminal danger within the club extended beyond the visible fights and robberies, settling into a pervasive, institutional culture of sexual predation and complicity.

On one occasion, while working as a dealer, a customer placed a hand on my thigh, reaching, searching, violating me under the table and out of sight. I immediately jumped out of my chair. Management banned the man for a mere thirty days after I reported the assault and complained about him coming back in the next day.

Following the incident, I spoke with several coworkers who confirmed the same man had touched each of them in the exact same way. Imagine, something like that happens and the first three people you talk to about it have had the exact same experience. I was the only one who reported the assault; the others felt compelled into silence, highlighting a shocking realization: every one of my coworkers had been violated. This predator was allowed to return to the club after his short ban to continue his abuse.

He was a heavy drinker, and Texas Card House was his go-to on Friday nights. He was alway encouraging people to “have a drink,” which in this context meant competing to drink the most beers and stack their empty cups the highest before blacking out. The beer is free and unlimited with a membership. Tragically, Texas Card House over-served him one Friday night and he crashed his car on the way home and died. 

One lady, blacked out from alcohol consumption, left in an ambulance on a stretcher. TCH management wouldn’t call a taxi for a player, but they would remove a player who became inconvenient. 

When I went back to management, repeatedly, slowly working my way up the chain of command, to detail the scale and scope of the problem—that every employee was being subjected to constant abuse and harassment—they responded by creating a sexual harassment training program. This program was a masterclass in institutional negligence. The first step of the training program was to tell your harasser to stop their actions and go to the Floor if things continued. This solidified the club as a place where the culture of predation was magnified by greed and a constant quest for power and status.

This complicity was openly flaunted in the club. While playing in a poker game, a member of management was present at the table when two players openly discussed how much they had paid to “rent the waitress for the night,” casually discussing the sale of his employee’s body right in front of him. This manager’s silence confirmed the predatory culture was not just tolerated, but part of the institutional norm.

The U-Word: A Political Threat

Adding to the environment of shared suffering, the dealers were often in the break room complaining about the poor wages and backbreaking conditions. I did my best to keep my mouth shut, but when suicide became a popular break room topic, stemming from the abuse we had to suffer, I felt compelled to speak. It was the last time I would.

They would be like, “Can you just imagine if we didn’t work one of these Saturday tournaments, how much money they’d lose?” They were talking about power, but they didn’t know the word for it.

That’s when I offered the simple truth: “Oh, you’re talking about a union.” I told them, “Yeah, so what you do is you get everyone together, and you’re exactly right, it’s called collective bargaining power, and it’s very effective.” I was happy enough, making a lot of money playing poker, and told them we could all still make $200,000 a year working the job if we really wanted to work that hard. I outlined the good and the bad—the scabs, the wars, the violence—but pointed to how unions had transformed jobs like coal mining, port work, and auto manufacturing into great, stable blue-collar careers. The only thing I’d really want, I told them, was a ROTH 401k with a 100% match; I’d probably stay there packing that thing out until retirement.

That kind of talk—the “U-word”—got back to upper management. I wanted to help my tribe and be honest, but that honesty marked me as a political enemy. They fired me less than a month after this conversation.

The eternal optimism was a great part of my downfall as well. The system thrived on broken down, desperate individuals who were easily exploited. I was in the break room spreading hope; “here’s how you’d make that $200,000 in a year…”

They had a points system for attendance. Any violation was a point. In four years, I never got a point. I never missed a shift, and I was never late. I had to go home early due to illness twice in those four years. Many of the others were constantly on the edge, holding 8 or 9 points, knowing number 10 is the axe. These are the people most easily manipulated into working under predatory conditions. TCH would offer these employees “points back” for showing up to work the lowest paying, highest stress gigs—the Saturday tournament. People would go to extreme lengths to avoid working on Saturdays, specifically because the pay and the conditions were so bad, and that was the only way the could staff the thing; dangling a carrot to the most desperate individuals at the end of their rope.Part II: The Small Conflicts

Me vs. Management

In this sanctuary of danger—a place where major crimes were swallowed by silence—my battles with management were desperate attempts to assert basic dignity and humanity. These weren’t fights over money or rules; they were fights over the right to exist without constant, petty humiliation.

The Arbitrary Rule and the Lie of “2+2=5”

My first conflicts were with Jae and Leon, the floor managers who enforced the arbitrary rules. I was waiting for the pre-shift meeting to begin. My 16-inch Mohawk was a sign of my allegiance to Misfit Island, right alongside my coworkers’ platinum blonde mullet, finger tattoos, rainbow-dyed hair and grim reaper earrings. I wore that Mohawk every Friday for six months, and the players loved it. It became a Friday tradition many were excited about. Many other Mohawks were inspired.

When Jae and Leon told me that spiking my hair was “offensive,” I stopped. I never even asked in what way it was offensive, though the question obviously formed immediately. But the issue was only beginning. The players continued to ask about it for the next two years, never letting it go. There were so many people affected, and each one wanted an individual explanation. The persistence forced me to lie constantly, offering up the club’s institutional lie of “2+2=5” whenever anyone asked why it was gone.

This forced deception was psychological torture. It forced me to lie to people like Cindi, who “drove two hours just to see my hair”, and Mr. King Boat, a man who had survived a literal battlefield, whose simple question was a reminder of the sheer pettiness of the management’s control.

I even went back to Jae and asked him directly, “What do I tell people when they ask me direct questions about illegal discrimination?” I told him that he didn’t want me wearing a Mohawk, so I wouldn’t, but that I was being constantly asked by the players about the Mohawk. They would ask me, how can that person right there have that hairstyle, but you can’t have yours?

I told him I didn’t want to argue; instead, I was deeply uncomfortable in these ever-present and escalating situations, and I needed to know what the company wanted me to say. He never got back to me. It was petty tyranny, and my I can’t have my 16 inch Mohawk because so many of my bosses had no hair at all and were deeply insecure about it.

The Privilege of Being Crippled

Unlike most other casinos that ban their employees from playing in their games, Texas Card House actively encouraged it. To entice their staff, TCH offered a suite of benefits: half-price time discounts, free beer, and free membership. The stated purpose was to build community and keep tables full, but the true effect was to lock employees even tighter into the system.

The contradiction was that while TCH needed its employees to play, they found ways to cripple those who were successful at the table. My ability to profit as a player was constantly disruptive. This dynamic created a system where management could use arbitrary rules to target profitable players, regardless of their status as an employee or a customer.

The Final Word and Tom’s Arbitrary Justice

One evening, I was playing against Dustin, a player known for being intimidated by me. He called me mean, profane names after successfully bluffing me off of a hand. He made a huge spectacle of the win.

I calmly responded that I was actually proud of him, simply for playing against me, noting that all the other times he had left the game as soon as I sat down because he was scared to play me. I told him I could tell by the way he was shaking and trembling and hollering that beating me out of a small pot was a very big deal for him.

Dustin immediately complained to management. The consequence was swift and arbitrary: Tom—the pathetic “Lead Floor” , the bureaucratic tyrant —told me I had to go, but Dustin could stay.

This incident confirmed the rules of the cage: profitability and dignity were a threat, and management would always prioritize the comfort of the abusive customer over the respect of the successful employee, even if the customer’s behavior was profane and childish.

The $100 Chip and the Line of Defiance

The escalating tension brought me closer to the manager I had successfully avoided for years: Mike. He was hired to be the “Fall Guy” for the operation. He was a high-level executive with a very impressive resume.

Everyone was always downing Mike. The employees, the players; he was an open joke. He was my boss, and I tried my best to keep my mouth shut, but I couldn’t close my ears. The rumors started as soon as he was hired.

2 years later I was sitting in the high stakes poker game he was so proud of, and he’s the topic of conversation. The players are trash talking every aspect of the man and the poker room he runs, and it continues for hours. It was clearly a daily topic of conversation among these men, and it wasn’t much different from what I’d hear in the break room.

I would believe anything someone told me about Mike. In the moment at the table, I did the best I could to stick up for my boss and my company. “He’s running the biggest poker room in the state, and you’re all playing at it.” I pointed out.

I had yet to actually talk to Mike, one on one. I’ll never take up for the man again. It’s all true.

My final, decisive confrontation with a customer pushed me into his office. It involved a $100 chip— in the context of a high stakes poker game, it’s a trivial piece of currency that a player, aiming for a personal insult, threw at me a second time, suggesting I was poor enough to need it. I had given it back to him the first time, but once I realized he was throwing a rock at me, I removed it from the equation.

My dignity was worth more than his temper. I had my hand open, palm up on the table, and his second toss landed it right into my open hand. I took the chip and, in an act of pure, final defiance, dropped it directly into the dealers tip box. If you treat the money like trash, it goes to the people you treat like trash. It was the clearest line I ever drew.

The consequence was immediate: I was called into Mike’s office the very next day. The complaint was filed not by the offended player, but by a player who hadn’t even been present, using the incident as leverage to have me barred from playing in the game. The reason was blunt: They couldn’t beat me at the game. I left with the implicit threat of being barred.

I told Mike I only learned that it was $100 after the fact; I had never even looked at the value of the chip before putting it in the dealers tip box. He was throwing things at me, and I didn’t like it, and I wasn’t going to give him the rock for the third time.

This guy, the one that was throwing his money around like candy, he took his lesson and didn’t ever say much about it. He actually bought me a nice glass of wine that gave me a bad headache. It was some of the other players insisting that I reimburse him, or at least split it with him. 

“You can see he wants it back now!” Is what his friend said. He suggested that I split it with him, and give him $50, because his friend had a sad face on. But what if he had thrown one of his many $500 or $1000 chips, should I pay the man $500 dollars because he’s literally throwing his money all over the place? 

Instead of being cowed, I walked straight back to the high-stakes game, played all day, and won a modest ten thousand dollars. For the next year, I continued to work in the shadow of the threat of being barred, a dangerous reminder that my profitability as a player was more disruptive than my dignity as an employee. I was also working quietly on the poker book my tribe had asked for, detailing how I won ten thousand dollars from the best players in town, again and again, and how anyone could do it.

The high stakes game is legendary among the employees of Texas Card House; it’s by far the most demanding and lowest paying gig at the club. There was one table of the high stakes, and 20 tables of the low stakes, and the topic in the break room would often be about having to cater to these few, elite players while suffering endless new abuses. 

When a man plays in a game for $200 dollars and doubles up and wins $400 dollars, he’ll often tip the dealer $3, $5, sometimes as much as $50. The legend comes from the dealer who saved all of his tips from the high stakes game, and at the end of it, gave all $4 back to them. You’re making $100 an hour from the guys winning $200, but only $8 an hour working for the guys at the game where $10,000 is a modest win. They are incessantly demanding and will nitpick the finest details, not to get a better experience, but simply to expose the employee as doing something “wrong” and gaining a few moments of leverage, power, and attention.

Mike specifically stated that the high stakes game is the most important game in the room, and he catered to their every whim and desire at the expense of his staff. They are, today, still suffering. Mike was willing to corrupt everything and everyone, sacrifice his integrity and the dignity of his people, so that he could run the poker room with “The Big Game.”

The Pivot: Mikes Firing

I spent another year avoiding Mike after my final, ridiculous lecture, then the world tilted. Mike was gone.

He was fired for a sex scandal so sickening it made all the club’s other abuses seem minor by comparison. Mike was allegedly recruiting junior managers to sleep with his wife while he watched, and whoever performed the best got the job or promotion.

My daughter, who was ten years old at the time, had sensed the danger instantly. I had brought her to a company picnic and Mike kept chasing her around, trying to get her to play with him. She was not having it. In hindsight, it all made sense. I taught her to trust her instincts and weve been right every time. The simple fact that both I and my ten-year-old daughter could tell instantly that something was wrong with Mike, yet Victor could not—or would not—is telling. It wasn’t just me, and my daughter.

I kept my mouth shut about my bosses. I do my best not to wallow in negative sentiment, and try to put a positive spin on everything. Sometimes, however, the main topic of conversation among the others at the club, both employees and customers, would be about Mike, and again, I tried my best to be positive in everything I said. After actually sitting down with Mike and having a conversation, I was absolutely right to avoid the man like the plague. I would believe anything anyone told me about him, and I have heard many things. Victor was in charge of Mike, and he should have seen what everyone else did. He couldn’t, or wouldn’t, because Victor and Mike weren’t just colleagues; they were essentially the same guy, only operating on different levels of institutional power.

My petty tormentor had been swept away by a wave of depravity that confirmed the club was not merely dysfunctional, but a true sanctuary for predators.

Mike’s abrupt and sickening departure created the first real instability the management structure had seen in years, and it was in this chaotic vacuum—with the club reeling from the sex scandal and Victor tightening his grip—that the true, systemic financial crime was finally exposed.

Part III: The Core Exposé 

Tyler

It was a vacuum of chaos, and into that vacuum, the club’s operational negligence finally ran headfirst into its financial reality: the discovery of the tournament tip pool theft.

The money was supposed to be divided up. They’d take the 8% harvest from the generous dealers and put it with the tips from the players, and without ever contributing a dime TCH was able to offer $25 per tournament down to the dealers.

The signs had been obvious. The club was packed nightly with players drawn in by the phantom wealth of the Bildo era, yet dealer earnings for the tournaments had plummeted from an estimated $50 an hour equivalent down to a brutal $14 an hour. The math simply didn’t add up.

People nearly rioted at that point. There was more money than ever flowing through the club, yet we were all starving. Texas Card House had to step in and pay its employees for the first time. An investigation was launched to ensure it never happened again.

The Discovery and the Grand Theft

Tyler, the tournament manager who had worked there since the beginning, the man that bragged about being “first”, was the man in charge of the tip pool. We know he was stealing throughout his tenure. The scheme only came to a halt when he took time off, and a substitute employee, running the numbers, found the catastrophic discrepancy. The exposure was instant.

This wasn’t mere incompetence; this was wholesale, methodical, cynical theft. Tyler was taking all, or most of, the entire tournament tip pool. He stole it all, over a course of years, forcing 300 employees—who were making the baseline minimum wage of $2.13 an hour—to fund his lifestyle.

The Laundered Chips and The Livestream

The biggest part of the tip pool would have been in poker chips. To cash this money out and explain his sudden wealth, Tyler used the club itself, coming in to play poker with the stolen chips as a way to launder the money as poker winnings. The irony was exquisite: he was a terrible poker player. He was always the big loser at the table, hemorrhaging thousands of dollars an hour. He likely lost far more to the game than he ever gained, making it suspicious that he was cashing out at all. This should have been an enormous red flag.

This leads to a far more dangerous question: At the live-streamed high-stakes game—the game that was the root of the entire “Legal” Dallas poker tree—Tyler was the manager in charge of the livestream and the “action tracker.” This meant he was alone in the booth, putting together the graphics for the TV viewers, with real-time access to every players hole cards.

Tyler was a man who, from a position of trust, was willing to steal as much as he could get over a long period of time from his own coworkers and underlings. Is it possible that this same man, with tens of thousands of dollars on the line and direct access to players’ hole cards, used that knowledge to steal from the players in one way or another?

It was after this theft was exposed that John offered me Tyler’s job. I declined, I didn’t want any more responsibilities.

The Institutional Cover-Up

Management’s response to the theft was immediate and chilling: Tyler was just… gone. There was no police report, no arrests, and certainly no attempt to retrieve the money and make reparations to those affected.

Then came the new decree, delivered in the tone of a generous savior: “We are guaranteeing all dealers $16 per down.”

It was a brilliant, cruel final manipulation. They had fired the thief, then used the crisis to solidify a permanent, massive pay cut. My real hourly earnings as a player had once been over $1,000 an hour at the high-stakes game, which is why I didn’t feel so beholden to the system. Now, my wages as a dealer were slashed and fixed. We never saw any more than that $16 a down again. The fact that we used to make $25 per down, and what happened to that money since Tyler’s not stealing it anymore, was never discussed.

Less than a month later, the final insult flashed across my phone screen: Tyler had been hired by a nearby, rival poker club in a management position. The system protects its own, and the golden cage was merely a revolving door for predators.

The whole cycle—the Bildo fraud, the petty tyranny of Victor and Mike, the personal violation, and the final institutionalized wage theft—clicked into place. It wasn’t a social club. It was a golden cage, and they’d just changed the lock.Part IV: The Final Exit

Stifling becomes Suffocating

The exposé of Tyler’s tip theft should have been the final, definitive reason to leave. I had been date raped, sexually assaulted, stripped of dignity, and robbed at gunpoint. Yet, I stayed. This was the job I had chosen, and even at the newly fixed rate, thirty-two dollars an hour was better than nothing. I truly loved the community—it was large, diverse, and felt like Misfit Island, my tribe. I was only a short time away from true financial independence, where I could pay cash for a house and live a simple life, writing books. But I was not willing to tolerate any more abuse.

The final straw had nothing to do with money or poker. It had to do with my puppy.

The Cage Door Slams Shut

The original deal for the dealer job was flexibility: I would work the 2 PM to 10 PM shift, and most of the time, I could leave after three or four hours, or even take the entire day off if I wanted. But as employees disappeared and the club refused to hire new ones, the workload skyrocketed.

I found myself eleven hours into an eight-hour shift, the place busier than ever, with fewer employees than ever. I finally went to the Floor and told him I had to go.

“I need to go check on my dog,” I explained. “I need to walk my puppy. I have a thirty-minute break right now. Can I please take an extra thirty minutes to feed my dog? I’ll come right back.”

Instead of granting a small, humane request, he wasted my entire break lecturing me. He told me that my dog would learn to love his cage, that he would be fine, and that I couldn’t leave. I was going to work as late as he told me to.

It was in that moment I realized the truth: He was looking at me like his dog in a cage, and he thought he could keep me there as late as he wanted. And he did. I went home well past 2 A.M. My young puppy, distressed, had chewed a hole straight through the wall of the closet—his spacious, doggy Ritz-Carlton enclosure—trying to escape.

I felt exactly like that dog. The rage and clarity turned into a song: “I feel like a dog trapped in a crate, and I’d do anything to escape, eat through the wall and run away, and I’m trapped in here everyday.”

The Final Confrontation and Exile

The next morning, I emailed the scheduler, stating clearly that from here on out, I could only work one day a week. I tried to play more poker to make up the difference, but a new, bizarre threat had emerged.

A waitress had started copying everything I did, but in an exaggerated, malicious way. My overalls became her evil designer overalls. Her hair was dyed and lengthened, strand for strand, to perfectly match mine. She was relentlessly present—showing up every ten minutes, staring at me, dressed like my twin.

This was a constant, genuinely concerning stream of daily exposures and attempts to touch me. I even made efforts to shift my schedule around, I was trying to focus on the game, and this woman found ways to be there every ten minutes, escalating her behavior. It was unsettling and felt like she was trying to turn me into a skin suit.

The final insult came when she refused to serve me a Coke Zero. I demanded answers. Why are you making my life a living hell, and can you please stop? I was following the very procedure the company had created after my earlier complaint—the first step of the new sexual harassment training program was to tell the person they were bothering you. I just laid out all the ways her actions had made my time at the poker room difficult.

She immediately shut down the conversation, and I suspect she was simply embarrassed and trying to cover her tracks, worried that I might talk to management about her actions. I went home. The very next day, I got a call from my boss telling me I was under investigation and could not come back to work.

The Crucial Irony: I was banned not for breaking policy, but for following the procedure I had forced them to create.

Someone had seized the opportunity to force me out, hoping to cover for the immense turnover the club was facing. The boss who fired me had quit immediately after, his final action being my banishment. The club’s response solidified its culture as one of institutional hypocrisy, where the very act of seeking protection was treated as an act of insubordination.

Another cruel piece of irony in the situation was the online harassment the company subjected me to. We were given the option to sign up for alerts from the company app as well as advertisements about all the exciting events about the poker room. I specifically declined all of them. I sent numerous emails over the course of my employment seeking to be removed from the lists. The day Leon called to tell me about the investigation, the emails multiplied. I received over 12,000 emails from the company over the next month, constant cruel reminders of the world I was now banished from.

Then I learned about Texas Penal Code 42.07, the section for Harassment. Turns out, I never did anything under that chapter, but when you cause the telephone of another to ring repeatedly or make repeated telephone communications anonymously or in a manner reasonably likely to harass, annoy, alarm, abuse, torment, embarrass, or offend another, you find yourself in violation of Subsection Four.

I sent many documented requests to many people in the company about these emails, and they never seemed to go anywhere. It was a constant torrent, an absolute email barrage that could not be stopped, sometimes multiple alerts per minute. I called the police, who I am grateful for, told them about the violation of Subsection Four, and within ten minutes that river of passive aggressive abuse turned off.

A month after my firing, the former boss, Leon, suddenly contacted me. He began demanding an in-person meeting to discuss the separation, but I kept refusing, asking for the conversation to be handled through email or over the phone.

The final conversation ended when I quoted the movie Casino: “Meeting’s in the desert make me nervous.” I told him explicitly that I didn’t want to end up buried in a cornfield like Nicky Santoro.

Leon quit the very next day. It’s difficult to believe the two events were unrelated. He likely saw that the best he could hope for was to be un-personed at some point, and the worst might be a car bomb like Ace Rothstein. My final act in the club’s orbit was to force the man who fired me to flee the consequences of his complicity.

The Betrayal of a Friend

He had told me I could come back after thirty days to play poker. I waited three months, then went to the high-stakes game. They sold me a membership and charged me hourly fees and let me play poker for four hours. Then, Tom—the “Lead Floor” himself—pulled me off the table.

Jae is the new GM over at Dallas,” Tom said, “and he says that you can’t play poker anymore. You have to talk to Jae to get answers.”

I was happy Jae had gotten the promotion, and I considered him a friend. I was willing to accept that I might have done wrong in the waitress situation, and I trusted his judgment. I reached out, hoping my friend could at least be honest with me, and tell me what happened, and I could use the knowledge to grow from the experience.

I was crushed. I was devastated. Jae told me that Leon—the man who had quit suddenly and fled from the country—was the one who had been very clear before he left that I was never allowed back. Jae admitted he was simply executing the order, and that he had never even asked a question about it. This man I had called a friend was un-personing me, and he couldn’t even tell me why. He didn’t have a reason to offer to when I pressed him. There was no apology or mention that we had spent all day every day together for years and never encountered anything we couldn’t navigate.

The system had corrupted two men I had once respected. Their words echoed: hollow, empty, and meaningless. That’s the worst part, to me, is watching these people and their potential, their ethics, and their morality being drained away by a systemic malignancy. No one can tell me why I can’t work or play cards at Texas Card House anymore, but I can legitimately write a whole book about why no one should ever work or play poker at Texas Card House.

The Final Lie

Even after the devastation of this final betrayal, I sought clarity. I eventually filed for unemployment, solely to force the club to explain what I had done to be fired and banned.

The club’s final, institutional lie was this: They told the government I had quit. They claimed TCH had never fired me; I had just stopped coming in for work. Though my claim was eventually approved, they still never provided a reason for my separation other than that I had stopped coming.

The Golden Cage was officially closed, protected by layers of lies and weaponized incompetence, enforced by supposed friends. I was finally, truly free.

Final Epilogue: The Legal Protection of the Golden Cage

The club’s institutional dishonesty extended far beyond the walls of the card room, finding its ultimate protection in the higher echelons of the Texas legal system. The full cycle of the Golden Cage was not complete until the law itself affirmed the club’s right to exist on a technicality, appearing to be manipulated by outside forces in the process.

The Criminality of the Dealer and Institutional Exploitation

The business model of TCH, and all card rooms in Texas, is predicated on the systematic exploitation of its workforce, deliberately placing every employee in legal jeopardy to shield the ownership from criminal charges.

The entire operation exists on a knife-edge of legality that criminalizes every aspect of a dealer’s job under the Texas Penal Code (Title 10, Chapter 47). While the club attempts to operate under the affirmative defense for “social gambling,” employment violates three key statutes, making every dealer an unpaid criminal accomplice:

Texas Penal Code SectionDealer’s Violating ActionImplication & Exploitation
Sec. 47.04 (Keeping a Gambling Place)Receiving an hourly wage and tips.The law’s defense is voided if “no person received any economic benefit other than personal winnings.” By paying you, the club voids its own defense, making the dealer the single element that transforms the venue into an illegal gambling place.
Sec. 47.06 (Possession of Gambling Device)Handling and transferring cards, chips, and dealing hands.The dealer knowingly handles and manipulates gambling devices with the intent to further the game.
Sec. 47.05 (Communicating Gambling Information)Announcing bets, pot sizes, and game rules.The dealer knowingly communicates information “as to bets” to further the gambling activity.

It was a business model predicated on the mass employment of criminals. The owners, who receive the actual economic benefit of millions in membership fees and seat charges, rely on the legal liability of their minimum-wage workforce to protect themselves. By paying the dealer, they secure their own defense against the more serious charges of Gambling Promotion, transferring the risk of prosecution directly onto your shoulders. The dealers are used as human shields.

The Certificate of Occupancy and the City’s Reversal

The long-running battle between the City of Dallas and Texas Card House (TCH) over its Certificate of Occupancy (C.O.) was the ultimate demonstration of this broken system.

  1. The Initial Lie: TCH was granted its C.O. to operate as a private membership club in 2020 after what the CEO claimed was a lengthy process of consulting with city staff. However, the city’s chief building official later revoked the C.O., claiming it was “issued in error” because the business was fundamentally an illegal gambling place and that the city had been mistaken about the state law’s “safe harbor” provision. The City was essentially claiming that TCH had lied about its true purpose to obtain the initial permit.
  2. The Political Reversal: TCH appealed the revocation to the City’s Board of Adjustment (BOA). The BOA sided with TCH, voting 5-0 to reinstate the C.O. A board member noted their disappointment with the process, stating the city’s position “seemed like the opinion was changed either by political reasons or possibly public backlash,” confirming the pressure from “outside forces” was driving the city’s legal action.
  3. The Absurd Ruling: The city official then sued the BOA, kicking off a years-long legal fight. While a Dallas District Court judge initially sided with the city official, ruling the card club was indeed illegal, that decision was overturned by the Fifth District Court of Appeals in August 2024.

The Appeals Court’s decision was a procedural victory, not a declaration of legality. It ruled that the trial judge had erred by failing to afford the proper deference to the BOA’s original decision.

The final outcome of the saga, which became the running joke among those watching the case, was a piece of perfect institutional absurdity: the court decided the room was illegal, and it was even more illegal to stop them from doing it.

This procedural ruling effectively cemented TCHs monopoly in Dallas. The precedent of a trial court ruling the business model illegal, even if overturned on a technicality, created a legal quagmire that successfully deterred any future competitor from attempting to open a similar operation. The operation was left as the sole game in town, legally untouchable on a technicality.

This entire, futile legal campaign came at a cost of around $620,000 to Dallas taxpayers, who funded the city’s costly attempt to sue its own administrative board. The system had affirmed the club’s right to exist, not based on integrity or legality, but on procedure, weaponized incompetence, and the exhaustion of public resources. The golden cage was protected.

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