By Kate O'Keeffe 

Wynn Resorts Ltd. on Tuesday accused Elaine Wynn--the casino operator's co-founder and third-largest shareholder--of improper activity and sought to undercut her campaign to keep her board seat.

The allegations, in presentation materials posted to the Wynn Resorts website, came just after Ms. Wynn arrived in New York to solicit support for her re-election to the board. They have raised the stakes in an increasingly bitter battle that has pitted the company and its chairman and chief executive, Steve Wynn, against Mr. Wynn's former wife.

The tenor of the dispute is becoming reminiscent of the casino operator's last epic board battle. Three years ago Wynn Resorts ousted its then-largest shareholder, Kazuo Okada, by forcibly redeeming his 20% stake in the company at a 30% discount and kicking him off the board after alleging he was involved in corrupt activity.

Mr. Okada, once close friends with Mr. Wynn, continues to fight to get the shares back and denies allegations of wrongdoing.

Wynn Resorts' board said last month that it decided not to renominate Ms. Wynn, who has been a director for more than a dozen years, when her term expires April 24, coinciding with the annual meeting. Ms. Wynn then nominated herself for the seat and began campaigning, touting her decades of experience, passion and independence, and her role as the company's sole female director.

In a slide presentation posted to the Wynn Resorts website Tuesday outlining "key considerations" ahead of the annual meeting, the company for the first time elaborated on the board's specific concerns with Ms. Wynn. Her representatives didn't immediately respond to a request for comment on any of Wynn Resorts' allegations, including one that she had sold $10 million worth of shares through her personal foundation during a "blackout period" ahead of the company's earnings release,during which directors are forbidden by company policy to sell common stock.

The sale happened shortly before the company's release of its fourth-quarter earnings last month, said a person familiar with the matter. Wynn shares fell sharply after the company reported net profit that missed analyst estimates due to plunging revenue across the Chinese territory of Macau, where the casino operator derives the bulk of its revenue.

The company also accused Ms. Wynn of improper behavior regarding a land deal. "Over the course of several years, Ms. Wynn participated in board meetings in which Wynn Resorts' plans to acquire property in Las Vegas were discussed at length. At no time did Ms. Wynn recuse herself from the Board discussions or inform the Board that her nephew was involved in a competing bid. Ultimately, the land that Wynn Resorts wanted was purchased by a group that included Ms. Wynn's nephew," the company said.

Ms. Wynn's nephew Andrew Pascal, who used to be a Wynn executive, didn't immediately respond to a request for comment.

The company also expanded on its claim that a lawsuit Ms.Wynn had filed in June 2012 in the U.S. District Court in Nevada against Mr. Wynn seeking to dissolve a shareholder agreement put her at odds with the board. The pact, designed to keep Mr. Wynn in control of the company even though he is the second-largest shareholder, puts voting and selling restrictions on Ms. Wynn's shares.

The lawsuit, which Mr. Wynn opposes, is pending.

T. Rowe Price Associates Inc. is the company's largest shareholder, with a 16.8% stake.

In the Tuesday presentation, the company said Ms. Wynn used the suit against Mr. Wynn to serve litigation discovery requests on her fellow board members, demanding they produce documents related to the decision not to renominate her as a director.

The casino operator also sought to undercut one of Ms. Wynn's key campaign points: that the Wynn board would be without a female voice if she weren't re-elected.

"In response to questions from our stockholders, the Corporate Governance Committee wants there to be no doubt that the Board is committed to prioritizing women and diverse candidates...and will name one or more diverse directors to the Board by the end of 2015," the company pledged Tuesday.

To keep her spot on the board, Ms. Wynn will need to get the most- or second-most votes of the three directors up for election. Though she owns a 9.4% stake in Wynn, she said she is already assured of getting more than 19% of the votes because Mr. Wynn, who owns 9.9% of the company's shares, is contractually obligated to vote for her due to the shareholder agreement.

Garnering the rest could be an uphill battle, as some major investors have expressed concern that, despite his obligation to support her candidacy, Mr. Wynn actually wants his former wife off the board and that her re-election would complicate his management of the company.

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