Sheldon Adelson is the 85-year-old billionaire behind the world's largest casino operator, Las Vegas Sands.
Adelson was the son of a cab driver in Boston.
Adelson first started making big money in trade shows. He launched COMDEX, a technology trade show in Las Vegas, with partners in 1979.
Adelson didn't get into the casino business until he was 55 years old. In 1989, he bought the Sands Casino & Hotel in Las Vegas for $128 million.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdIt took two years and cost $1.5 billion to build The Venetian.
The Venetian opened in April 1999. It just celebrated 20 years on the Las Vegas strip.
"The Venetian's success in Las Vegas, and particularly our convention-based business strategy, would end up being the basis for our company receiving coveted licenses in Macao and Singapore," Adelson said in a statement to the Las Vegas Review-Journal, a newspaper he owns.
In 2004, Adelson opened the Sands Macau, which cost at least $265 million to build.
Adelson is also in the media business.
Adelson is married to doctor Miriam Adelson.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdThe Adelsons live in a megamansion in Summerlin, an affluent Las Vegas planned community.
In addition to the Las Vegas mansion, Adelson reportedly owns $52 million worth of property in Malibu, California.
Adelson also owns a 300-foot superyacht that he named "Queen Miri" after his wife, Miriam.
The Las Vegas billionaire travels by private jet.
Adelson reportedly owns an Airbus A345, which he once used to set a record for the longest flight ever to depart from Israel's Ben-Gurion International Airport. According to Haaretz, he made a 17-hour and 40-minute flight from Israel to Honolulu, Hawaii, in 2017.
Adelson is a major donor to Republic politicians.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdAdelson has made at least $25 million in political contributions to Trump, earning him the nickname "Trump's Patron-in-Chief."
Adelson is also a major donor to Jewish organizations.
In March 2019, it was reported that Adelson was being treated for non-Hodgkin's lymphoma.
Ron Reese, a spokesman for Adelson's company, told Fortune that Adelson was experiencing side effects from his medication.
"These side effects have restricted his availability to travel or keep regular office hours," Reese told the magazine in a statement. "They have not, however, prevented him from fulfilling his duties as chairman and CEO."
In April, the casino mogul made $2.2 billion in one week thanks to his property in Macau.