Online Casino News and Information

Archive for September, 2006

Congress welcomes back Prohibition - Internet Gambling Bill Passes

Saturday, September 30th, 2006

EYE ON GAMBLING - EOG

written September 30, 2006

Many local bookmakers such as “Benny the Bullet” were seen partying and rejoicing in Central Park, New York late last night and into the early morning hours today. Their business is expected to quadruple, just as bootlegging did years ago.

I also imagine that some Poker houses are equally ecstatic to welcome back basement games.

The reason for all of this jubilation is due to Prohibition returning to the United States once again. Only this time, Prohibition is disguised in the mask of an Internet gambling bill.

Lawmakers stayed up late as well, making sure to throw our country back into the Dark Ages. It became apparent that Republicans spearheaded by Senator First would stop at nothing to prohibit Internet gambling. In a last ditch desperation move, the Senate majority leader was able to attach legislation to ban online gambling to a Port Security bill that had no correlation whatsoever with online betting. And it was automatically passed in the Senate without even a debate or a formal vote.

To summarize what was passed, this bill is designed to prevent the use of payment instruments (credit cards, fund transfers, etc.) for certain forms of online gambling that are defined as “unlawful Internet gambling.” The bill requires financial institutions to identify and block payments related to so-called unlawful Internet gambling transactions. If there is a violation, the government may file a lawsuit (known as an injunction) to prevent or restrain the violation. The bill provides a special exemption for three types of Internet gambling: (1) horse racing under the Interstate Horseracing Act (IHA), so OTBs and account wagering systems can remain in business, (2) Indian gambling that takes place on a reservation or between two reservations; and (3) Internet gambling that occurs solely within a state’s own borders, referred to as Intra-state gambling.

It is hypocritical of our government to make exceptions for some forms of online gambling, while declaring it illegal for most others to compete.

According to our Friends at onlinegamblingmythsandfacts.com, this bill should not be signed by President Bush for the following reasons:

1-it interferes with private personal freedom- Americans have the right to engage in recreational activities from the privacy of their own home.

2- it is opposed by the majority of voters and supported by a small minority.

3- it is opposed by leading newspapers and scholars who cover the realm of Internet gambling.

4- it will not work because Americans want to gamble online and will find a way to do so whether it is legal or not.

5- it will drive revenues and potential tax revenues offshore.

6- it violates US trade treaty obligations and a WTO ruling because among other reasons, this bill favors US remote gambling (online horse racing, online lotteries, etc), while seeking to ban foreign remote gambling (offshore casinos and sports books, etc).

7- the bill is totally out of line with a number of forward thinking countries-including the United Kingdom– that have decided to regulate online gambling rather than seeking ineffective ways to try to ban it.

8- it will not accomplish its purported goals (propoganda) of fighting money laundering, organized crime, problem gambling or underage gambling.

9. it will burden Internet service providers, search engines, and banking/financial services companies, third parties who will bear the cost and responsibility to try to comply with the new law.

10. it is detrimental and contrary to the concepts of freedom of expression and ‘Net neutrality’ embraced by Congress.

In fact, Senator Frank R. Lautenberg (D) from New Jersey called the entire process a “sham” last night by saying no one among the committee had even seen the final language of the Bill and the head of the conference board wasn’t even there in attendance.

It is a travesty and a tragedy to witness our government cram the Senate majority leader’s agenda onto a much needed Port security bill that has nothing at all to do with Internet Gambling.

It is comical to imagine Americans getting arrested for playing Texas holdem in their homes or for taking the 6 points on the New England Patriots against the Bengals on Sunday.

If my interpretation is correct, the President will sign this legislation within two weeks, but it allows 270 days before it is regulated and enforced.

The clock is ticking and time appears to be running out. Whether or not this bill will ever really be enforced remains to be seen.

In my opinion, it won’t happen, but I will save that for another column.

written by Kenneth Weitzner–EOG

–EOG

THIS ARTICLE CAN BE FOUND AT EYE ON GAMBLING - EOG

ONLINE GAMING BATTLE WAGES BETWEEN US AND ANTIGUA AND BABUDA

Thursday, September 28th, 2006

TAX-NEWS.COM
by Amanda Banks, Tax-News.com, London 28 September 2006

America’s hard-line stance on the issue of internet gambling is likely to be at the top of the agenda during the visit by a delegation from the government of Antigua and Barbuda to Washington this week.

The delegation, led by Minister of Finance Dr Errol Cort, has been holding a series of meetings with representatives of the US Department of State, the US Trade Representative, the Department of Justice and with Members of Congress, in an attempt to resolve the impasse over the American government’s refusal to comply with a WTO ruling against US actions preventing banks from processing transactions from online gaming firms based in the islands.

READ THE COMPLETE ARTICLE AT TAX-NEWS.COM

Sportingbet Takes Offense On US War On Internet Gambling

Thursday, September 28th, 2006

This Is Money (www.thisismoney.co.uk)

Bill Condie, Evening Standard
27 September 2006

Online gaming outfit Sportingbet has gone on the offensive against the American authorities ahead of a crucial hearing for Peter Dicks, its former chairman.

Dicks is returning to the US tomorrow to fight moves to put him on trial in Lousiana on charges of breaking state laws against internet gambling. Executive director Nigel Payne has attacked American attempts to outlaw his industry, saying they are driven by commercial interests and not social welfare concerns.

Writing in the New York Times today, Payne - whose company owns ParadisePoker and sportsbook.com - says: ‘I believe that the real picture that emerges is one of fiscal protectionism that is being masked by political manoeuvring and adroit public relations

READ THE COMPLETE ARTICLE AT THIS IS MONEY (www.thisismoney.co.uk)

Efforts to Attach Online Gambling Bill To Critical Defense Legislation Fails

Thursday, September 28th, 2006

ALL HEADLINE NEWS
September 27, 2006 5:00 p.m. EST

Jacob Cherian - All Headline News Staff Writer

Washington, DC (AHN) - An effort to stick a bill banning most forms of Internet gambling onto a “must-pass” defense bill has been stopped. However, Republican supporters are looking for alternative ways to pass the online gambling bill.

Senate Armed Services Committee Chairman John Warner wrote, “I have firmly opposed putting any (unrelated) bills in the conference report,” in a letter to Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist.

Although Warner did not refer to the online gambling bill as such, he was talking senators trying to stick nine unrelated bills to the pending defense bill.

However, Republican aides say that First has not given up on passing the gambling bill before Congress adjourns to campaign for the November 7 elections, at the end of the week. Aides say that First along with other supporters are planning to tag it to other provisions such as tightening port security against threats of terrorism.

MORE - READ THE COMPLETE STORY AT ALL HEADLINE NEWS

William Hill Stops All Bets From US Customers

Thursday, September 28th, 2006

IRISH EXAMINER (www.irishexaminer.com)

27/09/2006 - 3:10:39 PM

British bookmaker William Hill said today it had stopped taking casino and poker bets from US customers amid confusion over internet gambling laws there.

Online sports betting contravenes the 1961 Wire Act in America, which bans the placing of bets on sporting events via the telephone line in the states.

William Hill already has measures in place to prevent American gamblers logging onto its website and placing bets on sports events.

But the firm said it was also pulling out of casino and poker until there was a better understanding over how the law will affect its business.

William Hill said in a statement it would not accept casino or poker business from customers with a US address or US-issued credit card.

Chief executive David Harding said: “The advice we have had is that online gambling is not illegal under the Wire Act, but there are clearly attempts within the US to make it illegal.

READ THE COMPLETE ARTICLE AT IRISH EXAMINER

MORE WARRANTS FOR ONLINE GAMBLING’S SPORTINGBET STAFF

Wednesday, September 27th, 2006

SCOTSMAN.COM

LONDON (Reuters) - Louisiana is determined to stop Internet gambling companies from taking bets in the southern U.S. state and has issued four arrest warrants for staff at Sportingbet , a police officer told the Financial Times.

Captain Joe Lentini, head of the casino section of Louisiana’s Police Gaming Enforcement division, said in an interview published on Wednesday the warrants included one for Peter Dicks, former chairman of the UK-listed company.
Click to learn more…

Dicks is due to appear in a New York court on Thursday to hear if he will be extradited to Louisiana, the newspaper said.

The other three warrants were for Sportingbet executives or directors, Lentini said, declining to reveal names.

In a worrying sign for the lucrative online gambling business, the officer told the FT he was also investigating other companies and their bosses were at risk of arrest.

“We have agents all over the state working on this daily. There are other sites we’re looking into,” Lentini said.

Louisiana is one of a number of U.S. states that prohibits Internet gambling, which has become a hot topic in recent weeks amid fears of a crackdown by the United States.

READ ALL OF THIS ARTICLE AT SCOTSMAN.COM

Enforcing Louisiana’s Ban On Online Gambling -

Wednesday, September 27th, 2006

MSNBC
By Andrew Ward
Updated: 9:40 p.m. ET Sept 26, 2006

Louisiana’s investigation into online gambling originated in a routine staff meeting this year, when Captain Joe Lentini of Louisiana’s Police Gaming Enforcement division reminded officers of the state’s law against online gambling.

“I saw that this was a growing problem so I told our staff that I wanted them to find out if these sites were taking bets online from Louisiana,” says Mr Lentini, who heads the division’s casino section.
Story continues below ↓ advertisement

Over the next several months, his agents have been trawling the internet to find gambling sites that are prepared to flout state laws by accepting bets in Louisiana.

Sportingbet, the UK-listed company whose former chairman, Peter Dicks, was arrested in New York this month on a Louisiana warrant, was the first site that the agents snared.

“It was the luck of the draw,” says Mr Lentini. “That was the first one that came up on the screen and it was one of the easiest ones to find information about.”

MORE - READ THE COMPLETE ARTICLE AT MSNBC

CryptoLogic To Move Headquarters To Ireland

Wednesday, September 27th, 2006

THE TORONTO STAR
Sep. 25, 2006. 01:20 PM
TARA PERKINS
BUSINESS REPORTER

Toronto-based CryptoLogic Inc. is moving its headquarters to Ireland early next year, it announced Monday.

CryptoLogic makes software for gaming websites, specializing in poker and casino games.

The decision to move was not a result of the recent U.S. crackdown on online gambling, said CryptoLogic CEO Lewis Rose. But the uncertainty that’s been created as British executives of online gambling companies have been arrested in the United States has validated CryptoLogic’s decision, he said.

Both U.S. and Canadian legislation on online gambling remain unclear, he said.

READ THE COMPLETE ARTICLE AT THE TORONTO STAR

Resignations Stoke Online Gaming Fears

Wednesday, September 27th, 2006

MSNBC
By Roger Blitz, Leisure Industries Correspondent
Updated: 11:10 p.m. ET Sept 25, 2006

A former US attorney who served under former US President George H.W. Bush resigned on Monday as chairman and director of an online gambling company, highlighting fears among executives in the sector that they face arrest by travelling to the US or other countries taking a tough line against gambling.

World Gaming, an Aim-listed company whose operations are almost entirely US-facing, announced the resignation of James Grossman, along with that of Clare Roberts, a fellow non-executive director, after a board meeting of the company, which has offices in Antigua, London and Vancouver.

MORE - THE COMPLETE ARTICLE CAN BE READ AT MSNBC

INVESTORS LOSE BILLIONS ON ONLINE GAMBLING

Monday, September 25th, 2006

FINANCIAL NEWS
Tara Loader Wilkinson
25 Sep 2006
Regulatory crackdown and arrests in the US have hit pipeline of gaming flotations

Investors in online poker should know they can lose their shirts on one bad hand. But they might not have expected such a sustained run of bad cards that has seen the value of online gaming companies collapse by 51% from this year’s highs. It has also hit the prospects of those companies hoping to cash in on the tail end of the online poker craze by going public.

A combination of a clampdown by US regulators, high profile arrests of executives and questions over the sustainability of the business model of online gambling companies has wiped more than £6bn (€9.5bn) off the value of the big five listed companies.

PartyGaming, the biggest in its sector, is down a third from its highs in May, as is BETonSports, whose chief executive was arrested in the US this summer. Shares in 888.com have tumbled 47% from their peak this year, while SportingBet, whose chairman was held in the US last month, have dropped 58%. The worst performer is BetandWin, an Austrian gaming company whose co-chief executives were arrested in France this month and whose shares have collapsed more than 80%.

MORE - READ THE COMPLETE ARTICLE AT FINANCIAL NEWS (www.efinancialnews.com)