Wall
St. Bets on Gambling on the Web
As reported by the New York
Times: "Internet casinos are outlaw operations
in the eyes of the federal government, but they
look like solid investments to many of Wall
Street's largest firms.
"Blue-chip
investment houses like Goldman Sachs, Merrill
Lynch and Fidelity now hold hundreds of millions
of dollars in shares of online casinos and betting
parlors, which are publicly traded on the London
Stock Exchange and headquartered in places like
Costa Rica or Gibraltar.
"The
growing participation by American investors
underscores a striking gap between the federal
law-enforcement position on online gambling
and the realities behind what has emerged as
a booming business.
"It
also highlights the difficulty of policing cross-border
activity in the Internet age at the same time
that electronic commerce and a global economy
are creating fast economic partners across national
boundaries.
"Legal
experts are divided over whether American investors
and the investment houses that operate mutual
funds could themselves be seen as criminally
liable for their actions by providing financial
backing for offshore casinos.
"The
difference with Internet gambling is that the
activity takes place on domestic shores - with
Americans placing bets online using their home
computers - and the Justice Department has stated
clearly that the operators are violating American
law.
"...Internet
gambling analysts and company executives said
that the investments highlight how widely the
federal policy is, in essence, being ignored..."
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