Gaming's
Tangled Web
The Justice Department says it's
against the law, though operators say there's
no federal law that specifically outlaws online
gambling and cite a federal court decision supporting
that view.
It's illegal
in Nevada, which is home to one of the largest
networking events for online casino marketers.
Internet gambling experts say players and operators
may never be prosecuted here.
Nevada
began the process to legalize it, saying the
state was losing potential tax dollars to offshore
Web sites. But that process stopped, with regulators
concerned about running afoul of the feds and
jeopardizing the state's primary economic engine.
Internet
gambling will generate some $12 billion in revenue
this year, with more than half of those customers
coming from the United States. Yet the 60 or
so jurisdictions that now license Internet gambling
sites are located far from the reach of the
Justice Department, in countries that have legalized
it.
Peter
Marcus, a Londoner who represents the world's
second-largest Internet casino, is well aware
of these contradictions. He's one of only a
few offshore operators who isn't afraid to discuss
them.
"I
find it very strange that a country that so
much believes in freedom of expression has a
problem with (Internet gambling)," Marcus
said during an interview in Las Vegas last month,
where he attended the Casino Affiliate Convention.
Close
to 700 marketers for online casinos attended
the little-known event at the Stardust, which
was held the same week as the Global Gaming
Expo, the world's largest convention for land-based
casinos.
The
casino companies that attended Global Gaming
Expo didn't speak at the Casino Affiliate Conference,
while the online operators at the Stardust were
conspicuously absent from the Expo's trade show
floor at the Las Vegas Convention Center.
Internet
gambling sites continue to run television ads
and host high-profile charity events in the
United States, effectively thumbing their noses
at the Justice Department.
And
Marcus has gone public with his disagreement.
"It's
very clear to us that online poker and online
casinos are not covered by (U.S. law),"
he said.
Marcus,
like many other operators, wants legitimacy.
"I
want the U.S. authorities to regulate it,"
he said. "I want them to make (the regulations)
as strict as they want."
Hundreds
of Internet casinos now on the Web are minting
profits in the shadow of the Justice Department,
which has called Internet gambling a potential
haven for money launderers, terrorists and other
criminals. The feds cite the Wire Act, a 1961
law aimed at curbing bookmaking by organized
crime.
The
Wire Act has received at least one major defeat
in court.
In
ruling against online gamblers who disputed
charges for losses on their credit cards, a
federal appeals court in 2001 said the Wire
Act did not apply to casino-style gambling on
the Internet.
The
Justice Department disagrees with the 5th U.S.
Circuit Court of Appeals ruling, which is widely
cited by Internet casino operators. The gamblers
who lost their case did not appeal the case
to the U.S. Supreme Court.
Meanwhile,
Nevada passed legislation in 2001 to legalize
Internet gambling provided that certain conditions
were met. But Nevada regulators weren't yet
convinced that the Internet could be effectively
policed. The effort ultimately died in 2002
when the Nevada Gaming Control Board received
an opinion letter from the Justice Department
stating that Internet gambling violated the
Wire Act.
At
least one territory has already challenged the
Justice Department.
The
U.S. Virgin Islands signed Internet gambling
legislation into law in 2001. In a letter to
the territory's Casino Control Commission in
2002, the Virgin Islands Attorney General said
authorizing Internet gambling operations on
the islands wouldn't violate federal law.
In
January 2004, the chairman of the territory's
Casino Control Commission received a letter
from a U.S. attorney representing the Justice
Department, threatening prosecution.
As
a result, no gambling sites have set up shop
in the Virgin Islands, preferring to locate
in other parts of the world beyond the reach
of the feds.
"Someone
with deep pockets should take that license and
take (the Justice Department) to court,"
Frank Catania, former assistant attorney general
and director of the New Jersey Division of Gaming
Enforcement, said at last month's Global Gaming
Expo. Catania, now an Internet gambling consultant,
helped draft the Virgin Islands' still-unused
regulations.
By
contrast, the British government has a hands-off
policy.
Britain
is expected to enact legislation in the next
couple of years that would require Internet
casinos -- which now operate freely in that
country -- to be licensed in Britain or another
jurisdiction that can meet British standards
for blocking minors and compulsive gamblers.
London
is fast becoming the Silicon Valley of online
gambling. At the top of the heap is PartyGaming,
a Gibraltar-based company that went public in
June and soared to a market capitalization of
more than $10 billion. The company owns PartyPoker.com,
considered the world's largest poker site.
Marcus
believes Justice Department will change its
tune once Britain -- which has crafted protections
for gamblers in its regulations -- is on board.
"It
will send a very clear message to the U.S. that
this is the way to go," Marcus said.
That
may not be so easy.
Nevada
regulators and Internet operators still don't
see eye to eye because the mediums are so different,
said Tony Cabot, a Las Vegas attorney and Internet
gambling expert.
Some
aspects of land-based casinos are easier to
regulate than Internet casinos. The opposite
is also true, Cabot said, because online transactions
can be monitored and stored indefinitely.
"On
the other hand, in a casino you have a physical
person in front of you and you can identify
the person, assure that they're a proper age
and they're not intoxicated," Cabot said.
For
Nevada to allow online casinos, regulators would
need a major court victory for Internet gambling
-- either from the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of
Appeals, which includes Nevada, or from the
U.S. Supreme Court, he said.
The
American Gaming Association, which represents
the major commercial casinos, may already be
changing its skeptical position on Internet
gambling.
AGA
Chief Executive Frank Fahrenkopf has previously
been on record opposing Internet gambling, saying
the technology necessary to regulate and police
it doesn't yet exist. The group's members are
divided, with some attempting Internet operations
abroad and others steering clear.
In
an interview last month, Fahrenkopf said some
members have convincingly argued recently that
online gambling can become a legitimately regulated
enterprise.
"We
need to do some hard thinking" about the
regulation issue, he said. "It's an evolving
thing."
MGM
Mirage Chief Executive Terry Lanni says his
company was able to convince regulators in Nevada
and other states that the company's fledgling
online casino based on the Isle of Man would
work.
But
prohibiting American gamblers and making the
signup process more unwieldy for European bettors
hurt business. MGM Mirage closed the site inside
of a year.
Internet
gambling "should be regulated" rather
than criminalized, Lanni said at the Global
Gaming Expo. "I think it's ridiculous for
the federal government to be passing laws that
won't be supported."
Sen.
Jon Kyl, R-Ariz., who failed in his attempt
to attach an Internet gambling prohibition bill
to an appropriations bill in September, still
intends to push similar legislation as he has
attempted to do for the past several years.
Marcus
bristles at the notion that online casinos are
cultivating problem gamblers or breeding criminals,
saying Internet sites can keep meticulous records
that can be automatically forwarded to regulators.
"It's
a lot easier to follow electronic money than
cash," Marcus said. "I can follow
every transaction and when it was made."
InterCasino,
operated from the Netherlands Antilles in the
Caribbean, uses auditing giant PriceWaterhouseCoopers
to review its gambling payouts and NetTeller,
a service run by a Nasdaq-traded company, to
process bets.
"Two
to three years ago there were early adopters
gambling on the Internet," Marcus said.
"Today it's the mass market. The public
wants to know that they're putting their money
into something trustworthy."
Online
gamblers at InterCasino must first register
with a driver's license or passport. The site
will ban players who exhibit signs of a gambling
problem, Marcus said.
"If
someone is using five different payment methods
in two weeks, flipping from one to the other,
that could be a sign," he said.
Those
arguments bear little weight with the Justice
Department.
"Gambling
websites cannot look at their customers to assess
their age and request photo identification,"
John Malcolm, then deputy assistant Attorney
General for the Justice Department's criminal
division, testified before a Senate banking
committee hearing on Kyl's bill in 2003.
Marcus
says U.S. regulators are misguided and that
Internet gambling will continue to flourish
in spite of the opposition.
"It's
a coming of age," he said. "It's the
bar mitzvah of Internet gaming. And I don't
think the U.S. can ignore it."
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