Archive for the ‘Gambling’ Category

Gambling’s move online likely to cost tribes

WASHINGTON — Indian tribes that have made billions of dollars from legalized gambling stand the most to lose as gaming migrates to the Internet, experts told Congress on Thursday.

So much so, some said, that lawmakers should consider forms of protection for tribes, perhaps even compensation for lost revenue they have come to count on to sustain themselves and provide services on their reservations.

The discussion before the Senate Indian Affairs Committee shed light on an emerging issue as Congress and states consider legalizing and regulating online poker. Indian tribes brought in $26.48 billion from brick and mortar casinos and bingo halls in 2009.

Many tribes operate through special state compacts that limit gaming to their reservations. But that concept suddenly seems outdated as states consider legalizing forms of gaming via ethernet and wireless in the wake of a Justice Department ruling in December.

In much less than one decade we are going to see Internet gambling legalized by all the states, gaming law expert I. Nelson Rose, distinguished senior professor at Whittier Law School, told senators. Unless Congress figures out a way to protect particularly those in small states, I think a lot of the tribes are going to be out of luck.

Fitting tribes into the Internet gaming puzzle is one of the most complex issues facing policymakers, Rose said.

The gambling issues are extremely complex, the Internet is complex and you have Indian law, he said. Also, there are different laws from state to state and you can have different laws with tribes from inside the state. And we really didnt get into international law.

Kevin Washburn, dean of the University of New Mexico School of Law Administration, said issues facing gaming tribes is one reason Congress needs to pass a bill putting the federal government in charge of Internet gambling rather than leaving it to the states.

An entity at the federal level would be keenly focused on protecting the importance of Indian gaming to Indian tribes, he said, noting the revenues that sustain tribal services.

Internet gaming poses some risk to that very strong revenue source, and if that revenue source goes away that is going to be a federal responsibility to meet those needs, he said.

Rose said with few exceptions tribes wont have the money or the political clout to claim invaluable state licenses to offer online poker. In California, he predicted a license would go for one hundred million dollars up front.

Tribes now are granted a form of geographic exclusivity through their compacts with states, a status that would be encroached by online offerings, senators were told.

Weve invested nearly a billion dollars tied to our geographic area. That is what we have negotiated for, said Robert Odawi Porter, president of the Seneca Nation of Indians in western New York. Opening up Internet gaming beyond those geographic borders and allowing… the New York lottery to prey upon and seize business opportunities from patrons in our exclusivity zone is our greatest threat.

We cannot stand for the disruption of these compacts either in New York or anywhere in Indian country, Porter said.

Patrick Fleming, representing the Poker Players Alliance, said Internet poker is not a threat to tribes. Poker, he said, accounts for only 1 percent of tribal gaming revenue.

On the other hand, he said, it has been shown the popularity of online poker has driven players to try their skills at brick and mortar casinos. There is a symbiotic relationship between those who play poker online and those who play it live, he said.

Committee chairman Sen. Daniel Akaka, D-Hawaii, posed a question about possible compensation for tribes that might be affected by changes.

Akaka got affirmation from Glenn Feldman, a Phoenix attorney who represents the Cabazon Band of Mission Indians. In 1986, Feldman argued for the Southern California tribe before the Supreme Court in a case that yielded the landmark ruling leading to the legalization of gambling on Indian reservations.

There needs to be some accommodation for that loss of exclusivity, Feldman said. Tribes probably have more to lose from the expansion of Internet gaming than any other segment of the gaming industry.

I cant give you a formula but it is entirely appropriate that Congress give some consideration to that potential loss of exclusivity and protect it in some way. The $26 billion in revenue today is funding health programs, education programs, senior citizen programs, and tribes cant afford to lose that revenue stream.

Contact Stephens Washington Bureau Chief Steve Tetreault at stetreault@stephensmedia.com or 202-783-1760.

Gambling board toothless against rogue operators

There is a lot of illegal online gambling occurring that the National Gambling Board is not aware of, says CEO Baby Tyawa.

Deadwood gambling limits could go up

The South Dakota Commission on Gaming considered submitting legislation to repeal the three-casino limit.

Harry Christianson of Rapid City, a former owner of Deadwood establishments and now a member of the regulatory commission, said the change was an idea he brought to the commission.

He said his company, when it began in 1990, had three retail licenses and it took about 15 seconds to realize the limitation could be circumvented by making a space lease-back arrangement with an employee.

He described the license limit as a charade.

It was there for one reason, and that was to limit the participants in that industry to the ones who were already there, Christianson said.

Legalized gambling began in Deadwood more than 20 years ago with a $5 bet limit. That rose to $100 in 2000.

Nelson said the $5 limit was intended to be more attractive than the $2 charitable bets in North Dakota at the time. He said the $100 limit now is a barrier, because slot-machine programs have to be written differently for Deadwood, and therefore Deadwood gets new games later.

Competition and the smoking ban have pushed Deadwood into a decline for the first time, with a 6 percent drop last year in gaming activity. Nelson said the decision was made to pursue a higher bet limit rather than seek an exemption to the smoking ban.

Bet limits in other states currently are North Dakota, $250, Minnesota, $1,000; and Colorado, $100, while Iowa and Nevada have no limits.

I think this is an excellent opportunity. I see no downside to it, Sen. Stan Adelstein, R-Rapid City, said.

Senate District 44 Lawmakers Split on Gambling

Senate District 44 Lawmakers Split on Gambling

Sen. Ron Latz backs a downtown casino, while Rep. Ryan Winkler doesnt think the state should be in the gambling business.

Friend of Michelle Young recounts conversations about money, gambling

The therapist said Michelle Young told her that someone had forced himself upon her sexually during college, and though she had been able to have intimacy with other boyfriends since then, her sexual experiences with her husband lacked intimacy.

Michelle Young cried often during that session, the therapist said, echoing an observation that Linda Fisher, the mother of Michelle Young noted a month before her death.

I distinctively remember that I was downstairs, and she had her head in my lap, and I was stroking her hair, Fisher said today during the retrial of Young. I just felt like she was totally void of life.

Jason Young is accused of killing his wife in the early hours of Nov. 3. 2006, in the master bedroom of their home in the Enchanted Oaks neighborhood just south of Raleigh.

He was tried in June of last year, and a jury deadlocked eight for acquittal and four for conviction.

The retrial has been somewhat different from the first time, but many of the contentions are the same.

Fisher, a retired school teacher from Sayville, NY, was a source of tension in Jason and Michelle Youngs marriage, prosecutors and others contend.

Throughout the retrial, prosecutors continue to raise questions about Jason Youngs reluctance to speak with law enforcement, family and others about his whereabouts in the hours before and after his wifes death.

Linda Fisher testified about Jason Young relinquishing custody of Cassidy to Meredith Fisher, her younger daughter.

Jason Young, she explained, would have been asked to undergo a psychological evaluation and sit for a deposition had he continued a legal battle against the Fishers.

It was not until the first trial of Young that he offered an account of his whereabouts.

Jennifer Powers, a high school friend of Michelle Youngs, recounted several conversations the women had about Jason Young, the 37-year-old medical software salesman accused of killing his pregnant wife.

She recalled one telephone call when Michelle Young told her she was pregnant with Cassidy.

Michelle and Jason Young were living together at the time.

Powers said Michelle Young told her Jason Young wanted her to have an abortion, that if she continued the pregnancy he would resent her and the baby for the rest of their lives.

But the couple married several months later and Cassidy Young was born in March 2004.

After the couple married, Powers recalled several conversations about money, one Michelle and Jason Young talked about having one mutual bank account for family finances and two others. Michelle Young and Jason Young each had an account, Powers said, because they had argued about mutual spending on gifts and other items.

On another occasion, Michelle Young told Powers that she discovered Jason Young had an online gambling account, but she could not complain because he was successful.

She believed his account was up, the dollar amount, Powers said. She didnt elaborate any further.

Prosecutors contend Jason Young killed his wife early on Nov. 3, 2006, hours after checking into a Hampton Inn in Hillsville, Va., about a three-hour drive from Raleigh.

Hotel cameras caught images of Jason Young checking into the hotel late Nov. 2, 2006. Cameras also show Young leaving the hotel shortly before midnight, but do not show him returning.

Young took the stand in his defense during a trial eight months ago that ended with a jury hung 8-4 for acquittal. Young said he did not kill his wife or have anything to do with it.

Though prosecutors contended Young killed his wife during their closing arguments in the first trial, they also contended he might have had help with the killing.

The defense team argues that Young did not murder his wife, that DNA evidence not tied to Jason Young or anyone else tested as part of the investigation shows others were in the Wake County house the couple shared.

Michelle Young was bludgeoned to death, suffering at least 30 blows, according to the medical examiner.

Jason Young, according to investigators, had no cuts, scrapes or bruises, except one on a big toe, when investigators looked him over hours after his wifes body was found.

Casino gambling revenue shows uptick nationally

In Nevada, the largest jurisdiction, gross gaming revenue reached $10.7 billion, a 2.8% rise from 2010. The increase was pegged largely on a resurgence in Las Vegas, which is the biggest city in that market, according to the Nevada Gaming Control Boards annual report released Thursday.

But in the USAs second-biggest market, Atlantic City, gross revenue for last year fell 6.9% to $3.3 billion, according to the New Jersey Division of Gaming Enforcement.

  • STORY: Caesars up more than 70% in first day of trading

In Pennsylvania, the third-largest market, annual gross gaming revenue topped $3 billion for the first time with a 21.6% increase over 2010, the Pennsylvania Gaming Control Board reports. The outsized gain in Pennsylvania can be tied to casino expansion in the state as well as the states authorization of table games in mid-2010, says Bill Eadington, director of the Institute for the Study of Gambling and Commercial Gaming at the University of Nevada, Reno

Not all of the USAs 22 states with casino gaming have reported their revenue yet for calendar year 2011. But through November, the reported total of $32.56 billion was running 2.3% ahead of the first 11 months of 2010, unaudited data by the American Gaming Association show.

Association figures dont include tribal casinos, which comprise about 40%, or $26 billion, of total US casino revenue annually, estimates Eadington.

Stil, the trend of 2011s association figures has industry observers cautiously optimistic in the aftermath of a recession that pinched bettors wallets and from which the casino industry has yet to fully recover..

From what Ive seen, it seems in general to be picking up a little bit. Its not picking up 90s style, but a little bit, says David Schwartz, director of the Center for Gaming Research at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas.

It all comes down to tourists comfort level on parting with their money, says Frank Fahrenkopf, president of the American Gaming Association.

Were talking discretionary income, Fahrenkopf says of the 2011 revenue. People have been on very tight budgets and not spending as much, so this is good news. 2008 and 09 were down and 2010 flattened out, and we seem to have started a gradual gain.

States with calendar-year increases in revenue through November, according to the American Gaming Association include: Florida, Illinois, Iowa, Kansas, Maryland, Michigan, Missouri, Nevada, New Mexico, New York, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island and West Virginia.

States with declines include: Delaware, Colorado, Indiana, Louisiana, Maine, Mississippi, New Jersey and South Dakota.

Our industry nationwide is not monolithic, Fahrenkopf says. Regional markets, riverboat gaming states like Missouri, they did better than destination resort places.

He also points to special problem regions, such as Atlantic City and Reno.

Atlantic City has just gotten clobbered, he says. Look what happened in states around it. Delaware, West Virginia, Pennsylvania have gaming now. Atlantic City really depends on the Philadelphia market, and now if you live in Philly you dont have to take that long drive.

And while Las Vegas is surging, northern Nevada 450 miles away continues to struggle against tribal casinos siphoning off the drive-up market along key highways from Northern California, he says.

There are very few places where you can distinctly point at Indian gaming and say, It hurts, particularly in winter, he says. But Reno is one of them.

Contributing: ODriscoll also writes for the Reno Gazette-Journal

DC Council rejects Internet gambling

Posted at 02:57 PM ET, 02/07/2012
D.C. Council rejects Internet gambling
By Tim Craig

The D.C. Council voted Tuesday to repeal the city’s controversial Internet gambling law, capping a year-long debate about whether it improperly snuck the concept past the public without proper vetting.

After supporters unsuccessfully mounted a last-minute effort to salvage the measure, the council voted 10-2 to end the city’s contract for I-Gaming and reverse the legislation that authorized the games.


Council member Michael A. Brown tried to salvage the concept of Internet gambling.
(BILL O’LEARY – THE WASHINGTON POST)

“I want to make sure we get the best deal for the city,”said Council member Jack Evans (D-Ward 2), the sponsor of the repeal. “I believe it should be set up, so the city gets the best price and the best revenue.”

Internet gambling was quietly added to the city’s lottery contract as a “non-traditional games” option more than three months after the contract passed a 2009 council vote; it was later legalized through first-in-the-nation language added to a 2010 spending bill.

When the contract became entangled in a broader debate about how the council and Mayor Vincent C. Gray (D) managed the city’s lottery contract, gambling opponents gained crucial momentum to repeal the law.

Before the vote, council member Tommy Wells (D-Ward 6) said some members were not aware of what they were voting on when they approved Internet gambling in 2010.

“They didn’t even use the word ‘Internet gambling,’” Wells said. ”They used word ‘I-gambling’…We voted as a city, and decided as a city, that we didn’t want slots….It has to go through a public process. This didn’t go through a public process, but it’s slots.”

Council member Michael A. Brown (I-At large), who pushed through the initial law, attempted Tuesday to salvage the concept. Brown was willing to scrap the city’s contract for I-Gaming with Intralot, which also operates the city, while preserving the underlying legislation that permits Internet gambling.

Brown noted it’s unclear whether the new Republican-controlled Congress, which did not block the 2010 law, would reauthorize Internet-gambling. Brown has also raised concerns that so-called “casino interests” are trying to federalize the Internet gambling in the District.

“This was going to be our thing, our laws, governed by us,” Brown said. “We were going to reap the benefits from tourist, from residents.”

The repeal, which Gray supports, will cost the city an estimated $13.1 million in revenue through September 2015. City officials are working to identify new revenue or spending cuts to account for the change.

While city taxpayers have yet to spend a dime on developing the program, its lottery contractor, Intralot, has spent more than $5 million preparing an iGaming system. It’s possible the company could sue to recoup its costs.

Council member Marion Barry (D-Ward 8), the only member to vote with Brown, derided his colleagues who suggested they did not know what Internet gambling was when the council approved it.

“What kind of legislature are you?” Barry asked. “You giving the public the impression, you didn’t know what you voted for. This council already has a low approval rating… and you are telling me, you didn’t know you voted on something?”

But several members, including Mary M. Cheh (D-Ward 3) and Wells, said they would prefer to start the debate from scratch about whether the city should legalize Internet gambling.

“I believe there is a place we can try this,” Cheh said. “ I just think it can be controlled.”

Staff writer Mike DeBonis contributed to this report.

By Tim Craig
 | 
02:57 PM ET, 02/07/2012

Previous:
OSSE bus drivers among top offenders in city unemployment fraud, Nathan says

Next:
D.C. snow shoveling fines on hold

Las Vegas visitor count, gambling up in December

  • Email
  • Print
  • Aa
  • Tweet

Las Vegas visitor count, gambling up in December

Published: February 9, 2012 8:33 PM

By The Associated Press

Quick ReadLas Vegas visitor count up in 2011; tourists, gamblers returning to recession-weary city

(AP) — Las Vegas saw a 2.5 percent increase in visitors in December compared with the same month a year ago in the latest sign that Nevadas devastated economy might finally be turning around.

The Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority reported Thursday that nearly 3 million people visited in December.

In all, the citys visitor count was up 4.3 percent in 2011 compared with 2010….

As others see it: Gambling revenue not same as taxes

Published February 10, 2012, 12:00 AM

As others see it: Gambling revenue not same as taxes
As Minnesota’s Legislature ponders the intricacies of getting a new stadium for the Minnesota Vikings built, and how to pay for it, the issue of increasing gambling revenues keeps coming up.

By:

The Journal of New Ulm, Worthington Daily Globe

GiGse Announces ‘Start-up Launchpad’ at the iGaming Conference in San Francisco

Partners with NVPR to help produce and promote event

San Francisco (PRWEB) February 10, 2012

GiGse announced today the addition of Start-Up Launchpad at the iGaming conference to be held in San Francisco, CA, on April 24th-26th, 2012. The event aims to spotlight innovative and disruptive start-ups that blend the very best from the worlds of gambling and social gaming.The 12th Global iGaming Summit amp; Expo (GiGse) will also explore how the gambling industry can better prepare itself for the emergence of the regulated iGaming developments in North America.

The recent $500 million acquisition of social game developer DoubleDown Interactive and its flagship title DoubleDown Casino by the major slot machine manufacturer International Game Technology (IGT), has made the long awaited and speculated convergence between social gaming and gambling finally become a lucrative reality.

GiGse will offer a platform for such social, free-to-play, fantasy gaming developers to showcase their businesses and find potential partners. GiGses Start-Up Launchpad will present up to 5 new companies that offer a disruptive approach to gaming. The 5 businesses will be selected from a group of applicants. They will be quizzed by a panel of industry experts and the audience will vote for their favorite.

Clarion Gaming, organizers of GiGse, have successfully used a similar format at their European event, European iGaming Congress amp; Expo (EiG).

The Start-Up LaunchPad is one of the most attended sessions at EiG and we believe that GiGse would be a perfect place to replicate this session format, in particular as GiGse is taking place in San Francisco, home to disruptive technologies and social gaming, commented Ewa Bakun, Clarion Gamings Head of Content and Event Director for GiGse. NVPR brings perspective and experience that we look forward to utilizing to help our attendees maximize their experience at the event. We are thrilled to have them as a partner.

While social gaming companies such as DoubleDown, Zynga and GSN have been cashing in on a non-wagering, play-for-fun virtual currency business model that uses social networks as a platform, the gambling industry is now trying to catch up with the social gaming phenomenon as a means to tap into new and younger player demographics.

IGT should be congratulated for their bold move to embrace change and remain ahead of the curve by acquiring the disruptive DoubleDown. This move ensures their leadership position in the future, said Hal Bringman, president and founder of NVPR. GiGse looks to further foster this trend by adding the Start-up Launchpad to the agenda ensuring a more dynamic and competitive atmosphere to the event. Were honored to bring our well-established track record of repeatedly introducing many of digital media and social gamings most disruptive start-ups that ultimately become top brands in the marketplace.

Companies such as Ryzing Bingo, Crowdpark, Fanduel and others have been successfully using the virtual currency and fantasy betting model to monetize social gamblers, offering a legal alternative to markets where wagering is not allowed. Following the social gambling trend, there are an increasing number of game developers and start-up companies that working to capitalize on this potential, both on and off Facebook, and other social networks.

Clarion Gaming is now accepting submissions for the Start-up LaunchPad from recently created businesses and start-ups from the social gaming space. They are also looking for other innovative and disruptive business approaches that might revolutionize the emerging online gambling industry in the USA. To find out more about GiGse, the GiGse LaunchPad and the submission criteria, please find more information at www.gigse.com.

About GiGse

High-level attendance by over 350 delegates in 2011, inspiring debates that resonated with the industry for months and the implied claim that GiGses lottery panel has inspired the Reid/Kyl letter to the DoJ, have solidified GiGses influential position as the key event that significantly contributes to the US legislative and commercial debate. www.gigse.com

About Clarion Gaming

Clarion Gaming is the first choice provider of quality information, events and services to the global gaming, gambling and betting industries. It is dedicated to supporting the industry – whether traditional or new, supplier or buyer, trade association or government department. Clarion Gamings ongoing goal is to maintain its position of leadership both within the industry and in representing the industry to the business community at large, providing world class customer service in the process. www.totallygaming.com

About NVPR

NVPR is a digital media consultancy well-known for introducing disruptive technologies to the market. With an ROI emphasis and an entrepreneurial mindset, we help companies reach the next level, whether select start-ups, or major multinational corporations. Founded in 1998, the firm launched the digital music revolution and has continued to lead the digital media marketplace through today. The firm consults a wide range of clients providing them with strategic PR, marketing and business development services all delivered with a global perspective. For more information, please visit www.nvpr.com

Contact:

Hal Bringman

NVPR

+1.323.851.6877 (office)

+1.310.210.8011 (mobile)

hal(@)nvpr.com

@halbringman

www.nvpr.com

###

For the original version on PRWeb visit: www.prweb.com/releases/prweb2012/2/prweb9186142.htm