http://cryptologicsucks.com/managear...asp?c=10&a=113
Cryptologic Sucks
Home Thursday, April 12, 2007
Cryptologic Inc. the real Mafia of online gambling. CRYPTOLOGIC INC. & WagerLogic & ECash Direct Limited are the biggest crooks in the industry.
Cryptologic Inc. and Intercasino.com are the Real Mafia of online gambling. SERIOUS WARNING: PURE ORGANIZED CRIME and the big MAFIA of Online Gambling.
Cryptologic Inc. and the HEROIN link. The gangsters and Mafia and heroin trafficker are controlling Cryptologic Inc. and intercasino.com and Cryptologic Inc. is the worst business model and biggest rip-off in the entire industry.
The source of the material and information published on this site is: Cryptologic’s directors, Cryptologic’s insiders, Cryptologic’s management, Cryptologic’s employees, Cryptologic’s ex-employees, Cryptologic’s licensees, Cryptologic’s players, financial institutions and brokers, game developers, CasinoMagazine.com, GamblingMagazine.com, PlayerMagazine.com, GamingMagazine.com, informants. CryptologicSucks.com is owned by a U.S. company registered in Nevada. IMPORTANT, none of the information below is anonymous unless specifically indicated. Thousands more complaints will be published here, so check back often.
Lewis Rose from Cryptologic Inc. is in charge of the organized crime operations and Dennis Wing is chairman. When things got hot, the Cryptologic's crooks Andrew Rivkin, Mark Rivkin, Jenny Solursh, Harvey Solursh and Jean Noelting all resigned and disappeared because they didn't want to be around when the police will knock on the door. Now Cryptologic's Harvey Solursh is back as director and the rotten and corrupted and crooked lawyer Robert H. Stikeman is now vice chairman. Cryptologic Inc. is fundamentally a fraudulent company with a rotten business model based on fraud, lies, cheating others, and cooking the books! These crooks can't do business unless they cheat someone.
Cryptologic Inc. and the heroin connection with the Intercasino.com A drug dealer financed Cryptologic Inc.
MEET THE REAL MAFIA OF ONLINE GAMING: Cryptologic Inc. and Intercasino.com
Bill Scott also known as William "Billy" Scott is the bookie from Toledo, Ohio and the criminal who financed Cryptologic Inc. and Intercasino.com and Sands of the Caribbean as well as many illegal sportsbooks.
He laundered his heroin and other dirty money by financing Cryptologic Inc. and Intercasino.com and other fraudulent companies. Today, he still does heavy business with the Russian Mafia, Cryptologic Inc. and uses their rigged software under a large number of different names. This is the perfect method to launder his dirty money, and Cryptologic Inc. needs him to support the falling share price of their junk and illegal company, openly trading on the stock market.
Cryptologic's Bill Scott remains in Antigua as a fugitive because he will be arrested if he returns to the U.S because a federal warrant has been issued for his arrest.
Cryptologic's Bill Scott served time in federal prison for racketeering and other offences, including six years in prison for extortion and conspiracy, and he has been heavily involved with heroin and cocaine trafficking, tax fraud and illegal gambling. He served another sentence of two years in federal prison for other offences.
A warrant has been issued for his arrest on felony conspiracy charges, but he's not about to surrender. Cryptologic's Bill Scott is a member of one of Toledo's best known racketeering families and he was arrested and jailed too many times to keep track.
Some of the reasons why Cryptologic really sucks!
New Jersey Sues Another Eight Internet Betting Sites. The State Of New Jersey Has Broadened Its Attack On Internet Gambling With Additional Lawsuits.
The State of New Jersey has broadened its attack on Internet gambling with additional lawsuits filed Tuesday against eight sites, including some of the biggest names in the business.
New Jersey Attorney General John J. Farmer Jr. announced that the divisions of Gaming Enforcement and Consumer Affairs “filed civil actions against several Internet based sports betting operations for acting in violation of New Jersey law by accepting wagers from individuals, including minors, located in New Jersey.”
The defendants, and their bases of operations, are: 2betdsi.com (Diamond Sportsbook International), Costa Rica; InterCasino.com, Dominica; Laythepoints.com (SBG Global Sportsbook), Costa Rica; Sportingbet.com, Alderney; Sportsbook.com, Costa Rica; Intertops.com, Antigua; BetonSports.com (NASA Sportsbook International), Costa Rica; and Betmill.com (Millennium Sports), Costa Rica. In July, Sportingbet.com bought the parent company of Sportsbook.com.
Robert Williams, marketing director of Diamond Sportsbook, told RGT Online tonight that his company has not seen the suit, and was surprised to read about it on a Web site. He said Diamond made no effort to target New Jersey for advertising, and had not run a billboard there.
“We advertise all over North America,” Williams said. “We’re in every publication, like everybody else -- the sports annuals, the betting guides, as well as customers that we would mail to.”
Asked if Diamond has customers in New Jersey, he said, “Every sports book has customers in New Jersey.”
The other defendants could not be reach tonight, or the people who could speak for the companies were not available.
In a press release, New Jersey officials said state investigators logged on to the Web sites and placed wagers on athletic events. They said there were few, if any, safeguards to prevent minors with access to ************ from betting.
“The citizens of New Jersey need to be aware that these sports betting operations are not regulated and they are illegal,” John P. Suarez, the director of the Division of Gaming Enforcement, said in a statement. “Regardless of their occasional claims of ‘licensing’ and ‘legality’, they answer to no one and are therefore not held to the same scrutiny as our Atlantic City casinos.”
In June, New Jersey sued three online casinos that were not nearly as prominent as this week’s defendants – 7Sultans.com, Royalclubcasino.com and Alohacasino.com. A spokesman for the attorney general had no information today on what’s happened in those cases.
All three of te June defendants had advertised on billboards in or near Atlantic City. According to a story in The Press of Atlantic City, advertising also brought this week’s defendants to the attention of state officials.
The Press said one of the eight defendants had bought billboard space in the Atlantic City area, another advertised on radio and another sent a mailer to the post office box of the Attorney General himself.
Both the June cases and the new ones are civil, not criminal, and were filed in Mercer County Superior Court. The state is asking the court to prohibit the defendants from accepting bets from individuals in New Jersey, account for all money won from New Jersey residents in the last year, and require the defendants to “restore any money or property acquired by means of an alleged unlawful practice.”
New Jersey is doing more than filing suits, however. It’s going after the providers of the sites’ phone services and, reportedly, credit card companies. In the press release, Suarez said, “We have written cease and desist letters to the telephone companies that provide toll-free services to these illegal Internet sites. Under federal law, the telephone companies will be required to comply with our demand.”
Herb Greenberg, a columnist for RealMoney.com, said in a column posted this afternoon that a spokeswoman for Attorney General Farmer said that if this week’s suits are successful, the “next step” would be to go after credit card companies “for facilitating illegal activity.”
Greenberg also implied that CryptoLogic, a major software developer, was one of the defendants. But Ronald George, a spokesman for Farmer, said he thought that CryptoLogic was mentioned in the complaint against InterCasino, but that CryptoLogic was not sued. The only defendants, he said, are the eight sites listed in the release.
CryptoLogic owns the InterCasino trade name. The company has said that InterCasino is one of the largest online casinos, and that together with two affiliated sites, accounted for 75 percent of CryptoLogic’s revenue last year.
If CyrptoLogic did get into trouble with New Jersey authorities, the repercussions could be serious. CryptoLogic is trying to get its software approved by regulators in two strict jurisdictions – Australia and the Isle of Man. It also hopes to eventually be approved by Nevada, if and when that state licenses Internet gambling.
Regulators in such jurisdictions often refuse to license an applicant for a gaming license who has previously violated laws, even in other jurisdictions.