Online gambling thrives despite law!!!!

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  • SPECULATOR 13
    SBR Wise Guy
    • 08-12-07
    • 768

    #1
    Online gambling thrives despite law!!!!


    DOESN'T that just make your day to read this:

    Online gambling thrives despite law
    By AMAN BATHEJA
    Star-Telegram Staff Writer
    Related Content

    * Betting their lives Related story

    Gambling Web sites like to attract customers, not controversy.

    But the Costa Rica-based 5Dimes.com got both last month when it began taking bets on this week's football game between Southlake Carroll and Miami Northwestern.

    It wasn't the first high school game on which the site had taken bets, but it inspired national outrage (on the bright side for Carroll fans, the Dragons were favored by eight points). The company quickly stopped bets on all high school games.

    The uproar made clear that online gambling is still thriving in the U.S., nearly a year after a federal ban was enacted.

    "There's plenty of action," said David Conlan, an avid online poker player in Garland. "Just as much as there always was."

    The Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act, which President Bush signed in October, blocks financial institutions from transferring money to gambling sites. It is supposed to keep Americans from using their credit cards to fund accounts on popular betting sites.

    Many gamblers have found workarounds.

    "I don't see it's had any serious impact on online gambling with one exception," said James Kelly, a business law professor at SUNY College at Buffalo and co-editor of Gaming Law Review. "It's forced the publicly traded companies to be very wary of taking any American customers."

    Many U.S. gamblers skirt the restrictions by giving their money to a third-party site that then transfers it to the gambling site.

    Walter Jones, a spokesman with 5Dimes.com, said he's seen relatively little impact from the gambling restrictions.

    Conlan has continued to ante up on partypoker.com by signing up for a Canadian credit card. The site offers a link to that option.

    Adding to the controversy is a ruling by the World Trade Organization that the U.S. law violates international trade agreements.

    The ruling stems from a complaint by Antigua, a tiny Caribbean island where dozens of gambling sites are based. The island, represented by El Paso lawyer Mark Mendel, argues that U.S. policy on the issue is hypocritical because it allows some horse-racing bets to be placed online.

    The WTO has told the U.S. that it must open the country to offshore gambling sites or completely ban all forms of online wagering.

    At least four bills now in Congress would legalize gambling and subject it to regulations and taxes.

    Anti-gambling groups are fighting the bills, and pro-gambling groups are supporting them.

    It remains unclear what kind of gambling, if any, is legal for a U.S. consumer on Web sites based in other countries.

    "The Justice Department says everything is illegal," Kelly said. "Experts say sports betting is definitely illegal and everything else is in a shade of gray."
    Aman Batheja, 817-390-7695
    abatheja@star-telegram.com
  • SBR_John
    SBR Posting Legend
    • 07-12-05
    • 16471

    #2
    It has been very effective at reducing online gaming. Its early but it appears most books have lost around 40% of their gross handle compared to this time last year. It has not slowed future growth however. In 2 years it will be above where it was when the law was passed.
    Comment
    • rugbybdyb
      SBR Wise Guy
      • 09-06-07
      • 997

      #3
      Thats funny, I have twin brother in Laws who played at southlake and both have rings, I think that Southlake is going to have its hands full with that team from Miami........ If I had to bet I would take Miami +8 hands down.......Southlake should have lost that game last year against Trinity.....Of course I would never gamble on a high school game.
      Comment
      • ritehook
        SBR MVP
        • 08-12-06
        • 2244

        #4
        The UIGEA will have the same effect as Prohibition did in the 20s.

        Speakeasys flourished, and a lot of people got sick and some died from rotgut home-brewed booze.

        But the drinking continued. And big crime syndicates took hold in the land, suppliers of the desired commodity.

        Same thing here. Going after the processors will slow, and has slowed, the growth. But short of the religious right pulling off a dictatorship (Bush as Caesar? - what a jest!) ways will be found to overcome.

        Money to be made, suppliers will be paid. Just go out into the streets of any big city and see how long it takes you to find and buy illegal drugs or guns.

        Particularly in the US, a country with a long history of gambling. The American Revolution was partly financed by national lotteries. And stuff like the Louisiana Purchase (done by Jefferson) and the purchase of Alaska (derided at the time as "Seward's Folly") were huge gambles.

        It's in our blood. The Mind Everyone Else's Business church people should confine themselves to monitoring men's restrooms where some of their most ardent political supporters may be lurking at any time.
        Comment
        • SBR_John
          SBR Posting Legend
          • 07-12-05
          • 16471

          #5
          Originally posted by ritehook

          It's in our blood. The Mind Everyone Else's Business church people should confine themselves to monitoring men's restrooms where some of their most ardent political supporters may be lurking at any time.
          Comment
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