US Attorney welcomes first UIGEA conviction

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  • marriedtothegame
    SBR Rookie
    • 09-09-10
    • 27

    #1
    US Attorney welcomes first UIGEA conviction

    Beverly man faces offshore betting charges

    By Jonathan Saltzman
    Globe Staff / May 8, 2010






    A 36-year-old Beverly man has become the first person in Massachusetts charged with violating a 2006 federal law that restricts Internet gambling, according to federal prosecutors.

    Todd Lyons was arrested Thursday night on a 36-count indictment that alleges he collected more than $22 million illegally as the primary agent in the state for Sports Offshore, an Internet gambling site licensed in the Caribbean island of Antigua, authorities said. The illegal activity allegedly took place from 1997 until his arrest.


    Prosecutors say that Sports Offshore used an Internet site and toll-free telephone number registered in Antigua, but that the operation was actually based in the United States.

    The Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act, which was signed by President George W. Bush, bars Americans from using electronic fund transfers, ************, and checks to place bets with gambling sites worldwide. The law holds banks and credit companies responsible for enforcement.

    The office of US Attorney Carmen M. Ortiz said Lyons is one of the first people in the country charged with breaking the law and the first in Massachusetts.

    He faces multiple charges, including racketeering, money laundering, and operating an illegal gambling business.

    “The conduct alleged in this case reveals a blatant effort to circumvent gaming and tax laws,’’ Ortiz said in a statement. “The notion that the type of activity alleged here is legal because it is conducted over the Internet from offshore is pure fiction.’’

    Lyons was released on a $200,000 secure bond, said Christina DiIorio-Sterling, a spokeswoman for Ortiz. He is due to appear in US District Court on June 21.

    Lyons’s lawyer, Peter Horstmann, declined to comment yesterday.

    If convicted, Lyons faces a maximum sentence of 20 years in prison on each of the most serious charges.
  • mighty maron
    SBR MVP
    • 04-20-09
    • 4215

    #2
    Title of thread is WRONG. It should say in violation of UIGEA. He is not being charged with offshore betting but to act as a fiancial institution to circumvent UIGEA
    Comment
    • John Dough
      SBR MVP
      • 09-21-05
      • 1785

      #3
      Originally posted by mighty maron
      Title of thread is WRONG. It should say in violation of UIGEA. He is not being charged with offshore betting but to act as a fiancial institution to circumvent UIGEA
      Agree. Of course being an agent is illegal. One of his charges is operating an illegal gambling operation (i.e. being a bookie). This is nothing new IMO.
      Comment
      • marriedtothegame
        SBR Rookie
        • 09-09-10
        • 27

        #4
        This is how it is being touted in the states, a UIGEA victory. The newswire where I saw it was gaming intelligence.
        Comment
        • Emily_Haines
          SBR Posting Legend
          • 04-14-09
          • 15917

          #5
          They don't care about the guy wining 3000, 4000 or even 20000. They always go after the big fish. If your routinely pulling down 1-2 million a year, then you got something to worry about.
          Comment
          • 5mike5
            SBR Aristocracy
            • 09-21-11
            • 52006

            #6
            story is almost 2 years old
            Comment
            • marriedtothegame
              SBR Rookie
              • 09-09-10
              • 27

              #7
              sorry, first story was indictment, this is the guilty charge

              Steven Stradbrooke

              December 6, 2011

              US federal prosecutors have claimed their first scalp under the Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act (UIGEA). On Monday, a Massachusetts jury returned guilty verdicts against Daniel Eremian and Todd Lyons on charges including racketeering (RICO), operating an illegal gambling business and Wire Act offenses for their involvement in the Antigua-based (but not Antigua-licensed) Sports Offshore credit betting operation. Lyons, who acted as an on-the-ground ‘agent’ collecting losses from US sports bettors and shipping the proceeds to Antigua, was also found guilty on charges of ‘acceptance of financial instruments for unlawful internet gambling’, specifically prohibited under the terms of the UIGEA.
              Eremian and Lyons will be sentenced on March 8. Each faces up to 20 years in the slammer on the RICO charges, five years for the illegal gambling charges and two years for the Wire Act charges. Lyons faces an additional three years on charges of filing false tax returns, five years on charges of racketeering-related interstate travel and the UIGEA violations, plus 20 years for money laundering. There are also hefty fines related to each charge. While Lyon’s lawyer declined any post-verdict comment, Eremian’s attorney Marc S. Nurik said he and his client were “examining the verdict and we’ll determine what, if any, motions we will file” in response.
              Following the verdicts, Eremian and Lyons were allowed to leave court, but are prohibited from leaving the state. Prosecutors believe they are serious flight risks and have requested each man be detained until sentencing. That detention hearing will take place Thursday. US Attorney Carmen M. Ortiz released a statement saying that the convictions “should serve as a message to those involved with illegal gambling schemes that the government will apply the full weight of its resources to identify, investigate and prosecute individuals who seek to profit from offshore gambling.” Two other Sports Offshore defendants, Robert Eremian and Richard Sullivan, remain at large.
              Comment
              • John Dough
                SBR MVP
                • 09-21-05
                • 1785

                #8
                Originally posted by 5mike5
                story is almost 2 years old
                LOL, good catch.
                Comment
                • 5mike5
                  SBR Aristocracy
                  • 09-21-11
                  • 52006

                  #9
                  yeah just saying this is old news, remember it from when came out in 2010

                  20 million, no doubt going to get busted...feds could care less about 99.9% of us

                  if ur dumb enough to mess arounds with millions offshore, move to vegas
                  Comment
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