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Non-Tech : Gaming Lottery Corp (GLXW) - Good Prospects? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: White Shoes who wrote (125)10/23/1997 11:40:00 PM
From: Tom W.  Respond to of 473
 
From www.news.com re Senate committee

Second to last paragraph may help Gaming Lottery. If they ever get their site running, GLC isn't planning on offering gambling to the US anyway.

news.com

A key Senate committee stacked the odds against
online gambling today by prohibiting states from
legalizing Net wagers.

Upon passing the Internet Gambling Prohibition Act
this morning, the Senate Judiciary Committee made
major changes to the bill,
which now goes before the full
Senate for debate and a final
vote.

Sen. Jon Kyl's (R-Arizona) bill would completely
overhaul the way gambling is currently regulated:
that is, at the state level. Indeed, the Net mucks up
jurisdictional boundaries when it comes to online
wagers, but Kyl's bill would shift control to the
federal government.

The amended version of the legislation threw out a
provision noting that the federal law would not
preempt state law. The original version of Kyl's bill
left the door open for Net bets if the act was legal in
both the state of origination and the jurisdiction in
which the wager was actually accepted.

"That version was bad for Internet commerce as a
whole because it meant that states had jurisdiction
over the Internet, which is a global medium," said
David Safavian, who represents the Interactive
Services Association, a group fighting the bill.

He said although the change was good for
e-commerce because it basically defines the Net as
an interstate medium, it is not good for the gaming
industry. If the bill passes as it is now written, states
would not be able to legalize online wagering in the
future, therefore the act would be illegal throughout
the entire United States.

Despite opposition from pro-gaming groups, the
committee also tacked on stricter fines for violation
of the proposed law. Operators could get a
$20,000 fine and four years in prison for accepting
just one wager.

Rivals of the bill say it penalizes not only
cyber-casinos, but also their patrons. Under the
legislation, a "casual bettor" would get a $2,500 fine
and six months in prison for betting on the Net.

The federal Wire Act already allows states to
prosecute those who "knowingly use a wire
communication facility for the transmission in
interstate or foreign commerce of bets, wagers, or
information assisting in the placing of bets or
wagers." Currently it is unclear whether the Wire
Act applies to the Internet. But groups such as the
National Association for Attorneys General are
pushing for Congress to pass the Kyl bill, which
would update the act to include computer
networks.

Although the senators unanimously consented to
pass the bill out of committee today, they didn't
actually vote. Even cosponsors of the original bill,
such as Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-California),
opposed permanently taking away states' powers
when it comes to regulating cyber-casinos. "She
thought that was something that infringed on states'
rights," said a Feinstein staffer.

Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-Vermont) was against some
of the changes as well. "He has concerns about the
bill. Now it is a straight prohibition. And for the first
time it's making it illegal for individuals to make a
bet," said David Carle, the senator's press
secretary.

But some of the modifications were praised by
proponents of Net gambling, although they still plan
to derail the bill.

One amendment says only states' attorneys general
or the U.S. attorney general can seek an injunction
from a federal district court to shut down gambling
sites. In addition, any injunction issued by a federal
court will only apply within the state where the court
was located. Previously, the bill said any state,
local, or federal law agency could go after online
casinos.

"This is good because in many of the existing
lawsuits [involving Net gambling], the defendants
have been trying to get them moved to federal
court," said Sue Schneider, editor of Rolling Good
Times OnLine.

For example, the president of the
Philadelphia-based Interactive Gaming site was
indicted in July for allegedly violating the court order
banning him from taking bets from Missouri
residents. He could face up to five years in prison
or a $15,000 fine if found guilty. Under the old Kyl
bill, every locality anywhere in the country could file
such lawsuits.

Another positive change, Schneider said, is the
deletion of a provision that said the gaming law
would apply outside U.S. borders. However, the
bill does require the Secretary of State and the
Secretary of the Treasury to seek an international
agreement that would permit global enforcement of
the U.S. law.

The House has yet to take up the bill, which is not
expected to pass this session. However, Congress
is expected to vote on it next year, when the new
session begins.