|
|
| Texas Gambling Laws |
© Copyright 2006, all rights reserved worldwide. Gambling and the Law® is a registered trademark of Professor I Nelson Rose, www.GamblingAndTheLaw.com. The Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act of 2006 was rammed through Congress by the Republican leadership in the final minutes before the election period recess. According to Sen. Frank R. Lautenberg (D-NJ), no one on the Senate-House Conference Committee had even seen the final language of the bill. The Act is title VIII of a completely unrelated bill, the Safe Port Act, HR 4954, dealing with port security. It can be found on pages 213 -244 of the Conference Report. It is based on the Leach and Goodlatte bills, HR 4411 and HR 4777, but there are some important differences. §5361 The Act begins with Congress’s findings and purpose. These include a recommendation from the discredited National Gambling Impact Study |
The full text of the Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act can be found at the end of the Safe Port Act.
The Antigua-U.S. World Trade Organization dispute over internet gambling. Historical summary of the dispute. |
| Texas Legislator's Positions on Gambling | ||
| The Benefits of Legalized Gambling | ||
| LTG Gambling Blog | ||
| LTG Emailing List | ||
| The Texas Gambling Issue in the News | ||
| The Online Gambling Issue in the News | ||
| Places to Gamble in Texas | ||
| Texas Gambling Busts | ||
| Other Gambling Blogs, Forums and Chats | ||
| Gambling Stocks | ||
| Gambling Jokes | ||
| Texas Casino Poll | ||
| Add an LTG Banner to Your Own Website | ||
| Other Gambling Advocates |
|
Commission,
whose chair was the right-wing,
Republican incompetent, Kay Coles James.
Findings include the doubtful assertion that Internet gambling is a
growing problem for banks and credit card companies.
It correctly states that “new mechanisms for enforcing gambling
laws on the Internet are necessary,” especially cross-border betting.
The Act contains a standard clause that it does not change any
other law or Indian compact. It
repeats this many times, to make sure that no one can use the Act as a
defense to another crime, or to expand existing gambling.
Most importantly, the Department of Justice is arguing before the
World Trade Organization, in the dispute between the §5362
Definitions.
Bet or wager includes risking something of value on the outcome of
a contest, sports event “or a game subject to chance.”
The Act otherwise allows contestants to risk money on themselves.
The “game subject to chance” restriction is designed to
eliminate Internet poker.
The Act then confuses the issue of skill by stating that betting
includes purchasing an “opportunity” to win a lottery, which must be
predominantly subject to chance. Someone
will figure out a way to create an opportunity to win, where the
opportunity is subject to some chance.
But the Act expressly prohibits lotteries based on sports events.
Betting includes instructions or information.
This eliminates the argument overseas operators used that the money
was already in a foreign country, so no bet took place in the
The Act exempts activities that we all know are gambling, but are,
by statute, declared not to be gambling.
These include securities and commodities, including futures,
that are traded on
Free games are not gambling. But
there is a special provision that allows sites to offer points or credits
to players only if these are redeemable only for more games.
Operators of free games, where players can win valuable prizes,
will have to stop giving points for wins that can be redeemed for cash.
Free bingo, on the other hand, can still give small cash prizes
paid out of the advertising budget.
Fantasy leagues are legal, but subject to detailed restrictions.
A fantasy team cannot be “based on the current membership of an
actual team.” What they
actually mean is a fantasy team cannot be composed merely of the players
of a real team. There is no
limit on the cost of entering, but prizes must be announced in advance,
and not based on the fees paid by participants.
Statistics must be derived from more than one play, more than one
player, and more than one real-world event.
Being in the “business of betting or wagering” still does not
include mere players. It also
expressly does not include financial institutions involved in money
transfers.
“Designated payment system” is a new term.
It could have been labeled simply “target,” as in “you are
the target of a criminal investigation.”
It covers any system used by anyone involved in money transfers,
that the federal government determines could be used by illegal gambling.
The procedure will be that the Secretary of the Treasury, Board of
Governors of the Federal Reserve System and Attorney General will meet and
create regulations and orders targeting certain money transfer systems.
“Financial transaction provider” is a very broad definition
covering everyone who participates in transferring money for illegal
Internet gambling. This
expressly includes an “operator of a terminal at which an electronic
fund transfer may be initiated,” and international payment networks.
This covers third party providers, like Neteller.
“Interactive computer service” includes Internet service
providers.
“Restricted transaction” means any transmittal of money
involved with unlawful Internet gambling.
“Unlawful Internet gambling” is defined as betting, receiving
or transmitting a bet that is illegal under federal, state or tribal law.
The Act says to ignore the intermediary computers and look to the
place where the bet is made or received.
This does not completely solve the problem of Internet poker, or
even Internet casinos. The
Act does not expand the reach of the Wire Act, the main federal statute
the DOJ uses against Internet gambling.
Although the DOJ has taken the position that the Wire Act covers
all forms of gambling, courts have ruled that it is limited to bets on
sports events and races. State
anti-gambling statutes have similar weaknesses, including the presumption
that they do not apply if part of the activity takes place overseas.
This new statute requires that the Internet gambling be
“unlawful.” But it would
often be difficult to find a federal, state or tribal law that clearly
made a specific Internet bet illegal.
Tribes were given the same rights, with the same restrictions.
Two tribes can set up an Internet gaming system, if it is
authorized by the Indian Gaming Regulatory Act.
This means that tribes can operate bingo games linking bingo halls
on reservations. They can
also link progressive slot machines, if their tribal-state compacts allow.
But they cannot operate Internet lotteries and other games open to
the general public.
It is interesting that Congress decreed that states can decide for
themselves if they want to have at-home betting on horseracing, but not on
do gracing.
Congress also decreed that tribes can operate games that link
reservations, even across state lines, but not the states themselves:
state lotteries are not exempt.
Congress had a little problem with the term “financial
institution.” To force
casinos to report large cash transaction, federal law was changed to
define “financial institution” as including large gambling businesses.
Congress had to undo that definition, so that in this Act casinos
go back to being casinos. Since
no other federal laws were changed, casinos will still have to file
Financial Transaction Reports and the other forms.
The other definitions are standard or are described above. §5363
“No person engaged in the business of betting or wagering
may knowingly accept” any money transfers in any way from a person
participating in unlawful Internet gambling.
This includes credit cards, electronic fund transfers, and even
paper checks. But it is
limited to Internet gambling businesses, not mere players.
It also would not cover payment processors, except under a theory
of aiding and abetting. §5364
Federal regulators have 270 days from the date this bill is
signed into law to come up with regulations to identify and block money
transactions to gambling sites. At
this writing, President Bush had not yet signed this bill, but he will.
So the regs will go into effect by the
beginning of July 2007.
The regs will require everyone
connected with a “designated payment system” to i.d.
and block all restricted transactions.
So all payment processors are suppose to
have systems in place to prevent money from going to operators of illegal
Internet gambling. The first
step will undoubtedly be to take the credit card merchant code 7995 and
expand it to all money transfers. Visa
created the 7995 classification in 2001 to avoid having its credit cards
used for online gambling. The
federal government will order banks and all others involved with
electronic money transfers to cease sending funds to any Internet operator
who has a 7995 credit card merchant code.
Any financial institution that follows the regs
cannot be sued, even if it wrongfully blocks a legitimate transaction.
The Act allows the federal regulators to exempt transactions where
it would be impractical to require identifying and blocking.
This obviously applies to paper checks.
Banks have no way now of reading who the payee is on paper checks
and cannot be expected to go into that business.
Banks tried to defeat this bill, not because they cared about
patrons’ privacy, but because they knew that it would cost them billions
of dollars to set up systems to read paper checks.
The great unknown is how far into the Internet commerce stream
federal regulators are willing to go.
The Act requires institutions like the Bank of America and Neteller
to i.d. and block transactions to unlawful
gambling sites, whatever they are. But,
while the Bank of America will comply, Neteller
might not, because it is not subject to
For financial institutions within the U.S, the Act provides that
exclusive regulatory enforcement rests with their federal regulators, like
the Federal Reserve Board. The
Federal Trade Commission is supposed to enforce regulations on everyone
else. It is extremely
doubtful whether the F.T.C. will ever try to do anything about the Netellers
of the world, who are beyond regular §5365
Since there is no way to regulate overseas payment
processors, the Act allows the
It is difficult to serve a company with the papers necessary to
start a lawsuit, a summons and complaint or petition, if the company has
no offices, or officers, in the
The Act provides for limited civil remedies against “interactive
computer services.” An
Internet service provider can be ordered to remove sites and block
hyperlinks to sites that are transmitting money to unlawful gambling
sites. ISPs are under no
obligation to monitor whether its patrons are sending funds to payment
processors or even directly to gambling sites.
But once it receives notice from an U.S. Attorney or state Attorney
General, the ISP can be forced to appear at a hearing to be ordered to
sever its links.
But the statute has an interesting requirement:
The site must “reside on a computer server that such service
controls or operates.” This
would limit the reach of this statute to payment processors, affiliates
and search engines that are housed on that particular ISP.
The same problem of going after foreign operators and payment
processors affects this section. Foreign
ISPs are difficult to serve and not necessarily subject to federal court
injunctions.
The greatest danger here would seem to be with affiliates.
Any American operator can be easily grabbed.
This includes sites that don’t directly take bets, but do refer
visitors to gaming sites. If
the affiliate is paid for those referrals by receiving a share of the
money wagered or lost, it would not be difficult to charge the affiliate
with violating this law, under the theory of aiding and abetting.
Being a knowing accomplice and sharing in the proceeds of a crime
make the aider and abettor guilty of the crime
itself. The federal
government could also charge the affiliate with conspiracy to violate this
new Act.
The other danger lies with search engines.
Although California-based Google does not take paid ads, punching
in “sports bet” brings ups many links to real-money sites.
This new Act expressly allows a federal court to order the removal
of “a hypertext link to an online site” that is violating the
prohibition on money transfers. But
what prosecutor would want to be ridiculed internationally for trying to
prevent Google from showing links?
The Act gives ISPs a little more security by declaring that they
cannot be convicted of violating the Wire Act, unless, of course, the ISP
is operating its own illegal gambling site.
This section of the Act ends with a limitation,
that, frankly, makes no sense.
It says that, after all the talk of getting court orders to prevent
restricted transactions, “no provision of this subchapter shall be
construed as authorizing” anyone “to institute proceedings to prevent
or restrain a restricted transaction against any financial transaction
provider, to the extent that the person is acting as a financial
transaction provider.” This
could be a typo, since the bill was rushed through without an opportunity
to even be read. Or perhaps
it means that banks can be ordered to not transfer money to gambling
sites, but only if they know about it.
It is indecipherable. §5366
Criminal penalties: Up to five years in prison, and a fine.
And barred from being involved in gambling. §5367
The Act naturally makes ISPs and financial institutions
liable if they actually operate illegal gambling sites themselves.
Lastly, the Act requests, but does not require, the executive
branch to try and get other countries to help enforce this new law and
“encourage cooperation by foreign governments” in identifying whether
Internet gambling is being used for crime.
The Secretary of the Treasury is told to issue a report to Congress
each year “on any deliberations between the
END ©
Copyright 2006. Professor I
Nelson Rose, Note – This
paper is copyrighted. You may
quote it at length, republish it or distribute it for free only if you
include this copyright and trademark information.
|
Sign the Petition to repeal the UIGEA. ![]() Read the latest news about online gambling in the U.S.
|
I. NELSON ROSE
Professor I. Nelson Rose is recognized as one of the world's leading
experts on gambling law. A tenured
full Professor at
Professor Rose is best known for his internationally syndicated column,
"Gambling and the Law®" and his landmark 1986 book with the same
name. The author of more than 1,000
published works, including Gambling and
the Law and Blackjack and the Law.
He wrote the chapter on Internet gambling for the first casebook on
gaming law, Gaming Law: Cases and
Materials, and in 2005 co-authored Internet
Gaming Law (available at www.liebertpub.com/igl).
With the rising interest in gambling throughout the world, Prof. Rose has
addressed such diverse groups as the National Conference of State Legislatures,
Congress of State Lotteries of Europe and the National Academy of Sciences.
He has taught classes on gaming law to the F.B.I., at the