KYL COUNTER ATTACK
27 April 2007
With Barney Frank's UIGEA initiative gaining
ground, online gambling's would-be nemesis steps forward
again
Online gambling's arch-enemy, Arizona Republican Senator
Jon Kyl used a Senate Judiciary Committee enquiry to
again push his anti-online gambling agenda last week.
The Senator was part of an enquiry into the dismissal
for inappropriate conduct of 8 US Attorneys recently. In
the hot seat was US Attorney General Alberto Gonzales,
and Kyl used the opportunity to put the spotlight back
on the Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act, which
he helped draft and ram through a late night session of
Congress attached to the Safe Ports Bill last year.
In his assessment of the exchange, respected lawyer
Lawrence G. Walters of GameAttorneys.com said the
questioning appeared to catch the Attorney General
offguard, as the hearing related to his responsibility
for the alleged improprieties associated with the
firings of the U.S. attorneys.
Kyl was initially on topic with his first question to
Gonzales, but he then digressed, requesting a meeting to
discuss "crime victims" to which Gonzales had little
option but to agree.
Kyl then launched into a lengthy monologue listing the
vices of online gambling, and describing his efforts to
pass the UIGEA. He praised the Department of Justice for
their successes in high profile industry arrests and the
disruption of payment methods used by US online players.
He questioned Attorney General Gonzales regarding the
soon to be promulgated regulations implementing the
UIGEA, and the potential substance of those regulations,
strongly urging Gonzales to agree that there is a need
for “strong regulations.” Under some pressure, Gonzales
agreed.
Kyl then pushed Gonzales to agree that the regulations
would include a requirement that banks and financial
institutions receive a list of specific bank accounts
that belonged to known online gambling establishments,
so that those accounts could be easily blocked. Gonzales
hedged on that question, and repeatedly stated that he
was not sure if that effort could be accomplished, but
reassured Kyl that his office was doing everything it
could to work with Kyl’s office and develop a strong set
of regulations.
Clearly unsatisfied with that answer, Kyl repeatedly
badgered Gonzales to agree that the regulations should
include such a list. Finally, he accepted a concession
from Gonzales that including such a list would
strengthen the regulations.
Still on his off-topic diversion of the enquiry into
online gambling, Kyl then discussed the urgent need to
finalise the regulations, since they were “about to be
issued.” He indicated that the Treasury Department was
waiting on some feedback from the Attorney General on
various matters (presumably including the feasibility of
the “list”).
Gonzales assured the Senator that he is working as
quickly as possible on it, and doing everything that he
can to assist in drafting the regulations.
Walters sums up the extraordinary exchange by surmising
that it appeared as though Sen. Kyl is meeting some
resistance from the Attorney General’s Office in
developing the kind of regulations he envisions as most
effective for implementing the UIGEA.
"The Attorney General obviously has a lot on his mind
these days, and online gambling may not be the most
important issue on his plate," Walters observes dryly.
"However, Gonzales has significant motivation to keep
the Senators happy – particularly those on the Oversight
Committee. But the practical reality involved in
identifying and blocking specific accounts known to be
used for online gambling transactions is rearing its
ugly head, forcing the Attorney General to wrestle with
the real world implications of this effort."
Kyl's timing in again using an unrelated enquiry to draw
attention to the UIGEA could also be a reaction to the
wide and growing publicity which political initiatives
aimed at de-fanging the UIGEA have been achieving.
Congressman Barney Frank has served notice that he is
about to propose the repeal of what he has dubbed "the
stupidest act ever passed" and the wheels are clearly in
motion to achieve this and muster support from the
American playing public to do so.
Online Casino News courtesy of InfoPowa
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