TIME TO FOLD ON INTERNET GAMBLING SAYS WSJ
11 April 2008
Barney Frank may be on to something by introducing
a bill to regulate online gambling, says US business
journal
The internationally respected US business and financial
publication the Wall Street Journal appears to approve
of the idea of regulated and licensed online gambling in
an op-ed article this week, observing that Congressman
Barney Frank's Internet Gambling Regulation and
Enforcement Act proposal could resolve several problems
now facing the US as a consequence of its anti-online
gambling legislative policy.
The journal summarised the various problems confronting
US enforcement and banking authorities as a result of
the Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act
introduced in October 2006, and the consequences it has
generated in terms of World Trade Organisation actions
against the United States, and difficulties in
implementation being experienced by the authorities and
the American financial industry.
"For a change, the Europeans stand on the side of free
trade, while America dabbles in regulatory overreach,"
the article observes, going on to describe the
international litigation against the USA, notably by the
European Union on grounds that US policy discriminates
against European companies unfairly.
"Brussels is making a narrow legal point that Washington
discriminates against Europeans by simultaneously
permitting U.S. Internet horse betting. That's against
World Trade Organization rules," the article comments
before describing previous US defeats in the WTO at the
hands of Antigua and Barbuda in its long-running dispute
over Internet gambling restrictions.
"Washington could have stood down then. Instead, it is
'threatening and pressing criminal prosecutions,
forfeitures and other enforcement actions against
foreign online gaming operators,' according to the
London-based Remote Gambling Association, which took the
complaint to the EU," the WSJ report continues.
"In doing so, Washington is also practicing a form of
universal jurisdiction by applying domestic law to
foreigners beyond its borders – a legal interpretation
that the U.S. has, rightly, condemned in other cases,"
it reports, pointing to the arrest and detention of Brit
businessman Peter Dicks (see previous InfoPowa reports)
The article covers submissions by financial industry
experts at the Congressional hearing on the UIGEA last
week that the US ban is impractical, difficult in
implementation and lays the burden of policing and
enforcing on an already stretched financial services
industry.
"We have our differences with House Financial Services
Chairman Barney Frank, but he may have been on to
something when he introduced a bill to exempt licensed
operators from the ban," the WSJ concludes.
"Gambling is a vice, and social problems attach
themselves to it. By legalizing and regulating the
business, however, Washington could more effectively
battle such problems as underage gambling and addiction.
It would also avoid unnecessary trade tiffs with its
leading commercial partners. And it would exempt
cyberspace from overaggressive regulators, in America or
anywhere else."
http://online.wsj.com:80/article/SB120779121832703691.html?mod=googlenews_wsj
Online Casino News courtesy of
InfoPowa
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