PARTYGAMING REMOVES U.S. THREAT OF ONLINE GAMBLING
PROSECUTION
10 April 2009
$105 million the price for relief from
retroactive prosecution
Shares in the London-listed online gambling group
PartyGaming are expected to soar following the group's
announcement Tuesday that it has reached a settlement
with the US Department of Justice, removing the threat
of prosecution for pre-UIGEA activities.
The cost
of removing the cloud of possible action by the
Americans is $105 million, payable as follows:
*
10 April 2009 - $5m * 30 September 2009 - $10m *
31 March 2010 - $15m * 30 September 2010 - $15m *
31 March 2011 - $15m * 30 September 2011 - $15m *
31 March 2012 - $15m * 30 September 2012 - $15m
It is considerable cheaper than the $300 million
paid independently by one of the founders, Anurag
Dikshit, in his personal capacity earlier this year (see
previous InfoPowa report.)
In a statement,
PartyGaming said that a non-prosecution agreement had
been concluded with the US Attorney’s Office for the
Southern District of New York (the ‘USAO’) following
protracted negotiations.
Under the terms of the
Non-Prosecution Agreement, the USAO will not prosecute
PartyGaming plc or any of its subsidiaries for providing
Internet gambling services to customers in the US prior
to the enactment of the Unlawful Internet Gambling
Enforcement Act on 13 October 2006.
As part of
the agreement, the company has accepted a Statement of
Facts regarding its business activities prior to the
enactment of the UIGEA and has agreed to pay $105
million, payable in semi-annual instalments over a
period ending on 30 September 2012. Such payments will
be made from the Group’s existing financial resources.
Key elements of the Statement of Facts are:
* From 1997 until 13 October 2006, PartyGaming
offered Internet gaming to players located in the US,
including real-money poker and casino gaming. On 13
October, 2006, the day the UIGEA was enacted, the Group
voluntarily exited the US market.
* Prior to 13
October 2006, certain of the US customer transactions
intended for PartyGaming that were processed by third
parties, and other gaming and payment-related activity,
were contrary to certain US laws.
* PartyGaming
has agreed to maintain, with respect to its operations,
a restriction preventing Internet gambling services from
being provided to customers in the US in violation of
the prevailing law of the US or any jurisdiction within
the US.
* If requested by PartyGaming, the USAO
will bring the co-operation and remedial actions of
PartyGaming to the attention of other licensing and
regulatory authorities.
Commenting on today’s
announcement, Jim Ryan, Chief Executive Officer said:
“The resolution of our position with the US
authorities marks an important day for PartyGaming. It
has been a long and complex process but we have reached
an amicable solution with the USAO that makes commercial
sense for our business and is in the best interests of
shareholders. We are now well-placed to seize organic as
well as strategic opportunities that previously were
beyond our reach.”
The impact of the announcement
on the company's share price was almost immediate, with
PartyGaming stock surging - at one stage by 15.3 percent
to 253 pence on the London exchange.
Rival online
gambling groups also known to be negotiating with the
DoJ also benefitted, with 888 Holdings up 8 percent to
97.25 pence and Sportingbet rising 10 percent to 45.75
pence.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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