CLONMEL OPERATOR WINS UNLAWFUL GAMBLING CASE
24 April 2009
Year old case resolved...but this casino club
may have been ruined by prosecution
A police action in Ireland almost a year ago (see
previous InfoPowa reports) that saw the closure of a
casino club in Clonmel, County Tipperary, culminated in
a lost court case for the prosecution this week.
But the owners, who paid their taxes and operated
legitimately, may not reopen the club after the
operational hiatus that resulted from the raid, the
Irish Times reports.
Judge David Anderson ruled
on Tuesday that there was insufficient evidence to prove
a charge of unlawful gaming against the Atlantis Casino
Club under the 1956 Gaming and Lotteries Act.
The
case against the club was widely seen as a test of the
State’s laws on gambling. Casinos are illegal under the
1956 Act but this has not stopped up to 50 casinos
operating as private members’ clubs opening up in recent
years.
The favourable verdict has come too late
for Paul Lucey, operator of the Atlantis Casino Club,
who said the Garda raid on the club in May 2008 had
effectively put him out of business and he did not think
the backers would want to reopen Atlantis.
A
clearly relieved Lucey called for legislation to reform
the Irish gambling laws.
“We ran a professional
show,” Lucey said, “we paid our taxes and all our staff
were on the books. Like others in this sector, we want
legislation to clarify the situation.”
The
Atlantis was shut in May 2008 after an early morning
raid by seven gardaí, who seized the roulette wheel,
safe and gambling chips.
The Gaming and Leisure
Association of Ireland, which represents 12 casino
clubs, said the verdict showed that existing legislation
on gambling was not working.
“This outcome
appears to show that the authorities don’t have the
power to close down clubs, and it doesn’t give us the
clarity we need on the law,” said David Hickson of the
association. “It’s not serving anybody well at the
moment.”
Minister for Justice Dermot Ahern has
declared his intention to press ahead with legislation
to legalise casino clubs despite the failure of efforts
to achieve cross-party consensus on the issue. The
legislation is expected to be included in a new
anti-money laundering Bill to be published within weeks.
Ahern is also expected to start consultations
shortly about reform of the entire gambling sector,
including betting shops and the horseracing and
greyhound industries.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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