KENTUCKY FINANCES TIGHT
24 April 2009
Some lawmakers selling the concept of
expanded gambling as a cure for budget deficits
The U.S. state of Kentucky appears to be in financial
trouble, judging by reports from local media, with extra
funds having to be diverted to keep the Department of
Public Advocacy running and reports that state
prosecutors are having to take unpaid layoffs of up to
three weeks, probably resulting in a growing backlog of
untried cases in the bluegrass state.
How state
finances got into such a mess is not known, but it
perhaps goes some way to explain why Governor Steve
Beshear is trying to redress the financial problems
facing the state by seeking to expand land gambling
interests. And his protectionist position on those land
gambling interests has been manifested in the recent,
and unprecedented, attempt by the Beshear state
government to hijack global domain names belonging to
online gambling operators, whom the state sees as
competition (see previous InfoPowa reports).
Over
the past month Politicker.com has followed the decline
in Public Advocacy finances, reporting in March that the
state was considering the diversion of an extra $4.7
million to the department to enable it to survive
through to the end of June and the start of a new fiscal
year. Unconfirmed and more recent reports suggest that
at least $2 million has already been diverted to the
department as an emergency measure.
Department
of Public Advocacy spokesman Jessie W. Luscher
distributed a statement saying that when funding runs
out in May, public defenders will "be unable to provide
any representation whatsoever in any court" and may have
to withdraw cases.
Earlier, public defenders
filed a suit against the state alleging that they had
been allotted inadequate funding to handle excessive
case loads. State lawmakers cut the agency's budget by
$2.3 million to $37.8 million for the fiscal year that
ends June 30 2009, and the department still seeks a
judicial ruling on the issue because it is quickly
running out of operating funds.
The case is being
heard by a judge who has become well known to the online
gambling industry for all the wrong reasons; Frankfort
County Circuit Judge Thomas Wingate made the infamous
and initially covert ruling that allowed Beshear's
officials to seize 141 international online gambling
domains last year. His order was subsequently set aside
by judges of the Kentucky Court of Appeals, but Governor
Beshear continues to contest the case with an
appeal-against-the-appeal filed with the Kentucky
Supreme Court.
Reports are that Beshear does not
need to put cash upfront for his use of out-sourced
lawyers handling the domain case - these legal experts
are reported to be working on a contingency basis of 'no
win - no pay'.
Should Beshear prove successful in
persuading the Kentucky legislature to expand land
gambling in the state, it could prove to be both a
blessing and a curse to the cash strapped
administration. On the one hand it may produce
sufficient extra revenues to plug the serious financial
deficits plaguing the state, but on the other it could
strengthen legal claims by the owners of threatened
global domains that the state's motives are more
commercially protectionist (and therefore in conflict
with the Constitution) than altruistic.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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