MORE BETCHA.COM REVELATIONS (Update)
24 August 2007
Did Washington State and Louisiana officials
collude on gambling charges?
The results of yesterday (Monday) afternoon's
extradition hearings on Betcha.com owner Nick Jenkins
and two colleagues were not available at press time
today and will be reported in due course, but in the
meantime Jenkins's blog at http://www.betcha.com/Blogs
has disclosed what appears to be some alarming collusion
between Washington State and Louisiana officials.
Jenkins, readers will recall, is the Seattle lawyer and
owner of the P2P website Betcha.com. Jenkins disputes
the Washington State Gambling Commission's claim that
his site is illegal. The WGSC subsequently initiated a
late night raid in which Betcha.com equipment was
confiscated, and Jenkins launched litigation against the
Commission.(see previous InfoPowa reports)
When Nick and his attorney were last at the offices of
the Washington State Gambling Commission, serving notice
of litigation, they were told that two other states were
"interested in the case." Presumably because those
states had access to otherwise confidential information.
Immediately after Jenkins and his attorney left that
meeting, the first bet from the state of Louisiana on
Betcha.com took place.
The next move in the saga came when three Seattle police
officers accompanied by Louisiana officials arrested
Betcha.com's Chief Technology Officer at the Seattle
office. Jenkins and the company's server admin officer
immediately turned themselves in, and were deprived of
their liberty. Alarmingly, it is claimed that when
officials from Louisiana showed up with Washington State
Troopers to make the arrests they did not produce an
arrest warrant until the trio were in court.
The "crime" ? Someone in Louisiana used Betcha.com to
take $35 worth of bets from other bettors, whereby the
site made all of 70 cents in gross revenue.
Despite Louisiana opposition to bail on grounds of
"flight risk" the judicial authorities in Seattle
eventually ordered the three men released on their
personal assurances not to flee before further hearings.
And the extradition hearing was set for yesterday
(Monday) afternoon.
Jenkins reviews the issue as follows on his blog:
"Betcha.com was up for approximately a month. During
that time, not a single resident of Louisiana took a bet
on the site until approximately one hour after we served
the WSGC with notice that we were suing them based on
their wrongful application of Washington law.
"That service happened at a meeting in which they told
us that they were in contact with two other states about
Betcha. (I wonder if Louisiana was one of them?)
"Our gross revenue off said bettor was $.70 (yep,
seventy cents)
"For operating The Site for approximately one month, we
now face felony fugitive charges for a crime punishable
by up to five years in prison and up to a $20,000 fine.
For $.70."
Online Casino News courtesy of
InfoPowa
More news here.
Top of page |
Home |
News |
Forum |
Webcast |
Vortran |
Accredited Casinos |
Evil Ones |
Pitch a Bitch |
Partner Links |
Poker
|