LEAVE THE EUROPEANS ALONE!
8 August 2008
Two US lawmakers call for an end to DoJ pre-UIGEA
prosecutions
The US enforcement regime has been urged by two US
legislators to halt its pursuit of European online
gambling companies active in the US market prior to the
promulgation of the 2006 Unlawful Internet Gambling
Enforcement Act.
Florida Rep. Robert Wexler and Rep. Steve Cohen, a
Tennessee Democrat, this week warned U.S. Attorney
General Michael Mukasey in separate letters that
continued operations against the companies could lead to
a potentially damaging trade dispute between the United
States and the European Union at the World Trade
Organisation, reports the Reuters news agency.
Given the several controversial Internet gambling issues
in which the US is in dispute with other nations, their
assessment is credible.
"In all likelihood, this [pursuit of European companies]
issue will escalate and I understand could result in WTO
action focused specifically on how the U.S. government
enforces its laws," wrote Representative Wexler. "I
cannot see how that can be in the interests of this
country."
The warnings come on the heels of a postponement of
meetings between the US Trade Representative and a
delegation from the European Union following complaints
by the Remote Gambling Association regarding the
discriminatory manner in which US law was being
enforced.
Reuters points out that European Internet gambling
companies and investors lost billions of Euros in
declining markets after Congress made it illegal for
banks and credit card companies to make payments to
online gambling sites. Many publicly traded European
companies, such as PartyGaming, Sportingbet and 888.com,
withdrew from the United States after Congress passed
the Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act in 2006,
but remain under the threat of criminal prosecution for
pre-UIGEA activities.
This has prompted the European Commission to launch an
investigation in March this year into whether Washington
was singling out EU companies for enforcement actions,
while allowing U.S. online firms to operate freely.
Representative Cohen, in his letter to Mukasey, pointed
out that the Justice Department has yet to give sound
reasons for its investigation of "foreign operators who
respected congressional intent in 2006 and withdrew from
the market, while U.S. companies continue to operate
[online] uninterrupted."
In June this year EU Trade Commissioner Peter Mandelson
urged the Bush administration to "freeze" any Justice
Department action until the EU had completed its probe
into the discrimination issue. Questionnaires were sent
to various US government agencies, which did not
respond. One exception was the USTR, who somewhat
peremptorily denied the EU allegations.
Online Casino News courtesy of
InfoPowa
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