Casinomeister News Casinomeister News

PPA CANNOT SUPPORT HR 6663 (Update)

Online Casino News

8 August 2008

"HR 6663 only confuses a clear judicial standing on this matter,” says PPA chief


The chairman of the one million member Poker Players Alliance, Former Senator Alphonse D'Amato says that the Alliance cannot support Texas Representative Pete Session's Bill HR6663 because it confuses a clear judicial understanding of the status quo of online poker.

HR6663 (see previous InfoPowa report) is designed primarily to determine what is legal and illegal under the confusing UIGEA, and grant amnesty from prosecution to those companies that ceased providing internet gambling services in the USA (other than sportsbetting) when the Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act was signed into law in October 2006. The bill identifies one of the major ambiguities of the UIGEA - whether online poker and casino games like online blackjack are legal within the United States, saying: “Federal Internet gambling prosecutions have involved sports betting, creating a lack of authoritative court decisions on the applicability of other federal criminal statutes to Internet poker and casino-style gambling.”

With Congress currently in its August recess, discussion on the proposal cannot take place, nor can it move beyond the House Judiciary Committee until September, when the politicians reconvene.

In a statement, D’Amato says: “The PPA remains concerned with the implication HR 6663 asserts that the UIGEA has made internet poker an unlawful activity that needs special protection. Previous federal case law (re: MasterCard 2002) has made it clear that existing federal criminal law (WIRE Act of 1961) applies only to internet sports wagering and not to internet poker. Further, the UIGEA itself states, ‘No provision of this subchapter should be construed as altering, limiting or extending any federal or state law.’

"Thus HR 6663 only confuses a clear judicial standing on this matter.”

If HR6663 is accepted, it has the potential to let major companies that withdrew from the US market post-UIGEA, such as 888.com and Party Poker, off the hook, possibly relieving these corporates of the burden of heavy settlement penalties, an issue on which individual managements are believed to have been in negotiation with Department of Justice officials. As long as the company was not offering Americans sportsbetting, HR6663 would constitute a reprieve for past activities.

Following this reasoning, it would seem that a company like Bodog, which did offer sportsbetting, would not qualify for retrospective 'amnesty.'

Online Casino News courtesy of InfoPowa

More news here.

Follow Casinomeister on Twitter!
Rogue Announcement

Libertyslots - Not Recommended

They have a secret gaming license...
Read about it here.
Rogue section here...
Casinomeister Special Report
The Meister's GiGSE San Francisco Report

If reading about crackheads and the i-Gaming industry floats your boat, check this out here!

The Full Report
Casinomeister's Webcast!

Casinomeister's Webcast
- Bad manners, Purple Lounge Faceplant, Vortran's casino warning...
LAND CASINO LAUNCHES ONLINE OPERATION

Aristocrat has provided internet action for Maryland Live!

More info here
More news here...