MORE CALIFORNIA PRESSURE FOR INTERNET POKER
14 August 2009
Card clubs, tribal casinos pushing to
legalise Internet poker
The pressure to regulate intrastate poker in the
tax-strapped state of California is increasing,
according to a report this week in the Sacramento Bee.
And the situation has created unlikely alliances, such
as that between California card clubs and tribal
casinos, long bitter political rivals, but now working
together in a concerted, behind-the-scenes drive to
legalise Internet poker, the newspaper reports.
Apparently the effort to create an online California
"Internet poker consortium" is being led by a wealthy
Riverside County tribe, the Morongo Band of Mission
Indians, and card clubs including the Commerce Casino in
Los Angeles County.
Lobbyists have been
despatched to the state capital and the alliance is
privately courting other tribes and poker rooms to build
political momentum for a gambling enterprise run by a
consortium of tribes and card rooms. The state's 60 card
clubs and more than 100 federally recognised Indian
tribes would be eligible to participate, the Sacramento
Bee article claims.
The plan is to get an
Internet poker bill passed after lawmakers return from
their summer recess next Monday. Representatives from
dozens of tribal groups have been invited to hear the
proposal this Thursday at a closed-door meeting at the
Hyatt Regency Sacramento.
The Morongo tribe is
using the desperate tax situation of the state as
justification for tribes and card clubs to tap into a
vast offshore Internet poker industry that draws an
estimated $4 billion in what are now classed by
enforcement officials as illegal bets from U.S.
residents.
The California effort may get a boost
– and legal clarification – from federal legislation
introduced August 6 by Senator Robert Menendez (see
earlier InfoPowa report). The New Jersey Democrat's bill
would legalise online poker and "games of skill."
Similar but broader online gambling legislation by
Congressman Barney Frank would give states and Indian
tribes the authority to permit – or disallow – Internet
poker for their residents.
"You've got a huge
amount of gambling going on on the Internet right now
that is a large measure unregulated," George Forman, an
attorney for the Morongo tribe, said in an interview
with the Sacramento Bee.
"Huge amounts of money
are being wagered. The state is not getting any of that.
Money is going offshore.
"I think it is fair to
say there is an interest on some people's part that this
activity can and should be regulated to protect
consumers and produce a revenue source for the states,"
Forman added.
Not all tribes may be on board with
the Morongo move, however. Some California tribal groups
reportedly claim a poker cooperative with card clubs
could upset California tribes' exclusive rights to
casino action and violate federal standards against
off-reservation gambling.
"They're trying to
convince people that this is a good idea and we should
move forward when the Legislature comes back," said
Alison Harvey, executive director of the California
Tribal Business Alliance, which recently heard the pitch
from Morongo tribal representatives. "I just think
there's serious potential consequences of this that
haven't been thought through."
Morongo officials
declined to discuss specifics of their plan publicly.
But in private talks with other gambling interests, they
have said a California poker consortium could net $450
million a year. Morongo has apparently suggested a 10
percent licensing fee to be paid to the state. Proposed
bill language being circulated leaves the state's share
blank.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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