ONE STEP BACK IN PENNSYLVANIA POKER CASE
21 August 2009
Poker organiser found guilty as jury opts for
chance over skill
The Pittsburgh Post reports that a Pennsylvania poker
game organiser's defence that poker is a game
predominentely of skill and therefore falls outside
gambling law restrictions has failed in a local court.
65-year-old Lawrence Burns was charged with twelve
different illegal gambling misdemeanours in 2007 after
enforcement officials accused him of running poker
tournaments at two local fire halls.
Although he
admitted to organising the tournaments, Burns argued
that it fell outside the definition of illegal gambling
because the games involved skill and the application of
learned techniques to win, more than chance.
Calling expert evidence to bolster his claims, Burns was
supported by University of Denver professor Dr. Robert
Hannum, who testified that poker is not a game of
chance, referencing a computer simulation that showed
skilled players winning 960 million times out of one
billion over non-skilled players. The professor has also
been used as an expert witness in a Colorado case (see
previous InfoPowa reports)
Burns also called a
second expert - Susquehanna University professor Matthew
Rousu - who testified and produced statistical evidence
that poker is a game predominently of skill.
But
after two hours of deliberation, the 12-person jury
rejected the expert opinions, finding Burns guilty on
all counts as the week ended.
Burns is planning
to appeal the case.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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