BAD NEWS FOR DELAWARE (Update)
28 August 2009
Sportsbetting initiative stopped in its
tracks by federal appeals court
Hopes that the state of Delaware would prevail in
litigation launched against its sportsbetting ambitions
by the national sports leagues were dashed Monday in a
surprise ruling by a federal appeals court.
Instead of ruling on whether an urgent injunction should
be granted halting the state's sportsbetting initiative
until a case on the constitutionality of a recent
Delaware law could be argued, the appeal court went
directly to the question of constitutionality...and
ruled Delaware out of order.
The acrimonious
legal dispute between the major sports leagues and
Delaware broke out earlier this year when the state
legislature passed a law permitting the state to embark
on sportsbetting to plug budget deficits.
The
leagues opposed the law, saying that it violated the
federal Professional and Amateur Sports Protection Act
and covered single game betting which took it out of the
exemptions granted to Delaware in earlier federal
legislation.
With the start of the US football
season on the horizon, and Delaware gearing up to launch
its sportsbetting, the leagues went to court with a
request for an urgent injunction to halt the state's
actions until a court had decided on the
constitutionality question. This was turned down by a
lower court judge, and the leagues appealed his
decision, going to a federal appeals court.
On
Monday a three judge panel in the appeals court went
straight to the heart of the matter instead of debating
the need for an injunction...and their finding was not
helpful to Delaware, because it ruled that the state
would violate a 1992 federal ban on such wagering,
essentially halting Delaware plans to start taking bets
next month.
"We're very disappointed with today's
ruling," said Michael Barlow, counsel for Delaware's
state governor, Jack Markell.
Delaware was one of
four states exempted from the federal ban on sports
betting because it once ran an NFL sports lottery in
1976 that required parlay, or multiple bets, on at least
three games.
The 1992 law restricts sports
betting to the four states that met a deadline to sign
up for it: Nevada, where Las Vegas sports books
determine the odds for sporting events across the
country; Delaware; Montana; and Oregon.
But the
leagues argued that the exemption does not allow
Delaware to offer bets on single games, or on sports
other than professional football.
Judge Theodore
McKee of the appeals court said that the Delaware
betting plan as currently envisioned violates the
federal ban. The court was expected to issue a formal
order later Monday, followed by a written opinion later.
Associated Press reported that state administration
officials will later decide whether to appeal the ruling
to the full appeals court, or to the U.S. Supreme Court.
The governor, through a spokesman, said the state
still plans to offer parlay betting on professional
football games, which federal law still allows.
Lawrence Hamermesh, a professor of corporate and
business law at Widener University, told Associated
Press that pursuing an appeal would be difficult. The
state's chances are slim because there was no split on
the three-judge panel, and there is no broad impact from
the ruling, he said.
"This is a one-off
situation," said Hamermesh, who described the state's
position as "pretty weak."
"We were hoping the
court would rule on the merits," said Kenneth Nachbar,
an attorney representing the NFL, NBA, NHL, NCAA and
Major League Baseball.
Nachbar and NCAA
spokesman Erik Christianson both said they were pleased
with the ruling.
During Monday's 2 hours of legal
argument, Judge McKee asked what would happen if
Delaware launched sports betting as planned in
September, then had it declared illegal by the district
court several months later. Individual bettors would
have lost hundreds or thousands of dollars on what
essentially was an illegal state scheme, he said.
"What happens if you're wrong?" McKee asked Andre
Bouchard, an attorney representing the state.
"Caveat emptor," Bouchard replied, citing the Latin
admonition of "buyer beware."
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
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