MOGUL'S PLEA RESURRECTS UNFAIR U.S. LAW ARGUMENTS
19 December 2008
Imprisoned execs, discriminatory laws and official
intimidation seem to be the order the day with the DoJ
This week's $300 million "settlement" and Wire Act
guilty plea by the co-founder of Party Gaming, Anurag
Dikshit (see previous InfoPowa reports) has resulted in
a blizzard of high-visibility coverage for the industry
in the world's mainstream media, and much of it has been
positive - highlighting the confusing and often
discriminatory nature of US laws on Internet gambling
and its application by the Department of Justice.
Among the subjects resurrected this week were the
continued house-imprisonment after 2 years of being
denied liberty of former BetonSports CEO David
Carruthers, and lengthy detention without bail of BoS
founder Gary Kaplan; the still unresolved World Trade
Organisation disputes with the European Union and
Antigua; the highly questionable acts by the state
governor of Kentucky, his officials and a local county
court in attempting to seize 141 global online gambling
domains; the manner in which the UIGEA was rammed
through Congress, and the way in which the supporting
regulations became a "midnight drop" for the incoming
Obama administration; the arrest of Neteller founders
and how this was used to wring substantial sums of money
from the e-processor and drive it from the US market;
the inequitable nature of US legislative "carve-outs"
for US horseracing, lotteries and fantasy football and
several cases of official intimidation enacted against
advertising media in the past.
The overall picture this publicity painted of official
zealotry, commercial protectionism, uneven application
of the law and political chicanery did the United States
no credit.
Among the more entertaining of the pieces was a widely
discussed article by Jacob Sullum on the Reason blog at
http://www.reason.com/blog/show/130625.html.
Headed "I Plead Guilty to Possibly Violating Your
Ridiculous Gambling Laws," the piece covered the Dikshit
settlement with the DoJ, claiming that his brief
statement when pleading guilty before a New York court
this week alluded to the vague and arbitrary nature of
US law.
"Even in admitting his guilt, Dikshit alluded to the
arbitrariness and vagueness of U.S. gambling laws,
especially as applied to foreign companies that are
perfectly legal in the countries where they operate,"
wrote Sullum, quoting Dikshit's statement thus:
"I came to believe there was a high probability that the
company's business was illegal under US laws. I
acknowledge my actions and have come to believe that
what I did was wrong."
Sullum examines that admission, writing: "Doesn't the
rule of law require something more than the possibility
of gradually realizing, after operating a business for
years, that you are probably committing a crime?"
The Dikshit settlement immediately triggered a sharp
statement from the UK-based Remote Gambling Association
condemning the US Trade Representative at the World
Trade Organisation for the unresolved status of its
complaint on the inequities of US law as applied to its
members. The trade association, which numbers most of
Europe's major online gambling groups among its members,
submitted a complaint to the European Commission which
took up the issue with US authorities, apparently
without a resolution.
One person in US politics concerned about the cooling US
- European Union relationship was Rep. Robert Wexler (D-Fla.),
chairman of the Europe subcommittee of the House Foreign
Affairs Committee, who also quickly responded to
Dikshit's guilty plea by urging the legalisation of
online gambling:
"It is of critical importance that we find an effective
and immediate way to regulate and tax internet gaming in
order to avoid a serious trade dispute with the E.U.,
which, in turn, could have global trade repercussions
for the United States. The retroactive and
discriminatory enforcement against E.U. parties, who
ceased operating in the U.S. a long time ago, has
directly led to an escalating trade dispute with the E.U.,"
he said.
Sullum's piece elicited a number of comments, among them
these:
"This is two things: a shakedown, and a message to other
gambling providers that US-based gambling interests
control the US market. Plain and simple."
"'It is of critical importance that we find an effective
and immediate way to regulate and tax internet gaming.'
Sadly, this counts as progress. I, for one, am still
very curious (and dubious) about how the US exerts
criminal jurisdiction over a foreign national who has no
"nexus" with the US (that is, no physical footprint
here)."
"What we need is to take over a flag-of-convenience
microstate, make it illegal there to make gambling
illegal anywhere, and then start seizing the persons of
American legislators, executive branch personnel, and
judges wherever we find them. Only allow them to leave
if they plead guilty, surrender assets, and accept
caning. That would be fair, right?"
"Maybe call it Extortiania or Gougestan?" another poster
commented.
"I was thinking more along the lines of Hoistepetardikia,"
wrote another.
"There's no way to rule innocent men. The only power
government has is the power to crack down on criminals.
Well, when there aren't enough criminals, one makes
them. One declares so many things to be a crime that it
becomes impossible for men to live without breaking
laws."
Techdirt commented on the Dikshit issue and recalled
previous cases in which the DoJ has extracted online
gambling related "settlements" outside of the courtroom.
Doing some quick calculations, it found that Dikshit's
and the Neteller founders' settlements alone pulled half
a billion dollars into US federal coffers.
"If revenue generation is the goal, why not simply
legalize online gambling, then regulate and tax it? That
way, the government gets its slice, while US citizens
can enjoy some protection while betting, instead of
being forced into the grey market where they're largely
at the whim of site owners," the popular publication
concluded.
Online Casino News courtesy of
InfoPowa
More news here.
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