GENERALLY POSITIVE VIBE AT CONGRESSIONAL HEARING
(Update)
4 December 2009
Thursday hearing saw some useful
testimony...and a strangely uninformed FBI opinion
The House Financial Services Committee hearing
Washington Thursday attracted some 22 members of the
committee and an impressive list of expert witnesses,
most of whom appeared to support the concept of
regulated online gambling in the United States.
One very obvious but expected exception was the
Republican Representative from Alabama, Spencer Bachus,
who presented his customary anti-online gambling
arguments, augmented by a new twist - an FBI letter
claiming that collusion was possible and implying that
little was done to counter it. The Poker Players
Alliance was quick to criticise this in a subsequent
statement.
The 90 minute hearing was for
information purposes only as a first step to launching
chairman Barney Frank's Internet Gambling Regulation,
Consumer Protection and Enforcement Act of 2009 (H.R.
2267) next year in another attempt to legalise, regulate
and tax online gambling, and there was no vote or markup
procedure.
Chairman Frank opened proceedings with
a statement in which he said: "The notion that this
Congress should tell millions of adult Americans that we
know better than they what they should with their own
money on their own time on their own computer seems to
me to be a very grave error.
"It is true if
things are [on] the Internet, there is the possibility
that underage people can get at them," he continued.
"There are a whole range of things on the Internet that
we would not like underage people to use....the notion
that because some people will abuse something, you
prevent everybody from doing it, is as great a threat to
the liberty of the individual as any philosophy I have
seen."
Congressman Frank went on to criticise
Republican opposition to repealing the UIGEA, saying it
was incompatible with conservative philosophy.
"I
am struck by frankly what seems to be a inconsistency on
the part of some of my conservative colleagues who
bemoan the nanny state, who talk about limited
government, who urge the government to stay out of
people's lives, who also argue that the Internet ought
to be a free of restrictions, but who then single out
the Internet for restrictions on personal choices to be
made by individuals," Frank said.
Witness
testimonies provided further evidence to Committee
members that a regulatory framework for Internet
gambling would protect consumers and ensure the
integrity of Internet gambling financial transactions.
The hearing highlighted the success of existing
systems and technologies in blocking minors from
gambling online, combating compulsive gambling and
protecting consumers against money laundering, fraud and
identity theft.
Parry Aftab, executive director
of WiredSafety, the largest Internet safety and help
group in the world, concluded in her testimony that
regulation provides the best opportunity to protect
consumers.
"The status quo offers no meaningful
assurances that consumers will be protected," Aftab
testified. "There are a number of technologies routinely
used in other industries that are easily adaptable to
online gambling sites. They are real, proven and in use
today. They are also improving by the minute."
A
comprehensive study conducted by Harvard University's
John F. Kennedy School of Government and presented by
Professor Malcolm K. Sparrow further reinforced the
consumer benefits of regulation.
In the Harvard
study, "Can Internet Gambling Be Effectively Regulated?
Managing the Risks," which was released at the hearing,
Professor Sparrow found: "The establishment of a
well-regulated industry under U.S. jurisdiction would
offer far better protection against online gambling's
potential social harms than outright prohibition.
Combining a thoughtful regulatory scheme with education,
technology tools, and support appears to be the most
effective means of handling the realities and risks of
online gambling in the United States...In the end,
consumers in the United States would be better protected
than they are now."
In his testimony, Dr.
Sparrow, who is a former Detective Chief Inspector of
the British Police Service with extensive experience in
criminal investigation, said: "At a minimum, even an
imperfect legalization and regulatory regime for online
gambling would give Americans much more protection than
they have now." His research included important findings
on issues of gambling by minors and the potential for
criminal and fraudulent behavior, in which the study
concludes that improved technology and enforcement
mechanisms that are currently available are more
effective than an outright ban.
Michael Brodsky,
executive chairman of Youbet.com, a provider of
pari-mutuel horse racing content for consumers through
Internet and telephone platforms, testified that
existing technology can be deployed to successfully
regulate Internet gambling.
"Today at Youbet we
use technology that would ensure effective regulation of
Internet gambling. The already-existing, totally legal,
online pari-mutuel horserace wagering industry is a
U.S.-based model of how to provide a responsible online
wagering experience for adults - one that is clean,
regulated and scrupulous about both collecting and
paying taxes," stated Brodsky.
The Youbet
executive went on to characterise today's illegal online
gambling as a 'Wild West Affair', adding, "The only way
to put any controls on Internet gambling is to legalize
it and regulate it."
While existing federal laws
generally prohibit online wagering, Congress has allowed
domestic companies like Youbet.com to accept online
wagers for horse racing, despite a Justice Department
position that such wagers remain illegal.
In his
largely neutral testimony, Keith Whyte, executive
director of the National Council on Problem Gambling,
the U.S. advocate for programs and services to assist
problem gamblers and their families, discussed how
online technology and controls can be used to better
help combat compulsive gambling than can be done in the
existing land-based industry.
"The graphical and
interactive structure of the internet provides an
opportunity to create informed consumers with access to
a variety of information designed to encourage safe
choices and discourage unsafe behavior," stated Whyte.
"The amount of online information and possible
interventions are essentially unlimited."
Chairman Frank referred to the recent six month
postponement by federal agencies of the UIGEA
regulations, commenting that this gave Representatives
"....a chance to act in an unhurried manner on my
legislation to undo this regulatory excess by the Bush
administration and to undo this ill-advised law."
The main opposition to online gambling came as usual
from Rep. Spencer Bachus, who argued that the UIGEA
should have been finalised and implemented two years
back - delays occasioned by federal drafters during the
Bush Administration. Apparently overlooking this fact,
Bachus challenged Frank to "Quit the foot dragging and
enforce this law."
"No amount of regulation can
begin to protect against this particularly predatory and
abusive intrusion into American homes and the harm it is
causing our youth," Bachus asserted.
Further
opposition came from Robert Martin, tribal chairman of
the Morongo Band of Mission Indians in California who
claimed that legalising online gambling would be
prejudicial to tribal gambling interests. His objection
was challenged by Congressman Frank, who noted that the
Morongo had recently tried to engineer online poker
legalisation state laws that would give exclusivity.
"They are not against Internet poker in general and in
fact are trying to get involved in the industry by
passing legislation in California," he observed. "You
want to be able to do it and have no one else do it, is
that the issue?"
Martin did not respond to the
challenge.
Only hours after the hearing, the
Poker Players Alliance pounced on the negative FBI
opinion presented to the hearing by Representative
Spencer Bachus.
In a statement that achieved
wide and immediate media coverage, the Alliance
challenged the statement allegedly made by Shawn Henry,
Assistant Director of the Cyber Division of the Federal
Bureau of Investigation that there is potential for
criminal activity through online poker.
The PPA
statement pointed out: "The largest poker sites all use
software to detect collusion. If a site is subjected to
allegations that players are cheating, few players will
play on that site."
"Every concern the [FBI]
letter raises is better addressed by licensing and
regulation than by prohibition," said John Pappas,
Executive Director of the Poker Players Alliance. "The
letter misconstrues much about the current state of
online poker, but it does so in a way that clearly makes
the case for why federal oversight is necessary.
"Licensing and regulation is the most protective measure
we can take to ensure the online community can be
properly monitored while maintaining our internet
freedom," Pappas concluded.
An older FBI claim
that online gambling is vulnerable to money laundering,
was addressed by Rep. Peter King (R-N.Y.), the current
ranking member and former chairman of the Committee on
Homeland Security. He attended the hearing and said
publicly that he is not aware of any money laundering or
terrorism financing through Internet gaming. He pointed
out that if financial crimes were a legitimate concern,
then regulation and oversight as proposed in H.R. 2267
is the best way to mitigate that risk.
Samuel A.
Vallandingham, chief financial officer and vice
president of The First State Bank speaking on behalf of
the Independent Community Bankers of America said the
UIGEA makes impossible demands on community banking in
the US. He testified that the attempt to block payment
transactions by online casino operators is a burden the
financial industry cannot handle.
"The added
burden of monitoring all payment transactions for the
taint of unlawful Internet gambling would drain finite
resources currently engaged in complying with
anti-terrorism, anti-money laundering regulations, the
plethora of new regulations emerging from the financial
crisis and the daily operation of community banks to
meet the financial needs of their customers," said the
expert on banking technology.
He drew attention
to the imprecise definition of illegal online gambling
provided in the UIGEA, commenting that because no
overriding law exists, banks would have the problematic
task of determining each customer's legality with regard
to hundreds of state, federal, and local laws.
"ICBA strongly endorses H.R. 2267, the Internet Gambling
Regulation, Consumer Protection and Enforcement Act
which establishes a federal regulatory and enforcement
framework for licensing Internet gambling operators,"
concluded the banking representative, throwing the
support of the financial industry squarely behind Barney
Frank's bill.
Frank ended the hearing by saying
the committee would return to the subject next year,
presumably for further debate and markup.
Summing
up the hearing, Pappas commented: "I think what this
hearing did was lay a foundation of record for the
issue. The proponents of Internet gambling did a good
job. I really think we got the much stronger and
compelling arguments. If that's the best they
[anti-online gambling critics] can bring to the table, I
feel pretty good about it."
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
Top of page |
Home |
News |
Forum |
Webcast |
Vortran |
Accredited Casinos |
Evil Ones |
Pitch a Bitch |
Online Gambling Resources |
Poker
|
|