KENTUCKY PLAYING CARDS CLOSE TO CHEST IN LATEST
LEGAL MOVE (Update)
25 December 2009
Outsourced lawyers refuse to identify alleged
US online gambling domain owners
Recent moves by the state of Kentucky to claim
jurisdiction in its domain case appeal because
unidentified domain owners were Americans (see previous
InfoPowa reports) is under the media spotlight once
again.
The principal opponent to the state's
abortive move to seize international online gambling
domain names, the Interactive Media Entertainment &
Gaming Association, this week repreatedly requested that
the outsourced lawyers working for Kentucky reveal the
identities of those they claimed were Americans in their
motion to the Kentucky Supreme Court.
The
requests were refused.
"Lawyers representing the
commonwealth of Kentucky have refused to name any new
individuals targeted in their attempt to seize ownership
of 141 Internet domain names, all related to online
gambling, and then transfer them to the state," said a
statement from iMEGA.
"Despite numerous requests
from attorneys representing the industry’s trade
associations, the commonwealth’s attorneys have sternly
declined to identify anyone.
"In response to one
such request, William C. Hurt, Jr, a lawyer from Hurt,
Crosbie & May in Lexington, wrote that no one had the
right to any information or even to challenge the
motion."
iMEGA backed its assertions by
publishing relevant legal emails. In one of these, Hurt
wrote: “I do not believe anyone has standing to file a
response or motion to strike." This was despite a
January 2009 ruling by the Kentucky Court of Appeals
that blocked the seizures and decried the lack of due
process for the defendants.
In a secret hearing
in Franklin Circuit Court in the fall of 2008, Hurt and
other contingency-fee lawyers for the state convinced
Judge Thomas Wingate to sign off on seizure orders for
the domain names, despite no notification or
representation in court on behalf of the affected
owners.
The commonwealth’s lawyers then sought
to have the domain owners pay huge cash settlements to
regain ownership of their property, as well as promise
to block Kentucky residents from accessing their Web
sites.
The matter is currently before the
Kentucky Supreme Court, which heard arguments from both
sides in October. A decision is expected sometime early
next year.
Joe Brennan Jr., chairman of iMEGA,
has been scathing in his condemnation of the latest
moves by the state's lawyers, saying: “These lawyers
lost a very public battle with us in the Court of
Appeals, and probably sense the same result from the
State Supreme Court, so they’ll do anything to keep this
thing alive.
“They were counting on a big payday
from our members, in the form of settlements to get
their own property back, but it doesn’t look like that’s
going to happen. Since they don’t get one nickel from
the state to pursue this, it’s clear that the drive for
big money has taken over, and any sense of fair play or
due process has gone out the window.”
Responding
to Hurt’s claim that no one had standing to challenge
the motion or to request the names of the new
individuals added to the suit, Brennan said, “Their
strategy all along was to ignore us every step of the
way, even after the Court of Appeals recognized our
standing and blocked their seizure efforts. They can
stick their head in the sand, but we’re not going
anywhere, and frankly, neither is their attempt to seize
these domain names.”
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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