WASHINGTON STATE CONSTITUTIONAL CHALLENGE IN COURT
APRIL 25
29 February 2008
Lee Roussos has his day in court on draconian
state laws against Internet gambling
The Poker Players' Alliance reports that Seattle lawyer
Lee Roussos has been given a court date for his
challenge to the constitutionality of the Washington
state ban on Internet gambling, which makes offenders
liable to Class 3 felony penalities normally reserved
for serious personal crimes.
Rousso has informed the PPA that his long-awaited and
state-delayed hearing is now scheduled for the morning
of April 25 and he plans to file his brief before the
hearing on or before March 28. The PPA will publicise a
full copy of the brief.
"I hope Washington State poker players will come to the
hearing and show their support," Rousso says in his PPA
communication.
Rousso, who is also the PPA regional representative for
Washington state, filed the lawsuit mid-2007, claiming
that the state's online gambling ban fails to comply
with the Wire Act passed by the federal government,
which has never extended criminal liability to the
players, something the Washington legislation does.
The Rousso case additionally accuses Washington state of
imposing its ban on online gambling to protect a diverse
and extensive land gambling industry approved and taxed
by the state government - a violation of the U.S.
Constitution's commerce clause forbidding individual
states from passing protectionist laws (see previous
InfoPowa reports).
State legal tactics have delayed Roussos' day in court,
necessitating an appeal action, but the determined
lawyer now appears to be positioned to raise some
interesting and very public questions regarding a ban
that singles out online gambling in a state that appears
to recognise almost all other forms of the pastime on
land.
Online Casino News courtesy of
InfoPowa
More news here.
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