NEVADA GAMBLING CHIEF COMMENTS ON INTERNET GAMBLING
13 February 2009
The verdict is that online gambling's future in
the United States is still uncertain
Dennis Neilander, the chairman of the Nevada state
Gaming Control Board, has nixed the current prospects
for legalising online gambling by telling the Senate
Judiciary Committee that without clarification from the
courts or Congress he believes Nevada is precluded from
adding Internet gambling to the many games it regulates.
Addressing the Committee this week, Neilander said
the future of Internet gambling remains "very much up in
the air." Referring from the outgoing Bush
administration's Unlawful Internet Gaming Enforcement
Act regulations pushed through just before the change of
presidential power, Neilander noted that the definition
of "unlawful Internet gambling" is still in question.
He noted that Congressman Barney Frank, who
chairs the House Financial Services Committee had
opposed the UIGEA regulations and proposed the scrapping
of the law, and that American banks and other financial
institutions have complained they were being forced into
a law enforcement role when Congress couldn't even
define what conduct it was trying to prevent.
The
2006 law sought to curb online gambling by prohibiting
financial institutions from accepting payments from
credit cards, checks or electronic fund transfers to
settle online wagers, Associated Press reports.
Neilander commented that Representative Shelley Berkley,
a Democrat from Nevada, has proposed a comprehensive
study of the issue, remarking that the Bush
administration embarked on a "prohibitionist crusade
against Internet gaming" that led to the flawed rules
being issued "at the very last minute."
Addressing the question of private gambling salons in
Nevada, the Gaming Control Board executive said that
these became "as popular as we might have hoped"
following their approval by lawmakers in 2001. The
private salons were designed to expand on inducements
used by Nevada casinos for years, such as luxury suites,
free entertainment and meals, shopping sprees and access
to private jets.
Neilander said some high-stakes
gamblers prefer the salons, but others like the action
on the casino floor where they're shoulder-to-shoulder
with other bettors.
While there were early
concerns about the private salons because they departed
from a long-standing law that all gambling be open to
the public, Neilander added, "I frankly don't think the
general public even cares at this point."
Rules
for the salons were recently changed at the request of
the resort industry so that the clubs can set their own
minimum bets on live games. The minimum bet had been
$500. Also, the minimum bankroll that a privacy-seeking
high roller has to show was cut from $500 000 in cash to
$300 000.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
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