SKILL VS. CHANCE DEBATE TAKEN TO HIGHER
PENNSYLVANIAN COURT (Update)
13 February 2009
Conflicting rules steer argument to Superior Court
Poker fans who were cheered by the recent news that a
Pennsylvania court had ruled that skill dominated chance
in poker (see previous InfoPowa report) will have to
wait a little longer for a definitive legal opinion
following the news late last week that the issue has
been referred to the Pennsylvanian Superior Court.
The skill vs. chance issue is critical to defining the
legality of poker in many states.
Local newspaper the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review reports
that what appears to be a subsequent conflicting
decision by another Pennsylvanian judge has made the
referral necessary. The conflicting decision included a
reference to state gambling law as being
"...unconstitutionally vague when it comes to poker
tournaments.”
In the original case against Walter Watkins and Diane
Dent, Judge Thomas James ruled that poker in the state
was not an unlawful activity because skill dominated
chance, thus removing it from the legal definition of
illegality as a "game of chance". In reaching his
decision, the judge was aided by a large volume of
expert evidence and literature.
Then came the decision by fellow Pennsylvanian judge
Richard McCormick who, in trying a case against Larry
Burns who had organised volunteer fire department fund
raising poker tourneys, found that such tournaments were
illegal under the criminal code of Pennsylvania.
The issue may turn on the question of profit, opined
Duquesne University School of Law academic, Professor
Bruce Ledewitz in an interview with the newspaper.
“It’s a perfectly reasonable disagreement and I’m sure
it will be resolved by the Superior Court,” Ledewitz
said, pointing out that the differences in the cases
were that Watkins-Dent had accepted tips rather than a
formal rake, whilst the later case against Burns
involved him taking a percentage of the profits from the
poker games.
Presumably the Superior Court in Pennsylvania will also
take congisance of another recent finding in Colorado,
where Kevin Raley was successfully defended with expert
evidence from the University of Denver (see previous
InfoPowa report) that poker was a game of skill and not
predominaently chance.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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