FUGITIVE RULING STYMIES DoJ SEIZURE ATTEMPT
20 February 2009
WorldWide Telesports $7 million in assets denied
to U.S. Department of Justice
The United States Court of Appeals has stymied an
attempt by the US Department of Justice attempt to seize
seven million dollars-worth of assets from the
international bank accounts of online gambling
enterprise WorldWide Telesports and its fugitive major
shareholder Bill Scott.
The Justice officials
were confident that the assets would be seized, having
secured a summary judgement in a lower court, but Court
of Appeals Judge Thomas B. Griffith put a spanner in the
DoJ works by ruling that the seizure could not occur
because Scott was not a true fugitive under all five
conditions set down by US law.
Despite the
existence of warrants for Scott's arrest, Judge Griffith
ruled that the government was not entitled to seek
forfeiture of the $7 million as Scott's case did not
satisfy all five criteria established by previous
federal court interpretations of US "fugitive
disentitlement" statutes.
In a prior case, a
judge decided that an alleged fugitive's assets could
only be seized in cases:
1. where a warrant has
been issued in a criminal case for the fugitive's
apprehension; 2. where the subject had "notice or
knowledge" of that warrant and the criminal case was
related to the forfeiture action; 3. where the
alleged fugitive is not already incarcerated in a
foreign jail; and 4. where the fugitive has
"deliberately avoided criminal prosecution by leaving
the United States" and; 5. where the fugitive
declines to enter or reenter the country or otherwise
evades the criminal court's jurisdiction.
Judge
Griffith set aside the summary judgment because the
government had failed to establish a direct link between
Scott's refusal to return to the US and his wish to
avoid prosecution.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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