VERBOSE APPEAL FROM KENTUCKY ON DOMAIN ISSUE
(Update)
20 February 2009
Outsourced lawyers want to exceed the maximum in
appeal documents
Kentucky governor Steve Beshear's contingency-contracted
lawyers appear to have some voluminous arguments in the
latest twist to the online gambling domains saga (see
previous InfoPowa reports). According to the Interactive
Media Entertainment and Gaming Association (iMEGA)
website, the Kentucky legal representatives have asked
for leave to exceed the 50 page limit on their appeal
presentation.
iMEGA reports that lawyers for the
Commonwealth of Kentucky have asked the State Supreme
Court for permission to submit a much longer appeal
brief in the iMEGA v. Kentucky appeal than is allowed by
rule. Their motion asks that an additional 30 pages -
added to the standard 50 pages - be permitted. But the
main thrust of the appeal appears to have shifted from
the arguments about jurisdiction and gambling devices
which have been conclusively defeated, to the largely
technical argument of whether iMEGA and the IGC (which
contested the attempted seizure and confiscation of
domains) had legal standing.
The argument was
presented in the original action and successfully set
aside, allowing iMEGA and the IGC to defend their
members’ domain names from seizure by a lower Kentucky
court.
If the Supreme Court refuses to give
Beshear's legal team permission to include the extra 30
pages, the motion requests that they be granted an
additional ten days beyond the filing deadline to submit
their brief, giving an impression that there may some
playing for time involved.
Joe Brennan Jr.,
iMEGA’s chairman says: “They’re certainly within their
rights to make their request, but they don’t really seem
to be bringing anything new to the table. The motion is
a repetition of the same arguments that failed in the
Court of Appeals - that iMEGA is an “illegal gambling
association”; that we have no right to represent our
members in court; and that domain names are “gambling
devices” under Kentucky law.
"Those arguments
didn’t work before, but maybe they feel the added volume
of pages will overcome the flaws found by the Court of
Appeals in their attack on our members.”
“The
Commonwealth’s attorneys might save some space if they
drop this continued assault on our standing,” Brennan
points out. “Perhaps they might review Hunt v.
Washington State Apple Advertising Commission, where the
the US Supreme Court establish the right of associations
to stand in court on the behalf of their members. Since
that’s been a settled issue since 1977, I think it’s
time for the Commonwealth’s attorneys to move on.”
Commenting on the governor's appeal against a ruling
by his own state appeals court, Brennan said earlier
this year: “We’re not surprised that Gov. Beshear and
Secretary (J. Michael) Brown filed their appeal. They
both invested a lot of political capital in this suit.
They likely feel they can’t back down. Their attorneys
took this on a contingency fee-basis, and have
reportedly sunk over a million dollars of their own
money in this suit, and other suits like this that they
reportedly prepared for other states.
"Without a
win in Kentucky, it will be hard to get those other
suits off the ground, and they’ll have taken huge losses
on their own gamble.”
Meanwhile, there was some
more Kentucky sleight-of-hand politicking going on in
the bluegrass state - read the next InfoPowa story.....
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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