ONLINE GAMBLING FINANCE MEN LOSE ATTEMPT TO QUASH
CHARGES
10 February 2012
Campos and Elie fail in attempt to have DoJ
Black Friday charges dismissed
Former Utah banker John Campos and e-processor Chad Elie, who face charges relating to the payment
processing of online poker transactions, suffered a
setback Tuesday when a Manhattan judge refused to allow
their motion for dismissal of Black Friday indictments
against them.
Judge Lewis Kaplan wrote:
"Defendants' argument that poker is not gambling fails,
at least at this stage," in an eight-page memorandum
opinion.
The
publication Forbes notes that the ruling should come as
no surprise to the two defendants; at a pre-trial
hearing in December last year the judge noted that it
would be "extraordinarily unlikely that the entire
indictment will be dismissed." (see previous InfoPowa
reports).
All eight of the government's charges
against the duo remain, with three of six original Black
Friday defendants already pleading guilty.
Campos and Elie are set to go on trial next month,
nearly one year after American enforcement officials
shut down the US operations of PokerStars, Absolute
Poker and Full Tilt Poker, unsealing a criminal
indictment of 11 men and a $3 billion lawsuit against
the companies and some of their founders and board
members.
Judge Kaplan characterised the argument
that poker is not gambling as "surprising" and said
that Campos and Elie will need to defend at trial the
government's claims that they violated the Illegal
Gambling Business Act.
"It would be
inappropriate," Kaplan wrote, "to dismiss any count
"for lack of proof at this point in time."
Update: Campos and Elie have already started refiling
their motion to dismiss the DoJ charges.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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