POKER REFORM IN SOUTH CAROLINA?
12 January 2007
But only for "recreational activity"
A longtime ban on poker playing in the state of South
Carolina will soon be under the legislative microscope
if state Representative Wallace Scarborough of
Charleston has his way.
The state lawmaker wants to revamp South Carolina's
gambling laws to legalise in-house poker games, and is
busy drafting legislation to permit the games as long as
they are done under the heading of "recreational
activity."
The bill, still in the early stages of development,
would be part of an overall effort to update the state's
200-year-old gaming laws, which some say technically
prohibits card and dice games and even some common board
games like Monopoly.
Scarborough called the restrictions "ridiculous,
considering we live in a modern era."
The proposal comes after a raid in Mount Pleasant that
ended with a 28-year-old man being charged with
operating a gambling establishment. Nathan Stallings
pleaded guilty Friday in a deal that cost him $747 in
fines and court costs, but lets him avoid jail time,
reports Associated Press.
The game at Stallings home had been advertised on an
Internet site that attracted like-minded poker
enthusiasts from all over the Lowcountry. Players paid
$20 to join the game, with a percentage of the proceeds
going to the house.
Eighteen of the players arrested in the raid are seeking
jury trials in what they say is a bid to toss out the
state's anti-poker laws. A trial date has not been set,
Mount Pleasant Town Attorney Ira Grossman said Friday.
Scarborough, whose proposal is unrelated to the
Stallings case, says he knows his proposal will run into
much opposition, particularly from some of his
Republican peers from the Upstate.
"I'm going to have a million people against it," he
said.
Scarborough also said the key to the proposal is making
sure that the law would not open the door to organised
gambling houses. "That is not my goal and not my
intent," he said.
The West Virginia Legislature also has gaming on its
agenda, and will be considering whether or not to have a
statewide vote to legalise table games at racetracks.
The current bill under consideration only requires the
four counties that have racetracks to vote, but others
want to make it a statewide issue.
Online Casino News courtesy of InfoPowa
More news here.
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