U.S. PROSECUTOR SCATHING ON BETONSPORTS (Update)
12 January 2007
Non appearance for arraignment strongly criticised
Betonsports Plc, the British Internet sports book, should be cited for contempt
of court after failing to appear for a scheduled arraignment in St. Louis
federal court on January 5, federal prosecutors said this week.
Bloombergs business news reports that the London-based company was indicted last
summer for violating U.S. interstate wire gambling laws and racketeering
offences. Last week (see previous InfoPowa reports), Jeffrey Demerath, an
attorney for the once-publicly traded company, told U.S. District Judge Carol
Jackson in St. Louis that his clients had instructed him not to appear to answer
the charges.
Betonsports' decision "suggests that corporate management is neither in a coma
nor dead but, instead, contemptuous and defiant,'' prosecutor Michael Fagan said
this week in court papers.
The London-based company took in wagers in 2004 totaling $1.25 billion, 98
percent of which were sports bets placed by U.S. gamblers using Betonsports' Web
sites and U.S. phone lines, Jackson found in a previous ruling.
Company founder Gary Kaplan and now-former Chief Executive Officer David
Carruthers were indicted on gambling and racketeering charges, along with nine
other defendants. Prosecutors are seeking the forfeiture of $4.5 billion.
Carruthers and six other defendants appeared in court July 31 to plead not
guilty. Kaplan and two other defendants are still at large.
Demerath didn't return a Bloomsberg call seeking comment. In November, he was
one of two corporate attorneys who signed a consent agreement with federal
prosecutors, paving the way for Jackson to issue an order permanently banning
Betonsports from doing business in the U.S.
At that time Fagan and co-counsel Marty Woelfle asked Jackson to impose fines on
the company or order that its officers and directors be arrested for their
"willful disregard'' of the court's processes and proceedings.
Meanwhile, media reports claim that thousands of angry customers have been
calling the prosecution's offices throughout the December holidays demanding to
know why they have yet to be paid.
The information portal Gambling911 published a story that revealed that some
customers who have been in contact are owed upwards of $35 000. The site also
reported that one of the main board directors, Operations Manager Clive Archer,
fled Costa Rica and is yet to return, and quotes an unidentified former employee
as saying: "He took with him all the server information and customer details."
Online Casino News courtesy of InfoPowa
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