HAS DIKSHIT ALIENATED OTHER PARTY GAMING FOUNDERS?
(Update)
2 January 2009
Gambling mogul could have acted precipitously
The $300 million "settlement" and Wire Act guilty plea
by Party Gaming co-founder Anurag Dikshit earlier this
(December) month was discussed in an interesting article
in the The Times over the holiday weekend, which
suggested that his unilateral and independent move to
clean the slate with the US Department of Justice may
not have gone down well with his fellow founders.
"Dikshit’s decision has created a rift with his former
Party Gaming colleagues, in particular the three other
entrepreneurs who helped launch what was once the
world’s biggest internet poker service — Ruth Parasol,
her husband, Russell De Leon, and their marketing guru,
Vikrant Bhargava," the article reports. "It will also
have troubled executives at other big online gaming
companies, such as 888 Holdings. And it could have grave
implications for the entire online gambling industry,
estimated to be worth more than $12 billion a year."
Describing the former software engineer's guilty plea as
a significant coup for the DoJ, The Times recaps on DoJ
actions against online gambling executives like David
Carruthers, who has been under house arrest in the US
for over two years with no trial date yet in sight.
According to the piece, Dikshit's motivation was the
determination of the American authorities to pursue
those involved in online gambling, and it quotes close
associates as saying that for him, it was simply a means
of bringing the affair to a personal end, even if it
cost $300 million.
"It is money he can afford to lose, argue his friends.
He has already made more than GBP500 million from the
sale of Party Gaming shares, and retains a 27.7 percent
stake in the business, worth GBP 213 million."
The Times quotes an unidentified online gambling
executive as saying: “It’s a dangerous precedent. If
he’s admitting wrong, I don’t like it.”
Dikshit’s decision to break ranks has provoked anger
among former colleagues, the article claims. "According
to one person who knows them well, the other three
founders of Party Gaming are upset because it leaves
them feeling “guilty by association. They believe they
have done nothing wrong, maintaining that until the US
explicitly banned online gaming in October 2006,
offering poker online to American citizens was not
illegal," it reports.
His former colleagues think that Dikshit has, in poker
parlance, folded, the report suggests. "They believe
that with the change in administration in America next
month, pursuing those involved in online gambling will
fall off the agenda. Why, they argue, pay huge sums to
settle these disputes if the authorities will be looking
elsewhere in just a few weeks?
"According to executives close to them, the Party Gaming
entrepreneurs are convinced that the US will regulate
the entire industry within the next two years, not least
for the valuable revenue it will generate in taxes."
Dikshit had apparently been negotiating for a resolution
since summer 2006, and in that time has travelled to
America only once — for this month’s court appearance.
An American law firm led the negotiations with the US
authorities on his behalf. He has had little contact
with his former colleagues, described by friends as "drifiting
apart" from them, although some said that it was on the
advice of his legal representatives.
Party Gaming has already issued a statement (see
previous InfoPowa reports) distancing itself from
Dikshit's decision, which it described as personal and
independent. The company did, however, reveal that its
own protracted negotiations with the DoJ were in the
final stages with a no-plea settlement likely at
considerably less than Dikshit has agreed to pay.
The Times opines that once settlements are agreed, the
sector is likely to undergo a rapid round of
consolidation. In the recent past, deals, such as a
mooted tie-up between Ladbrokes, the bookmaker, and 888
have come to nothing because of the risk of American
litigation. That could all change with a settlement.
Ivor Jones, an analyst at Evolution Securities, told the
newspaper: “Party Gaming and 888, as two of the largest
companies, look likely to start the process. We believe
combining the two would release at least $70 million of
synergies.”
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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