KENTUCKY DOMAINS CASE HEADING FOR STATE SUPREME
COURT (Update)
23 January 2009
State government has filed an appeal against the
iMEGA appeal!
The failed attempt by the state of Kentucky to seize and
confiscate 141 international domain names looks set to
stay in the headlines. Kentucky Governor Steve Beshear's
staff lodged an appeal this week against the successful
iMEGA and IGC appeal which overturned a lower court's
order supporting the Governor's unprecedented action
(see previous InfoPowa report).
Filed Wednesday, the appeal means that the issues will
be heard by the State Supreme Court. It was filed by J.
Michael Brown, Secretary, Justice and Public Safety
Cabinet, who has been spearheading the case for the
governor, working through outsourced lawyers on a
contingency basis. Brown's prominence in the case,
instead of the state's Attorney General as the
appropriate state enforcement official has been the
subject of legal debate in itself.
Brown's appeal is against the January 20, 2009 Order
Granting Petition for Writ of Prohibition," which was
filed by the Interactive Media Entertainment and Gaming
Association (iMEGA) and the Interactive Gaming Council (IGC),
with the Court of Appeals in Kentucky, in which the
plaintiffs won, stopping the governor's attempt to seize
and ultimately confiscate the domains in its tracks.
iMEGA, PlayersOnly.com, Sportsbook.com,
SportsInteraction.com, MySportsbook.com, LinesMaker.com,
VicsBingo.com, and the IGC were listed as the
petitioners in the successful appeal against the lower
court's decision, which had supported Governor Beshear's
controversial actions.
On Wednesday this week - the day after the successful
appeal against his actions - Brown's staff released a
statement to the press, advising that the state of
Kentucky intended to appeal against the decision of the
Kentucky Court of Appeals.
“The Commonwealth will continue its action to protect
Kentucky citizens from illegal internet gambling
operations and appeal the recent Court of Appeals ruling
to the state Supreme Court," the statement announced.
"The evidence demonstrated that illegal and unregulated
activity is occurring in Kentucky and that millions of
dollars are being lost as a result of that activity, a
fact that wasn’t disputed in Tuesday’s ruling.”
In the meantime, the domains appear to have been
released to their rightful owners, reports the
publication Government, which carried out whois checks
on the domains and commented: "The lower-court ruling
rested on Franklin County Circuit Judge Thomas Wingate's
highly specious finding that internet casino domain
names constitute "gambling devices" that are subject to
the state's anti-gambling statutes. Tuesday's decision
disabused Wingate of that notion in no uncertain terms."
Government goes on to detail the under cover nature of
the seizures under Brown's authority last August, which
involved a secret hearing closed to the defendant domain
owners and without their knowledge. This led in
September to Judge Wingate issuing an order directing
registrars of absolutepoker.com, ultimatebet.com, and
139 other domain names to transfer ownership to Kentucky
officials.
"Shortly after the order was issued, whois records for
many of the domains showed they were the property of
Kentucky," reports Government. "For reasons that still
are not clear, the handful of addresses we've checked
since then appeared to have reverted back to their
rightful owner. It's not clear who made the changes or
why they were made."
Government describes the reversal of Judge Wingate's
seizure order as a victory for civil-liberties
advocates, who argued that the laws of an individual
state shouldn't trump the rights of others to access
sites that are perfectly legal elsewhere. In
friend-of-the-court briefs filed in November, the
Electronic Frontier Foundation, the Center for Democracy
and Technology, and the American Civil Liberties Union
of Kentucky argued the decision would pave the way for
Kentucky to take control of any domain name if it
pointed to sites that were deemed illegal in that state.
"And it's not too much of a stretch to envision other
states with strong opinions, say Utah, or even
countries, perhaps China or North Korea, to similarly
commandeer entire sites they deem to violate their
laws," Government editorialised.
"It's always breath-taking when a court with little
understanding of the internet makes a decision that
proves to the rest of the world just how out-of-step
they are with today's changing world. A federal judge in
San Francisco did something similar last year, when he
ordered Wikileaks to be shut down. Fortunately, the
errors of these decisions tend to become so obvious over
time that they eventually have to be overturned. And
that's a good thing."
The week was not kind to Bush government litigation,
because iMEGA won another challenge Wednesday, this one
in the Philadelphia Appeals Court where the government
was defeated in its attempt to use broad Internet bans
rather than technology to protect the underaged from
objectionable content. Although protecting minors is an
emotive issue, the danger of the government's attempt
lay in its potential for extension to other areas.
The Philadelphia Appeals Court ruled this week that the
Internet Content Law proposed by the federal government
would unnecessarily violate the First Amendment, because
filtering technologies and other parental control tools
are a less restrictive way to protect children from
inappropriate Internet content.
The US government had persisted in passing the act
despite the fact that the Supreme Court had a year
earlier ruled that another law intended to protect
children from explicit material online - the
Communications Decency Act - was unconstitutional.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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