ANOTHER POKER SKILL RULING
30 January 2009
Now a Colorado jury favours the skill rather than
luck concept of poker
Following on the heels of the recent Pennsylvanian court
ruling that poker is a game dominated by skill rather
than chance (see previous InfoPowa reports) comes a
report from Colorado that a jury in that state has
arrived at the same conclusion.
The Poker Players Alliance has issued a press release
applauding the decision, which is another important
precedent for the legalisation of poker as a game of
skill more than luck.
In the release, the one million member PPA, which boasts
13 000 members in Colorado, commended the ruling in
Colorado v. Kevin Raley, in which a jury found the
organiser of a poker league not guilty of illegal
gambling.
The lawyers for the defense presented expert testimony
by Professor Robert Hannum, Professor of Statistics at
the University of Denver, that poker is more a game of
skill than it is of luck. This testimony was challenged
by the prosecution, yet the jury still returned a not
guilty verdict likely due to Professor Hannum's
testimony and the overwhelming body of evidence that
demonstrates that poker is in fact a game of skill.
Under Colorado law, illegal gambling "means risking any
money, credit, deposit, or other thing of value for gain
contingent in whole or in part upon lot, chance, the
operation of a gambling device, or the happening or
outcome of an event, including a sporting event, over
which the person taking a risk has no control, but does
not include bona fide contests of skill."
Gary Reed, the Colorado State Director of the PPA
commented: "The PPA is pleased with the outcome of this
case. It is further confirmation that poker is indeed a
game of skill, not chance.
"At the same time, the not guilty verdict cements the
rights of Colorado citizens to enjoy the American
pastime of poker and will allow law enforcement to use
its scarce resources to investigate real unlawful
activity in the state, not poker games."
"I am pleased that the jury agreed that my actions in
organizing a poker league did not constitute illegal
gambling," said Kevin Raley, the defendant in this case.
"As a proud member of the PPA, I want to thank them for
their support of my case."
"Today's ruling is the third victory for the poker
community in less than a week, following verdicts in
Kentucky and Pennsylvania that protect an individual's
right to play poker at a time and place of their
choosing," said John Pappas, executive director of the
PPA. "The momentum continues in our favour, and the PPA
will continue to champion such causes in other states as
well as at the national level."
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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