KENTUCKY RULING NEXT WEEK?
15 January 2010
Kentucky Supreme Court decision on attempt to
seize international domains is due January 21st
If the run of successful industry legal actions against
the state of Kentucky continues, January 21st will be a
date to celebrate. That's when the Kentucky Supreme
Court is due to publish a decision that will hopefully
end the long-running attempt by Governor Steve Beshear's
outsourced lawyers to seize international domain names
belonging to foreign online gambling entities.
Thus far Gov. Beshear's efforts have met with dismal
failure. Initially successful in getting a local court
to give him jurisdiction, the governor lost subsequent
legal actions overturning the lower court's findings,
thanks to the strenuous legal efforts of iMEGA and the
IGC, with valuable support from Internet freedom bodies.
The current action is the Governor's appeal against an
earlier appeal decision, and is likely to finalise the
issue once and for all.
Recapping the events of
2008, the publication Poker News this week observed that
despite there being no federal or Kentucky law that
makes Internet poker illegal, or giving Kentucky
jurisdiction over offshore sites, Franklin County
Circuit Judge Thomas Wingate sided with the state
initially. A Kentucky Court of Appeals decision
subsequently overturned his ruling, prompting the
governor to launch an appeal against the appeal ruling.
Joe Brennan Jr., chairman of the Interactive
Media Entertainment and Gaming Association, was
outspoken in giving his views to Poker News this week,
saying: "These [state of Kentucky legal representative]
guys were punching above their weight class on this
issue.
"They're not very good lawyers, and you
can print that. They had a flawed argument from the
beginning.... They say, 'These are very bad people and
you should take their property away from them. Even
though they haven't been convicted of any crime and
there's no federal or Kentucky law that they've broken,
you should seize their property because we say so.'
"They are looking for a payday and thought they
found some novel concept, but they wound up getting
hammered."
The Kentucky lawyers made a perplexing
move last (December) month when they asked the court
currently considering their appeal for permission to add
names of U.S. citizens to the lawsuit... but declined to
identify such individuals. Brennan told Poker News that
iMEGA decided not to push that issue because it will be
irrelevant once the lawsuit fails.
If denied by
Kentucky's Supreme Court, the last remaining recourse
for the state would be an attempt to bring the suit to
the U.S. Supreme Court, the Poker News article observes.
Brennan doesn't think this would fly: "This is a state
issue," he said. "As two-time losers in their own state,
I don't think they'd get it."
Poker News
pragmatically points out that: "The lawsuit is
ultimately pointless because the sites would continue to
operate without their domain names. The only players who
type in a domain name are the ones looking to initially
download the software, and the search engines could
easily be changed to recognize a new address."
The full article is here:
http://www.pokernews.com/news/2010/01/kentucky-s-domain-name-seizure-ruling-soon-7776.htm
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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