THE ATLANTA STORY ISN'T DONE YET (Update)
29 January 2010
Will the new head of Governor Riley's
anti-gambling unit go after alleged informant?
The resignation of David Barber, former head of Alabama
Governor Bob Riley's anti-gambling task force, on
disclosures of gambling activity in neighbouring
Mississippi (see previous InfoPowa report) may have had
sinister undertones, according to a report from
Associated Press updating the story.
The press
agency quoted Barber's replacement, Mobile County
District Attorney John Tyson Jr., this week as claiming
that an Alabama casino owner may have been obstructing
justice when he hired a detective to trail Barber, who
quit after winning $2 300 gambling at a Mississippi
casino.
Tyson said he personally had a clean
record, and hadn't gambled in nearly 20 years. He went
on to question whether Victoryland casino owner Milton
McGregor crossed a legal line when he hired a detective
to follow Barber to an Indian casino in Mississippi.
"Mr. McGegor needs to be concerned about whether or
not he's going to intimidate law enforcement officials
from doing their jobs," said Tyson. "I think it borders
on obstruction and we are going to look into that
immediately."
McGregor, who operates more than 6
000 electronic bingo machines at VictoryLand in Shorter,
openly revealed that he had a private investigator
follow Barber and witness his winnings at the Golden
Moon casino in Philadelphia, Miss.
McGregor
defended these activities this week, saying: "You can
monitor activities going on around you. Everyone is
entitled to do that."
McGregor said Tyson should
look at Barber's trip to Mississippi, including whether
any other Riley appointees joined him, whether they
received free meals and drinks, and how he picked the
winning machine.
Responding to the jibe, Tyson
said Monday he and his wife, Beth, visited a Mississippi
casino shortly after the first casinos opened in 1992
and spent about $20.
"It took us about 15, maybe
20 minutes and we lost it," Tyson said.
He said
he had never gambled anywhere else in the United States
or abroad, but had been back to a Mississippi casino to
see a musical performance and eat in a restaurant.
Associated Press reports that Tyson is a Democrat
and Riley a Republican, but they share the same view
about the legality of the thousands of electronic bingo
machines in Alabama.
"The electronic bingo
machines they have are really nothing more than slot
machines, and slot machines are illegal," Tyson said at
a news conference with Riley.
Riley started the
task force a year ago to crack down on gambling. One of
its first efforts was to assist Tyson in seizing more
than 120 illegal gambling devices from Mobile businesses
in March.
Since then, the task force has raided
one of the state's largest electronic bingo halls in
White Hall and tried to raid Gilley's Country Crossing
at Dothan before being stopped by a judge.
Tyson
would make no comments about possible targets or raids,
but he said laws allowing bingo in some counties were
written for traditional bingo cards, not machines.
"Your grandmother's bingo game is what is authorised,"
he said.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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