iMEGA DEALS A NEW CARD IN ONLINE GAMBLING
8 June 2007
Lawsuit filed against US Attorney General Gonzales
to halt enforcement of anti-online gambling law
Setting the Internet message boards and company
communications alight this week is news that a little
known organisation titled the Interactive Media
Entertainment & Gaming Association (iMEGA) has filed a
lawsuit against U.S. Attorney General Alberto Gonzales,
apparently with the objective of halting the enforcement
of the Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act.
The Federal Trade Commission and the Federal Reserve are
also named in the lawsuit, which is accompanied by a
request for "Temporary Restraints to Halt Enforcement of
the Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act of 2006 (UIGEA)
and Resume Internet Gambling."
Top executives of the organisation are scheduled to
speak this Thursday at the Global Interactive Gamiing
Summit and Expo (GIGSE) currently running in Montreal,
and news of the litigation will ensure a large
attendance of delegates for their session.
A statement released by the organisation advises that
iMEGA is seeking judgment restraining the United States
from enforcing the “Unlawful Internet Gambling
Enforcement Act of 2006” (UIGEA). The current law
prevents U.S. credit-card companies and banks from
processing payments to online gambling businesses.
According to the Act, violators are subject to civil
and/or criminal penalties including imprisonment.
The suit, filed in U.S. District Court outlines how the
Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act infringes
upon basic constitutional rights and sets a dangerous
precedent for I-commerce by criminalising the
transmission of money if the end result is illegal in
some unspecified place. The injunction, if granted, will
prevent the government from enforcing the UIGEA and pave
the way for Internet gambling to resume pending further
order of the court.
“The purpose of the Unlawful Internet Gambling
Enforcement Act is to prevent Americans from engaging in
their rights to conduct their lives in the manner they
wish to live it - to be free from the government
imposing public morality in the privacy of one’s home”,
says Eric M. Bernstein, Esq., lead attorney for iMEGA.
The lawsuit also seeks to stop the enforcement of the
UIGEA based on the recent ruling of the World Trade
Organisation in a final appeal which found the United
States in contempt of treaty obligations regarding
Internet gambling (see previous InfoPowa reports).
Washington spokesmen recently said the United States
would not appeal the ruling in favor of Antigua and
Barbuda, the Caribbean nation which won the WTO
challenge against the US and one nation where Internet
gambling is legal. Instead, Washington says, the US will
try to modify its treaty obligation to eliminate
Internet gambling. The WTO ruling permits sanctions to
be imposed against the US.
According to the statement, the Interactive Media
Entertainment & Gaming Association was established to be
"a voice of reason in Washington and around the world
for the fair, equitable, and rational governance of
interactive Internet commerce and communications." The
organisation is believed to be made up of many different
individuals and has extensive funding.
Edward Leyden, President of iMEGA, hopes the lawsuit
"...will open the eyes of legislators [and] encourage
the regulation and taxation of Internet gaming. Without
transparency, American consumers who gamble online are
left without standards of practice or consumer
protections."
"Two major benefits come immediately from U.S.
recognition and regulation of Internet gaming;
transparency and tax revenues,” said Leyden. “As with
the U.S. financial markets, transparency assures that
broad access to relevant data and the balancing forces
of a free market all operate to maintain fairness and
prevent corruption. Similarly, in this age of a yawning
federal "tax gap," U.S. taxation of Internet gaming
transactions and companies could generate more than $20
billion during the next several years - all while saving
federal law enforcement dollars for the fight against
terrorism and other dire issues.”
iMEGA's lead legal expert, Eric M. Bernstein, Esq. has
25 years of experience in handling litigation on a wide
range of subjects within the labour / employment law
fields, including general advice and assistance,
contract negotiations, interest and grievance
arbitrations, fact-finding and mediation, disciplinary
matters involving public safety and non-public safety
employees.
He has served as a municipal attorney on issues as
widely diverse as land use, ethics, municipal
construction, local public contracts law, tax appeals,
open space acquisition and government affairs. And as a
board of education attorney, Bernstein has handled
matters of special education, teacher/student discipline
and budget appeals..
In regard to First Amendment / Internet law, Bernstein
is a member of the First Amendment Lawyer's Association
and the Free Speech Coalition.
In addition to his professional practice, Bernstein is a
regular and frequently requested speaker at state and
national organisations and has been teaching for the
Rutgers University Bureau of Government Research since
the early 1980s. Mr. Bernstein has written articles for
publication and serves as a Director of the New Jersey
State Bar Association Local Government Law Section,
where he was previously Vice President and Editor of its
newsletter.
Online Casino News courtesy of
InfoPowa
More news here.
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