ONLINE POKER ENTREPRENEURS FACE TEXAS CRIMINAL
CHARGES
5 June 2009
Failed gambling venture leads to criminal
securities fraud charges
Prejudiced investors in a Texas online poker enterprise
have hit back at the entrepreneurs behind the failed
venture, securing a grand jury indictment on securities
fraud charges, alleging they misled the backers of their
online poker business, reports the Brownsville Herald.
Apparently 13 investors were persuaded in late 2005
to back a venture branded LetsPoker.com by entrepeneurs
Martin Graham Tyson Sr. and his son, Martin Jr. of the
Marble Falls, Texas-based Panorama Global Realty Group.
But because the developers failed to disclose the
true risks, the investors ended up losing their shirts,
the Texas State Securities Board found this week after
an Hidalgo County grand jury indicted Tyson Sr. and his
son.
The father-son duo allegedly failed to
inform investors of an ongoing civil fraud suit against
their company; a state investigation into investment
advisers working on their behalf and legislation then
making its way through Congress that would ban online
gambling financial transactions in 2006.
In all,
the mostly middle-aged backers lost close to $300 000 in
the venture, according to a two-count indictment filed
in the case.
"You've got to disclose what you're
doing with the money and then follow through with it,"
said Robert Elder, spokesman for the state securities
board. "Otherwise, it's a criminal offence."
Prosecutors alleged that the Tysons first approached the
investors in 2005 with a plan to develop LetsPoker.com,
a Web site that would allow U.S. citizens to play for
winnings over the Internet.
Working through
intermediaries, they convinced the 13 men and women to
hand over sums as large as $20 000 to fund development
on the site.
But the company later spent those
funds on purposes other than those originally promised,
the indictment states. Some of the funds allegedly went
to pay commission fees to the Tysons, while others were
funneled into another company operated by Tyson Jr.
To make matters worse, federal lawmakers were
already well into negotiations that would prohibit U.S.
credit card and bank companies from making payments to
online gambling sites.
Larry Dowling, an
Austin-based attorney who has previously represented the
men, said, however, that a preliminary version of
LetsPoker.com was launched before Congress officially
passed the [UIGEA] ban in October 2006. "It was
generating revenue," he said. "At the time that it was
shut down, it certainly wasn't the leading gambling
site, but it had prospects."
Enforcement officers
with the state securities board began investigating
Panorama in 2005 and in December of that year raided the
office of Richard A. Taff - an investment adviser
working for the company who has since pleaded guilty to
selling securities without a licence and is currently
serving a sentence of six years probation.
Tyson
Sr. and his son were arrested and arraigned late last
week in state district court, where both pleaded not
guilty. They were released later that day on personal
recognizance bonds. If convicted, the father and son
could face long prison sentences under Texas law.
Letspoker had a brief life using proprietary
software and, according to some accounts, attracting
less than 500 players. Shortly after launch slow-pay
complaints started to surface around September 2006 and
early in October 2006 the company announced it was
closing due to the UIGEA.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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