ISRAELI POKER DEBATE CONTINUES (Update)
26 June 2009
There are exceptions to the rule, but the
police remain obdurate
The court battle between the Israeli Poker Federation
and the police continued before Justice Edmond Levy in
Tel Aviv Monday. Despite having signed off on
applications to hold poker tournaments in previous
years, the police have this year decided that the game
is prohibited and refused to sign a permit.
That
left the IPF in a quandary and under pressure, with the
tournament due to start next Sunday, and it appealed to
the courts for guidance.
However, the Jerusalem
Post reports that such a decision has not yet been
handed down, although the judge has opined that there
are exceptions to the rules.
According to the
Penal Law, there is an "exception" article which allows
betting, lottery and "forbidden games" to be played on
condition that they meet three criteria included in
Article 230. These criteria are that:
* the game
be restricted to a specific circle of people,
*
that it not go beyond amusement or entertainment, and
* that it not be held in venue where forbidden
games were played.
IPF lawyers have contested
the police's "prohibited game" classification as well,
raising the contentious skill vs. chance argument. The
Penal Law defines a "prohibited game" as one in which "a
person may win money, valuable consideration or a
benefit according to the results of the game, those
results depending more on chance than on understanding
or ability."
However, IPF legal representatives
pointed out, "....the game is substantially different
from gambling games such as bingo, whose results are
determined solely by luck. In Texas Hold'em as played by
Israel Poker Federation rules, the player who
demonstrates expertise, knowledge, understanding, skill,
integration, timing and strategic thinking will win."
The federation denies that poker is primarily a
game of luck and filed, along with the petition, an
opinion by Prof. Ehud Lehrer, head of the statistics
department at Tel Aviv University, who supported that
contention.
The tournament does not involve
gambling; anyone wishing to participate pays an entrance
fee of NIS 1 350. Seventy-five percent of the fee is set
aside for prize money, and no other money changes hands
during the tournament. The format is a round-robin
tournament, with the player winning the most games
coming in first and receiving 20 percent of the prize
money. The rest is shared by the next 59 players to
finish.
It looks as if the IPF will be leaning
heavily on the judicial opinion that there is nothing
stopping it from holding the tournament as long as it
sticks to the conditions outlined in the exceptions, and
that it does not need a police permit to do so.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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