KENTUCKY DEBATE CONTINUES (Update)
26 June 2009
State government files its response to iMEGA
submission
The Kentucky 'appeal against an appeal' case involving
the state government of Kentucky and the Internet
freedom group iMEGA entered what could be the final
phase of a long and contentious legal issue this week as
state legal representatives filed their response to an
iMEGA brief submitted early this (June) month.
The Kentucky Supreme Court will now either throw the
state's case out and support the iMEGA-positive decision
of a three judge panel in the Kentucky appeals court, or
will perpetuate an already expensive and drawn out legal
process by deciding for the state or ordering further
arguments be submitted.
The case has its roots in
the covert seizure by a Kentucky lower court judge last
year of 141 international domain names belonging to
online gambling firms domiciled outside the bluegrass
state. The seizure was an attempt by the state governor,
using outsourced lawyers on a contingency payment basis,
to destroy online gambling competition to the state's
interests in land and internet gambling on horseracing,
with the possibility of claiming monetary damages
mentioned by state government spokesmen as well.
The action was strongly attacked by legal teams from
iMEGA and the IGC in an appeal case that attracted
worldwide attention and exposed the threat to the
freedom of the Internet and US Constitutional standards
which the Kentucky initiative constituted.
The
appeal was successful, and the seizure order set aside.
Almost immediately, and again using outsourced,
contingency-compensated lawyers, the governor of
Kentucky, Steve Beshear, launched an appeal against the
appeal, which is the current action now being considered
by the Kentucky Supreme Court.
This week,
attorneys representing Kentucky Justice and Public
Safety Cabinet Secretary J. Michael Brown filed a 20
page response brief to iMEGA's earlier submission to the
Court. In procedural terms it appears that the Kentucky
lawyers screwed up and missed the deadline for their
submission, which was June 17th. Although the court
accepted the submission, it required the Beshear legal
team to file a Motion for Enlargement explaining the one
day delay.
The motion blamed the complicated
nature of the action, saying:: “In this action, ten
separate parties have sought to participate in this
litigation as amicus curaie parties, with many such
motions still pending, and numerous parties currently
litigating this case as Appellees.” The Commonwealth's
lawyers added that the deadline had been miscalculated.
Judging by the state's current arguments, the issue
is set to become even more complex, with debate
regarding the right of Cabinet Secretary Brown to bring
a civil suit against the owners of the previously seized
domains, and whether Kentucky can institute a civil
action to prosecute a criminal illegal gambling charge.
The original grounds for seizure of the domains were,
however, based on criminal law. The question of whether
the lower court ordering the seizures had jurisdiction
to do so is also argued again.
Both parties, and
indeed the industry as a whole, now await the Court's
finding.
While this persecution of the online
gambling industry has been ongoing, Governor Beshear has
somewhat hypocritically been pushing for an expansion of
land gambling in his state, and after weeks of political
manouevring and debate in the state legislature he
appears to be within striking distance of his
objectives.
Business Week reports that gamblers
at Kentucky race tracks could soon be able to put their
money on more than horses under a measure that's made it
halfway through the state legislature and now awaits
only Senate approval and the governor's imprimatur.
House lawmakers approved Beshear's legislation
Friday that would allow Kentucky's tracks to install
video gambling terminals offering casino-style games
like slots and poker.
Beshear had earlier called
lawmakers into a special session of the House to address
a projected $1 billion budget deficit. He included the
gambling proposal on the agenda, saying it could
generate about $300 million a year for state coffers, a
portion of which will be used to leverage construction
bonds to pay for some $1.1 billion worth of school
upgrades.
The measure, which passed 52-45 after
some four hours of debate, has been touted as a means to
bolster a struggling horse racing industry and to
stimulate the state's faltering economy with additional
construction money.
The proposal could run into
trouble at Senate level, however.
Senate
President David Williams said the legislation lacks the
support it needs to pass in his chamber, and he is
offering a proposal to funnel money to the state's horse
tracks through a surcharge on lottery ticket sales in
the state instead. It was unclear Friday whether the
measure passed by the House will even be called for a
vote in the Senate, though it's sponsor, House Speaker
Greg Stumbo, joined the governor in calling for one.
Anti-gambling groups contend backers of Beshear's
measure "bought votes" from lawmakers with promises of
school construction projects in their districts.
"Today, we saw political corruption at its finest," said
David Edmunds, a policy analyst for the Kentucky Family
Foundation, a Lexington-based group that opposed the
measure. "We know that school construction jobs were
held over the heads of legislators who normally would
not vote for this measure."
One Senator said the
proposal would not pass the Senate, saying baldly: "You
can already stick a fork in it - it's done!"
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
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