UTAH A.G. AND PPA TALK (Update)
6 March 2009
"It is going to happen anyway, let's put some
regulation in place," says top lawman
The state of Utah's outspoken Attorney General, Mark
Shurtleff, was again in the news this week following his
words of support in a local radio interview for
Congressman Barney Frank's efforts to regulate and
licence online gambling (see previous InfoPowa report).
This time, Utah's top lawman discussed the issue
with the Poker Players Alliance, reports the Salt Lake
City Tribune, which revealed that Shurtleff is in favour
of strictly regulated Internet gambling, as long as it
doesn't lead to tribal casinos or other forms of
gambling in Utah.
"It is going to happen anyway,
let's put some regulation in place," the newpaper quotes
Shurtleff.
Shurtleff apparently heard a pitch
from the Poker Players Alliance during the spring
meeting of the National Association of Attorneys General
in Washington, D.C. The Alliance is supporting
Congressman Frank's attempts to create a regulatory
framework for online gaming, which include protections
against underage gambling, compulsive gambling, money
laundering and cheating. The bill, which is awaiting a
hearing in the House, would counteract the controversial
and imprecise Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement
Act, a 2006 bill that prohibits U.S. financial
institutions from handling payments to gaming sites.
"Even though we outlawed it [online gambling] for
two years now, it is still going on and it is highly
unregulated, so you've got unscrupulous people rigging
the system. People are getting ripped off," Shurtleff
said.
Utah is one of only two states that
outlaws any form of gambling and under Indian gaming
laws, if a state allows one form of gambling, it can't
prevent tribes from starting their own casinos and other
gaming establishments.
Shurtleff asked the poker
alliance to consider a change to the legislation that
would allow Utah to continue to block tribal casinos,
but that may be difficult.
John Pappas, the
executive director of the Poker Players Alliance, said
he didn't want this proposal to "upset the balance
struck in the Indian Gaming Regulations Act," the law
that governs gaming on reservations. But he also said:
"Our goal is not to bring brick and mortar casinos to
Utah."
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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