iMEGA CROSSES SWORDS AGAIN WITH DOJ OVER UIGEA
(Update)
6 March 2009
Justice officials try to stymie attempt to
add information on UIGEA "overblocking" of state lottery
online transactions
It appears that US Department of Justice officials are
uncomfortable with a move by the Interactive Media
Entertainment and Gaming Association (iMEGA) to
highlight UIGEA disruptions of state lotteries in its
litigation against the Unlawful Internet Gambling
Enforcement Act.
iMEGA, which wants to overturn
the UIGEA as unconstitutional, has announced that the
DoJ has opposed its request to supplement its submission
to the court with details of the unwarranted
"over-blocking" disruptions caused to state lotteries by
confused and overworked financial bodies expected to
enforce the flawed law. iMEGA had earlier sought to
include details of difficulties with online deposits
being experienced by the New Hampshire and North Dakota
state lotteries.
Apparently reclassifications of
lottery purchases by credit card companies caused many
transactions to be denied.
Last week, the
Associated Press also covered the difficulties in an
article on Illinois proposals to take its lottery
online, observing that there were problems with
“....card companies classifying the subscriptions as a
gambling purchase instead of a government service,
triggering additional fees and red tape for customers.”
(see previous InfoPowa reports)
Giving some
background to the request to suppement, iMEGA Chairman
Joe Brennan told Poker News Daily in an interview that,
as a matter of professional courtesy, it is customary to
ask the other party involved in a legal suit before
adding material to the record. He advised that Nicholas
Bagley, Attorney for the Civil Division of the DOJ, told
iMEGA on Monday that the U.S. Government would not give
its consent for the additions, and consequently iMEGA
would have to file a motion to the Third Circuit Court
of Appeals.
“It’s ridiculous because this deals
with the real-world impact of the UIGEA," said Brennan.
"I’m not surprised, though, because this inclusion makes
our case for us. Visa and MasterCard have, in their new
operating rules, stated that they’re going to over-block
lottery transactions even though there is a carve-out in
the UIGEA for state lotteries.”
Brennan also
revealed the current state of play in the state of
Kentucky appeal against a court ruling throwing out its
attempt to seize and confiscate 141 online gambling
domains (see previous InfoPowa reports). iMEGA is a
principal participant in this case, too, fighting for
the rights of the domain owners.
The state of
Kentucky's legal representatives filed a 64 page brief
with the state Supreme Court, requesting permission to
go over the customary limit of 50 pages, or be granted
10 more days to pare down their submission to the
accetable length. The court's ruling on this
technicality is awaited.
Brennan commented, “This
gives us more time to pull [their] brief apart until the
Court rules on it.”
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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