NEW JERSEY SENATOR TO SUE FOR REPEAL OF
SPORTSBETTING BAN
20 March 2009
Senator Lesniak wants some of those offshore
billions....
Last week's New Jersey.com plea to leagalise Internet
betting by online gambling consultant and former lawman
Frank Catania has been followed by a more direct
approach to such an initiative. As New Jersey land
gambling feels the chill winds of competition from
neighbouring states and the effects of the recession,
Democratic Senator Raymond Lesniak has given notice of
his intention to sue the federal government in a bid to
overturn a 17-year-old ban on sports betting.
The Senator, who has been active for some time in
campaigning for an expansion of gambling to grow state
revenues, seeks another source of cash for New Jersey at
a time of severe economic pain, with Atlantic City
revenues on an ever-steeper decline (see previous
InfoPowa reports). He plans to file his suit in a
federal district court within the next two weeks, he
confirmed to New Jersey.com.
The suit represents
a serious and innovative challenge to the Professional
and Amateur Sports Protection Act, and adds to
increasing pressure in several states for a more
practical approach to gambling, and a major push against
the federal Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act
which is being challenged by new legislative proposals
from Congressman Barney Frank, chairman of the House
Financial Services Committee.
"Billions of
dollars are being bet offshore through the Internet or
through organized crime, and those are revenues that
could be going to New Jersey," Lesniak told New
Jersey.com. "People are doing it. They're doing it every
day. They're doing it for the NCAA tournament. They're
doing it for the Super Bowl and professional football.
But we can't regulate it and run it in the state of New
Jersey, and that's just unfair."
In Lesniak's
view, sports betting should be permitted not only in
Atlantic City's casinos, but at the state's three ailing
horse-racing tracks, at off-track betting locations....
and over the Internet.
The Professional and
Amateur Sports Protection Act, which went into effect in
1992, is Lesniak's target. At the time, four states
already had laws on their books allowing sports betting.
Those states - Nevada, Oregon, Montana and Delaware -
were exempted, though betting is conducted only in
Nevada at present (there are new moves in Delaware to
legalise sportsbetting too - that could be a devastating
development for New Jersey).
New Jersey law
makers turned down an offer to be part of these
"exempted" states in 1993.
Lesniak said he also
plans to introduce legislation in the Senate and sponsor
a constitutional amendment to permit sports wagering. He
claims that sports betting will be a boon for the Garden
State's casinos, racetracks and bottom line, and says
his research suggests that New Jersey could take in more
than $100 million a year from sports betting, based on
the state's 8 percent tax imposed on gaming revenues.
Politicians' projections on gambling-related tax
revenues are usually and notoriously wide of the mark,
and gaming analyst Joseph Weinert, a senior vice
president with Spectrum Gaming Group, characterises
Lesniak's revenue forecast as wildly optimistic.
"New Jersey would have to be the only place in the
world with sports betting to achieve that number,"
Weinert said.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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