iMEGA ON THE ATTACK IN NEW JERSEY
27 March 2009
Attempt to declare sports betting law
unconstitutional gets underway
Look out for more legal fireworks from the Interactive
Media Entertainment and Gaming Association (iMEGA) on
Monday 23rd March - the civic and Internet freedoms
organisation will be announcing a new action in New
Jersey aimed at having the Professional and Amateur
Sports Protection Act declared unconstitutional.
The litigation comes on the heels of New Jersey Senator
Ray Lesniak's action seeking to repeal the same
17-year-old sportsbetting law as the state's land
gambling venues feel the chill winds of competition from
neighbouring states and the effects of the recession
(see previous InfoPowa report).
iMEGA is no
stranger to litigation against any law that it feels is
inequitable or unconstitutional; the organisation's
lawyers are still involved in major actions attacking
the Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act and in
fighting off an attempt last year by the state of
Kentucky to seize and confiscate international domain
names belonging to online gambling companies.
The
action against the Professional and Amateur Sports
Protection Act is based on iMEGA's contention that the
law violates the US Constitution's Tenth Amendment, and
tramples on the Commerce Clause of the U.S.
Constitution, Equal Protection Clause, First Amendment,
Eleventh Amendment, due process, and privacy rights. The
action will also claim that the law is "void for
vagueness," lacking precision in a practical sense.
Monday's announcement will be made mid-morning at a
press conference in the State House in Trenton. iMEGA
chairman Joe Brennan will be joined at the conference by
what in other circumstances might be viewed as unlikely
allies - representatives from the Thoroughbred Breeders
Association of New Jersey, the New Jersey Thoroughbred
Horsemen’s Association, the Standardbred Breeders and
Owners Association of New Jersey, and New Jersey State
Senators Jeff Van Drew and Raymond Lesniak.
In an
interview with Poker News Daily, Brennan opined that the
Professional and Amateur Sports Protection Act is a
violation of federalism and infringes on a state's
rights to raise revenue. It created a special class for
a small number of states and deprived other states from
being able to be a part of it. He claims that the law is
a violation of the Tenth Amendment of the United States
Constitution, which prescribes, "The powers not
delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor
prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the
States respectively, or to the people."
Brennan
noted that the US Attorney General and the U.S.
Department of Justice both opposed the law when it was
introduced, arguing that it was a violation of
federalism.
iMEGA's challenge to PASPA has been
assigned to Chief Judge Garrett E. Brown, Jr. , who sits
in Trenton, New Jersey.
Docket:
http://dockets.justia.com/browse/state-new_jersey/court-njdce/judge-Brown,
Jr./
The case number is: Civil Action No.
09-1301(GEB).
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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