OPPORTUNIST LEGAL ATTACK ON FULL TILT POKER?
1 May 2009
Los Angeles lawyer springs a surprise action
on global Internet poker site
What appears to be a civil legal action out of left
field will have the Full Tilt Poker legal team working
on a response this week. A Los Angeles attorney, James
B. Hicks of the firm Hicks Park LLC, appears to be
trying to sue Tiltware LLC, Fulltiltpoker.com, Tilt
Proof Inc., poker player Chris Ferguson, and “[John]
Does 1 through 100” for non-specific violations of the
Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act (UIGEA) and
various statutes from the California Business and
Professions Code.
Hicks filed the action this
week in the United States District Court’s Central
District of California, Western Division, according to a
report on the information site Pokerati. The action
seeks injunctive relief and an unspecified payment for
attorney’s fees, perhaps revealing the motive behind the
filing.
Hicks claims to be a member of the Full
Tilt poker site in an attempt to establish standing to
bring his claim, although he did not specifically claim
in the suit that he had actually played poker for money
on the site. Pokerati reports that the crux of his case
is that Full Tilt is liable under California law simply
for being accessible via the Internet to California
residents.
The Pokerarti report appears to
suggest that Hicks may have been previously cited for
ethical violations while pursuing other cases against
companies. One such episode in 2002, as archived on the
legal site altlaw.org, detailed a lawsuit by Hicks on
behalf of a fledgling dollmaker against industry giant
Mattel alleging copyright infringement, an adventure
that was dismissed as a “frivolous lawsuit” when an
examination of the Barbie dolls in question showed a
copyright date that predated by years the launching of
the plaintiff's line.
It is also claimed that
Hicks had his law license suspended for 30 days earlier
this year and remains o`n a two-year probation period
for his actions in another case. The California state
bar papers in that matter originate from a 2006 medical
case where Hicks alleged but could not provide proof of
proper legal summons, resulting in the temporary
issuance of a default judgment. The papers regarding
Hicks’ subsequent ethical hearing include notations such
as “Respondent’s misconduct harmed the administration of
justice.” In that matter, Hicks was fined over $10 000,
referred to legal ethics school, and required to pass
the Multistate Professional Responsibility Examination
to return to active law practice.
Full Tilt Poker
has yet to comment on the filing.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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