DETAILS OF FRANK ONLINE GAMBLING BILL RELEASED
(Update)
8 May 2009
New title but similar precautions
The chairman of the House Financial Services Committee,
Congressman Barney Frank released details of his new
legislative proposal aimed at legalising online gambling
in the United States Wednesday ahead of a delayed press
conference re-scheduled to late afternoon Washington
time.
Titled the Internet Gambling Regulation
Consumer Protection & Enforcement Act the proposal seeks
to overturn the controversial and much villified
Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act (UIGEA)
passed in 2006, which outlawed financial transactions
with online gambling companies and has caused billions
in damages to European companies forced to withdraw from
the US market.
The bill seeks to issue licenses
to online gambling operators, but only those who are in
good financial and legal standing and of good character,
honesty and integrity, and whose prior activities,
reputation, habits and associations do not pose a threat
to the public interest or to the effective regulation
and control of of the licensed activities.
Pre-licensing checks are likely to be stringent, and
would be operators will have to demonstrate that they
possess the requisite expertise to professionally manage
Internet gambling operations. There will be an
insistence on operators having the technology and
systems necessary to effectively combat money laundering
and fraud, exclude underage and problem gamblers, meet
tax requirements and comply with US federal and state
laws.
Applications are open to all entities, who
will have to supply detailed financial records and
personal details of directors in order that credit and
criminal histories can be checked.
The nature
and depth of background checks will be decided by the
Secretary for the Treasury, who will be charged with the
approval and monitoring of licensees and may call on the
US Attorney General for enforcement and compliance
issues.
Licensing terms will be for five years,
renewable conditional on good conduct and efficiency,
and the Secretary for the Treasury will have authority
to terminate the licenses at any time if a licensee does
not comply with requirements. Terms of imprisonment of
up to five years are provided for under the Act.
Congressman Frank later told reporters that he intends
to move the bill before the House's August break, but
that he will be introducing special legislation titled
the Reasonable Prudence in Regulation Act of 2009 aimed
at delaying for a year the implementation of the highly
controversial and much delayed regulations supporting
the UIGEA, which were rushed through in the twilight
months of the Bush administration and are due to finally
go into effect on 1st December.
This will allow
the new Democrat controlled Congress to decide a
national policy.
Representative McDermott is also
re-introducing a companion bill aimed at ensuring that
individual and corporate taxes owed on regulated
Internet gambling activities are collected.
There are already rumblings from Republican politicians
like Spencer Bachus, and from national sports leagues
and conservative Christian groups, which indicate that
the Internet Gambling Regulation Consumer Protection &
Enforcement Act is unlikely to enjoy a trouble-free
passage.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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