MINNESOTA BAN CHALLENGED IN COURT
8 May 2009
iMEGA in the forefront of the fight again
The Interactive Media and Entertainment & Gaming
Association (iMEGA) has followed up on its condemnation
of the attempt by Minnesota enforcement officials to ban
200 online gambling websites at ISP level by filing suit
in the US District Court of Minneapolis (see
documentation here
http://www.imega.org/wp-content/uploads/2009/05/imega-v-willems-mn-dps-us-district-court-of-minnesota.doc
)
And it has declared its intention to recoup
legal fees necessarily expended in challenging the
action of non-elected state officials, invoking USC 1983
and firing a warning shot across the bows of other state
officials who may be considering questionable
'enforcement' techniques that impact fundamental
constitutional rights.
The iMEGA action requests
that the court halt the Minnesota Department of Public
Safety's Alcohol and Gambling Enforcement division from
enforcing an order its director John Willems issued to
11 Internet service providers (ISPs), to block state
residents' access to 200 Web sites (see previous
InfoPowa reports).
"We filed this to first, get
MN DPS to rescind their order to the ISPs, and second,
to put any other state on notice that a similar action
will be contested in court," said Joe Brennan Jnr.,
iMEGA's chairman.
The iMEGA suit names John
Willems as director of AGED, and claims that Minnesota
lacks the authority to compel ISPs to block residents
access sites, and that the actions of the state and its
servants constitute a violation of free speech rights
guaranteed by the First Amendment of the US
Constitution.
"It's our hope that Minnesota will
recognize their error and drop their blocking order,"
said Brennan. "Censoring Internet access for Minnesota
residents would establish a troubling precedent of
government intrusion into the online world, and we just
can't allow that to happen."
iMEGA earlier
communicated with the ISPs involved, advising them of
their legal position and the fact that they were not
compelled by law to comply with the AGED's poorly
researched demands to block specific websites. The
advisory claimed that Minnesota had neither the
authority nor the jurisdiction to order the ISPs to
block Minnesota residents access to sites that were not
located within the state.
According to iMEGA, the
response from the ISPs has so far suggested that they
are disinclined to accede to the AGED demand.
"In
response to our letters (sent out) yesterday, they are
not inclined to comply with the Minnesota order,"
commented Brennan.
In an interesting footnote to
the iMEGA action, an independent study of the website
blacklist which Willems wants ISPs to block was carried
out by the Casino City gambling information website.
Only 44 of the 200 Web sites that Minnesota's Alcohol
and Gambling Enforcement Division seeks to censor
actually accept players from the state, it found. That
means just 22 percent of the sites AGED wants to block
affect Minnesota residents.
The study vindicated
comments made earlier by the iMEGA chairman that
questioned how much thought had been devoted by AGED
staff into making the 'random' selection.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
Top of page |
Home |
News |
Forum |
Webcast |
Vortran |
Accredited Casinos |
Evil Ones |
Pitch a Bitch |
Online Gambling Resources |
Poker
|