ONLINE GAMBLING AND A NIGHTMARE JACKPOT WIN
8 May 2009
This multi-million-dollar progressive jackpot
win turned out to be nothing but trouble for a Canadian
player
Life-changing, multi-million-dollar progressive jackpot
wins are for many gamblers the Holy Grail of gambling,
and for online players it is no different. Major
gambling software providers have adapted and developed
the land gambling concept, where a number of casinos are
networked and pay into a common winner's fund, to create
some truly massive - up to $5 million - wins.
But
the experiences of one Canadian player which surfaced
this week on the Casinomeister information portal, could
cast a shadow over the sector, and will hopefully cause
providers to take a second look at how they structure
their payout procedures.
Major software providers
like Cryptologic and Microgaming use big winners to
create massive publicity for their licensees, flying
major winners in for cheque presentations and photo opps,
laying on financial advice if required and handing over
the prize in one big tranche.
Other providers
restrict the payouts to monthly instalments - a
frustrating experience for a million dollar or more
winner.
And it seems that yet others simply pay
the jackpots over to the online casino where the big win
was made, and leave it up to them.
It is the
latter policy which appears to have applied in a case
where French Canadian player Sylvia P. won a staggering
$4 188 719.98 playing the Beach Life progressive slot at
Joyland - a Playtech powered casino which is now (but
was not at the time of the big win) part of the William
Hill Online group following the major Playtech-Will Hill
deal earlier this year.
The "win" was widely
publicised as one of the biggest jackpots ever paid out.
The sad thing is she only received about half of the
winnings.
It turns out that the Terms and
Conditions under which the player gambled at Joyland,
specified a maximum payout of $9 000 a month. This would
mean that SylvieP would have to be around for the next
39 years to collect her full winnings....and that does
not include interest accrued! A thought that must have
crossed her mind was whether Joyland Casino would still
be around in 2048, let alone herself.
Given that
Playtech presumably made the full jackpot payment to
Joyland's management, they would appear to have been
sitting pretty.
SylvieP's first disappointment
came when she tried to collect her multi-million dollar
windfall. She says she was told that the only way was
the $9 000 a month route specified in the T&C's to which
she had agreed before playing the progressive. But there
was an alternative if she decided to play out the money.
So if she wanted to collect, say, $100 000 she would
need to spend it first!
After some rather
strange unprofessional communications via a hotmail
address and early morning telephone calls, SylvieP was
put under pressure of time to decide on which course she
wished to follow.
SylvieP takes up the tale:
"Feeling like there was no way out of this I decided to
go ahead and collect only $2,3 million (half the prize)
plus bonus which was $61 000 in VIP points because I was
not getting anywhere and I felt that the VIP manager was
not honest because he was changing and using words one
day and the next day there was always something else. So
to collect most of my winnings and make sure I was
getting it I did as per their request.
"I was
forced to collect what they offered to a total sum of
$2,3 million I was so upset that on our last
conversation I requested a witness and also recorded the
whole conversation when all the sums and terms were
discussed with them in order to finanlise the 2,3 mill.
I made the VIP [casino representative] talk and asked
him how much was my total winnings how much I had lost
as per their requests and my bonus points? He summarised
it and he stated at the end that he had erased my
account balance, after which I tried to re log in and
was unsuccessful. I guess they have blocked my account."
What is not clear is whether a formal agreement was
presented and signed by the parties. Surely a win of
this magnitude would be documented? And yet to date
nothing has been made publicly available by the former
owners, or Playtech.
Subsequent to SylvieP's
experiences, Joyland was taken into the William Hill
Online stable following its mega-deal with Playtech. But
there is perhaps understandably no relief forthcoming
from William Hill Online, which considers that SylvieP
accepted the Joyland terms and conditions, had an offer
to accept a lump sum if lesser payment, and took it.
Even though William Hill purchased the casino, it
purchased the assets and not the debt.
Playtech
has been less forthcoming when approached by
Casinomeister, leaving some major question marks over
what happened here:
1) Is it Playtech policy to
allow licensees to do what they like with the
progressives prize once it has been paid to them by the
network? If it is, that needs to be changed asap as it
offers too great a risk to the player as we have seen in
the Joyland case. A full payout is what players
anticipate when they hit the big one - not offers of
half the prize or payments to eternity.
2) Where
is the missing 2 million left after the player was only
paid half the prize? And to whom should it rightfully
belong? Joyland? Playtech's progressive network?
3) Who were the owners of Joyland? According to Trading
Markets.com Joyland was previously owned by Six Digits
Trading, allegedly through a trust associated with Teddy
Sagi....who is a major shareholder in Playtech.
4) Where is the full agreement as accepted and signed by
the complainant?
The lesson that comes out of
this sad tale is that players who go after progressive
jackpot action need to first weigh up whether they will
be paid in full and immediately or instalments over
time. If the T&Cs specify that progressive jackpots are
paid over time, that multi-million-dollar win may not
seem quite so attractive.
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
|