SOUTH CAROLINA BILLS MAKE IT OUT OF COMMITTEE
(Update)
22 May 2009
Conservative state could be moving out of the
gambling Dark Ages
Draconian and antiquated gambling laws that prohibit
gambling, and especially poker, in the state of South
Carolina could be in for revision as two key bills move
out of the legislature committee stage and toward full
debate and voting.
Senate Bills 535 and 628
cleared the state legislature's Senate Judiciary
Committee late last week and are key to a more
enlightened approach to gambling, with particular
emphasis on home or social and charity poker games...and
the interesting possibility of introducing the concept
of skill in poker, elevating the game above the general
definition of "game of chance".
The bills retain
tough limits on what should be regarded as acceptable,
for example 535 stipulates: “Gambling in a private home
where no house player, house bank, or house odds exist
and where the house receives no part of any of the money
or other thing of value that is risked or wagered in the
gambling in the private home is social gambling and is
not unlawful.”
Senate bill 628 makes social
gambling a competent defence for a charge of "illegal
gambling". And it stipulates that games deemed
predominately decided by skill are “not unlawful.”
Regarding charity fund raisers, the bill requires
the issue of a licence and requires that 90 percent of
the cash raised must go directly to the charity
identified in advance.
But what makes attempts
to update state law most interesting from an industry
perspective has been flagged by the Poker Players
Alliance as the move to gain acceptance for the concept
that poker is a game where skill predominates over
chance, therefore removing the game from the "illegal
gambling" definition. Recent court rulings in the state
have highlighted the need for more clarity in this
respect in state law, and this will hopefully flow from
a positive acceptance of the proposed legislative
changes.
John Ridgeway, the PPA representative in
South Carolina, says that following the advance of the
two bills last week, poker players in the state have
moved closer to a more enlightened system that will
allow them to play poker live or online in a social
context without worrying about criminal prosecutions
launched under 200-year-old laws.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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