WOULD AMERICAN LEGALISATION INCLUDE A PROTECTIONIST
ELEMENT?
29 May 2009
Legal expert argues that American firms could
have the US market all to themselves
The blog at Reason.com provided some interesting reading
on the impact of U.S. online gambling legalisation this
week, airing some previously unpublished views by
gambling law expert Prof. I. Nelson Rose, whom it quoted
as saying: "...the federal government will end up doing
nothing, except for a little unnecessary duplication of
effort to make it seem like there is federal oversight."
He added that once licensed, a site could serve
customers in all 50 states, except those that choose to
opt out within 90 days of the law's enactment.
Rose argues that the legislation favours domestic [US]
gambling businesses because it denies licenses to anyone
who "is delinquent in filing any applicable Federal or
State tax returns or in the payment of any taxes,
penalties, additions to tax, or interest owed to a State
or the United States."
And Rose warns that
"every Internet gaming site that ever took bets from the
U.S., whether or not they stopped when the UIGEA was
passed," could be considered delinquent if the Treasury
Department claims "an operator that had American players
was doing business here" and therefore should have paid
federal and/or state taxes.
By contrast, he says
"American companies, like Harrah's, which desperately
want to get into the Internet gaming business, but have
never had online gaming for money [in the United
States], would have no trouble."
The blog
correctly observes that while a protectionist tilt may
be politically inevitable, it would be not only
unfortunate but ironic, given that [Congressman] Frank's
effort to legalise online gambling is often presented as
a way of correcting the protectionist aspects of the
current gambling policy, which discriminates against
foreign-based websites and has given rise to several
trade complaints.
http://www.reason.com/blog/show/133746.html
In a parallel discussion on the attempts by Jim Tabilio's
Poker Voters of America to legalise intrastate online
poker in California, the liklihood that domestic
companies would have the inside track in any regulated
environment also surfaced.
Tabilio referred to
what he called the "political comfort level" among
Californian legislators for a pooled liquidity online
poker network run by an experienced single operator with
no history of US legal exposure.
That could give
GTECH, which has a track record as California's lottery
provider and Svenska Spel experience, the edge over
external challengers like Cyberarts, which has indicated
an interest.
Tabilio recently told EGR: “They
want to be able to do their regulatory due diligence on
a daily basis. Also, having someone operating in
California who has had access to US customers at any
point, and therefore has been operating, in the view of
the Federal and California DOJ, outside of the law,
would create problems for legislators and regulators.”
Tabilio added that suppliers who had taken bets from
US citizens might have problems passing a ‘fit and
proper test’ as part of the licensing process.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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