iMEGA ACTIONS CONTINUE (Update)
29 May 2009
Minnesota and Kentucky litigation on track
The Interactive Media Entertainment and Gaming
Association (iMEGA) is up to speed on its two major
legal actions against officials in two states
overreaching their authority in actions against the
online gambling industry.
In the action against
Kentucky governor Steve Beshear's attempt to hijack 141
international domain names owned by parties domiciled
outside the bluegrass state, iMEGA and the IGC,
supported by many civic rights and Internet freedom
groups, were successful earlier this year in overturning
a lower court's order backing the governor's actions
after launching an appeal with the Kentucky Court of
Appeals. The current status of the action is that the
governor has appealed against the appeal ruling, taking
the case to the state Supreme Court.
To contest
the governor's action, iMEGA and other interested
parties have until June 1st 2009 to file responses to
the governor's claims. iMEGA spokesmen have said that
this does not present a problem as nothing really new
has emerged from the governor's latest move, and the
responses have been complete for the past two months and
will be filed shortly.
“We sat on it because we
didn’t feel the need to give Commonwealth attorneys more
time than necessary," explained a confident iMEGA exec.
"They’ll get a chance to submit a rebuttal brief.”
In Minnesota, iMEGA is challenging an inadequately
researched attempt by enforcement officials to ban a
list of alleged online gambling websites at Internet
Service Provider level, using the Wire Act 1961 as their
reference point.
John Willems, Director of the
Department of Public Safety’s Alcohol and Gambling
Enforcement Division is the man responsible for the
latest American attempt to censor the Internet, sending
his much criticised list to 11 ISPs and demanding that
the sites be banned in a breathtaking excess of
jurisdictional authority.
iMEGA was quick to
take up the issue, corresponding with the ISPs and
advising them that the AGED demand lacked jurisdiction
and authority, and encouraging them to decline it.
iMEGA has also filed a legal action against Willems,
but discussion between the parties is ongoing and it may
yet be possible to find an out of court solution. It is
additionally reported that Willems will encounter stiff
resistance from the ISPs to his censorship demands, and
that the Minnesota AG has agreed for now not to force
the issue.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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