U.S. JUSTICE DEPARTMENT TO HOLD ONLINE POKER HEARING
16 November 2007
PPA will submit opinions on November 14
Claimed by the Poker Players' Association as a
by-product of the organisation's recent Washington
Fly-In initiative (see previous InfoPowa reports) the
U.S. Department of Justice is to hold a hearing on
Internet gaming at 10 00am on November 14, says PPA
executive director John Pappas.
Speaking to the online poker portal PocketFives.com,
Pappas said this was a huge step for online poker’s
future, and commented: “We talked with Chairman John
Conyers (D-MI) along with some of our poker pros during
the fly in. He pledged to hold a hearing and we’re
pleased that it’s happening.”
Expected at the hearing is an expert on World Trade
Organisation policy; a representative from the
Department of the Treasury; a representative from the
Department of Justice, and one Congressman on each side
of the issue. Poker pro Annie Duke will also be in
attendance as a witness.
Pappas expects hard-hitting questions: “Our goal is to
have members of Congress ask tough questions of the
Department of Justice representative about their
inconsistent enforcement of internet gaming," he told
PocketFives. "We also want them to point to the statute
that they used to claim that playing internet poker is
illegal.
"The WTO Expert is there to incite both free trade
Republicans and Democrats to action in order to preserve
our trading status and fulfill our WTO obligations. In
addition, we want to demonstrate there is appropriate
and viable age verification software out there.
"Finally, for Annie Duke, our goal is to distinguish
poker as something different than other forms of gaming,
show that it’s a skill game, and address the civil
liberties issue.”
Chairman Conyers has been a supporter of internet
gambling regulation, Pappas comments, saying: “Chairman
Conyers believes UIGEA is a terrible bill and that
regulation is a good approach. I wouldn’t be surprised
if, somewhere down the road, he introduces his own
legislation.”
Despite the short notice, the PPA is hoping for a good
turnout of legislators at the hearing, and has been
prepping members of Congress to ask the questions that
will help clarify poker’s future. “A hearing is just one
step in the process,” says Pappas. "A vote may still be
quite some time away, but this is an important initial
step to take."
The hearing is open to the general public on Wednesday,
November 14th, at 10:00am at 2141 Rayburn House Office
Building.
Online Casino News courtesy of
InfoPowa
More news here.
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