iMEGA FILES LATEST RESPONSE (Update)
14 November 2008
Representative body says new UIGEA regulations
strengthen its case
The legal team at the Interactive Media Entertainment &
Gaming Association (iMEGA) has filed their response
brief with the US 3rd Circuit Court of Appeals, the
latest step in their challenge to the constitutionality
of the Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act of
2006 (UIGEA). Their suit - iMEGA v. Keisler, et al -
targets the US Department of Justice (DoJ), the Federal
Reserve and the Federal Trade Commission, and seeks to
have the law overturned on constitutional grounds by the
appeals court.
The filing comes one day after the US Department of the
Treasury and the Federal Reserve System published the
final regulations for UIGEA, requiring all US banks,
credit card companies and electronic payment processors
to refuse all "unlawful Internet gambling" transactions.
"After reviewing the final regulations, we're extremely
confident the court will look at this law and agree that
UIGEA should be 'void for vagueness," said Joe Brennan
Jr., chairman of iMEGA. "Regulators and Congress have
refused to even define what 'unlawful internet gambling'
is, and if you cannot even answer that basic question,
how exactly are banks supposed to do it?"
The reply brief in in answer to an earlier brief
submitted by the government, challenging the basis for
iMEGA's suit. iMEGA's legal team answered the
government's arguments point-by-point:
1. DoJ's claim that a "void for vagueness" argument
against UIGEA was not raised by iMEGA at the trial court
level is groundless, as it was addressed and preserved
by the trial court and in Judge Mary J. Cooper's
decision.
2. DoJ's claim that iMEGA lacks standing to raise
privacy claims of individual Internet gamblers fails to
recognize that iMEGA members may be prosecuted under
UIGEA for permitting individuals to gamble on their Web
sites
3. DoJ failed to refute the fact that UIGEA has no
uniformity regarding "illegal gambling" in the states,
and is therefore "void for vagueness"
4. DoJ are wrong when they deny gambling online in one's
home - which is not a criminal activity - lacks
constitutional privacy protection, even when such
conduct is indeed private, consensual and legal under
UIGEA.
The next step in this challenge will be for a
three-judge panel to be selected by the court to review
the briefs, and decide at what time the court would
entertain oral arguments from both sides.
"For our part, we cannot wait for the opportunity to go
before the 3rd Circuit," Brennan said. "We have a
powerful argument that the government will find very
hard to dispute. The sooner we can move this fatally
flawed law off the books, the sooner we can turn our
attention to working on technology solutions that will
provide for a regulated online gaming industry in the
US, while addressing the concerns for responsible gaming
that critics have voiced."
Online Casino News courtesy of
InfoPowa
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