iMEGA SUCCESSFUL IN GETTING STAY OF KENTUCKY RULING
(Update)
21 November 2008
Three Court of Appeals judges put Wingate findings
on domains on hold
The first in a series of challenges to the astonishing
findings on domain seizures of Kentucky county court
Judge Thomas Wingate has been successful. The
Interactive Media Entertainment & Gaming Association (iMEGA)
has announced that the Court of Appeals of Kentucky has
granted a motion to stay the forfeiture hearing for 141
Internet domain names.
Kentucky Governor Stephen Beshear and Michael J. Brown,
the state’s Secretary of Justice and Public Safety, had
sought the seizure of the domain names, most related to
Internet gambling, in an effort to protect the state’s
own gambling industry from competition by online
gambling sites.
iMEGA asked the appeals court to stay the forfeiture
hearing ordered by the district court judge scheduled
for December 3rd, until the appeals court had an
opportunity to consider iMEGA’s petition to have the
lower court seizure ruling overturned. A hearing to
consider that petition has been scheduled for December
12th in Louisville.
“We’re pleased that the Court of Appeals has given us
the opportunity to challenge these seizures,” said Joe
Brennan Jr., iMEGA’s chairman. “The commonwealth has
tried to take these domains for their own financial
gain, violating Kentucky law, exceeding their
jurisdiction, and setting a terrible precedent in the
process.”
The appeals court also decided to combine iMEGA’s
petition with a narrower petition filed by Interactive
Gaming Council (IGC), of Vancouver, BC, an international
online gambling trade group.
Both groups contended that the lower court lacked
jurisdiction to order the domain seizures. iMEGA
contends that the lower court misapplied Kentucky’s
specific “gambling devices” law in order to provide a
rationale for permitting the seizures. iMEGA also argues
that Kentucky’s actions violate the Commerce Clause of
the US Constitution, and that Secretary Brown lacked the
authority to initiate the seizure action in the first
place.
“This matter has generated concerns across the online
world about abuse of governmental power,” said Brennan.
“Kentucky is opening the door for any government - state
and local, foreign and domestic - to use what amounts to
blackmail to achieve its ends. If this precedent is
allowed to stand, it’s not hard to imagine a government
like China utilizing this kind of seizure power to
prevent free media, like the New York Times, from
reaching their citizens.”
None of the 141 domain names are owned by individuals or
companies are located in Kentucky. Gov. Beshear claimed
the Internet gambling sites were sapping money from the
state’s own gambling businesses, calling them “leeches
on our community”.
In an interesting peripheral development, Kentucky
Attorney General Jack Conway has apparently distanced
himself from the domains case. Part of the argument in
the original case was the acceptability or standing of
the Secretary of Justice and Public Safety bringing the
case forward, rather than the state Attorney General.
The case was actually outsourced by Governor Beshear to
Chicago lawyers, reportedly on a 'no win, no fee' basis.
On Friday it emerged that the Attorney General had asked
to have his name removed from the Interactive Media
Entertainment & Gaming Association's court filings in
the matter. Reports earlier this year claimed that the
AG had refused to be drawn into, or comment on, the
issue.
The legal bills are likely to be substantial in the
matter, especially on Governor Beshear's side unless the
'no win, no fee' reports are true. In analysing the 43
page Wingate ruling, PC World found the interesting
nugget of information that investigators spent 500 hours
surfing gambling Web sites and engaging in online
gambling!
Judge Wingate's ruling is also being challenged by Net
Freedom organisations. This week the Center for
Democracy and Technology, the Electronic Frontier
Foundation and the American Civil Liberties Union of
Kentucky filed a petition with the Kentucky Court of
Appeals, asking the court to overturn rulings on the
domain seizure issue made on September 18th and October
16th by Franklin Circuit Judge Wingate.
The three civil liberties groups argued that Wingate's
order raises serious free-speech concerns and violates
the Commerce Clause of the U.S. Constitution, which says
the U.S. Congress has the power to regulate commerce
between U.S. states. The judge also does not have the
jurisdiction to force domain name registrars to turn
over the domain names, and the decision to target domain
names is an odd way to shut down Web sites, the three
groups wrote in their brief.
Domain names are simply addresses pointing Web users to
the proper Web sites, lawyers for the groups wrote.
"If allowed to stand, the court's flawed order would
needlessly create uncertainty about the basic rules
governing the operation of the Internet as well as the
authority of courts both inside and outside of the
United States to affect behavior in other
jurisdictions," the groups wrote. "Moreover, if carried
to its logical conclusion, the trial court's order could
well impose literally billions of dollars of additional
costs on individuals and businesses throughout the world
that have no significant contacts with Kentucky."
On the downside, the up-and-coming Cake Poker Network
has apparently barred its services to Kentucky players,
who on trying to log on found the notice: "You are
trying to use the application from a location that
prohibits gaming activity. It is illegal to wager from
this location."
Curious players were informed by Cake's support centre:
"Thank you for your email. Due to recent events in the
Commonwealth of Kentucky we will no longer be accepting
any players from the state of Kentucky. I can confirm
this applies for all players from Kentucky. Any funds in
your account will be cashed out, any RakeBack due has
been paid into your account as well as the value of any
outstanding tournament tickets. We will now cashout your
funds or you may transfer them to a non Kentucky account
if you so wish. Thank for your custom at CakePoker and
best of luck for the future."
PokerStars, always feisty in matters pertaining to the
United States, remains convinced that it is within its
rights to continue operations in the country. In a
statement, the world's largest online poker venue said:
"In regards to the Kentucky case, as this case is
ongoing, we are limited in what we can say. All we can
do at this point is confirm our belief that PokerStars
is not breaching any laws in providing our service to
residents of Kentucky. We cannot comment on the reasons
other sites have taken a particular action. As there is
ongoing legal action in this case, we cannot discuss
this any further at this time."
Online Casino News courtesy of
InfoPowa
More news here.
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