MIZZI NOW BANNED FROM POKERSTARS, TOO
24 October 2008
High profile online player adds to his Full Tilt
ban
High profile professional Internet poker players, who
should know better, continue to break the multi
accounting rule at major online poker websites like
PokerStars, Full Tilt and PartyPoker. Some of these role
models are perhaps tempted by the significant amount of
hard cash available in games on the Internet, and
knowingly take the risk - but the embarrassing publicity
of a ban often follows.
According to the poker information site AintLuck.com
this week, the latest to be caught out in this form of
cheating at PokerStars.com is the successful and high
profile young pro Sorel "Imper1um" Mizzi who has been
fortunate to have the six months exclusion originally
handed to him for multi accounting reduced to three
months after an appeal to the PokerStars management.
Mizzi should definitely know better - he was banned in
an embarrassingly public incident at Full Tilt Poker
last year for playing on another player's account in a
major tournament.
On this occasion, Mizzi said he was playing in an
important online tournament when he ran out of time and
had to make a dash for the airport. Rather than abandon
the game he asked a friend to continue playing for him.
Details of how PokerStars caught on to the ruse are not
available, but it illustrates the dangers of trying to
pull a fast one on the world's biggest online poker
website.
With the aid of Friend Google, a quick look back shows
that multi accounting bans have been handed out to
several top online players.
One of the most notorious involved Mizzi (again) and
took place at Full Tilt Poker around this time a year
back. Player "BluffMagCV", who subsequently turned out
to be a poker writer, made some remarkable wins at the
Sunday Millions tourneys at FT, repeating the success as
"SlippyJacks" the following week at PokerStars. Quite an
achievement. Until player "Kongsgaard" stepped forward
with the news that the FT tourney had been awarded to
him following a disqualification. It later transpired
that Mizzi had been playing for "BluffMagCV" on the
promise of a share in the significant winnings.
The PartyPoker case against "JJ Prodigy" aka Josh Field
was the subject of extensive publicity. At 16 years old,
he was caught by PartyPoker as a multi accounting
cheater, initially attracting attention by boasting on
IMs to friends after winning a $140 000 plus first prize
in a $500 000 guaranteed event. Unfortunately for "JJ"
his friends took up the boast on poker forums and other
players realised that the winner of the tourney had
actually been one "ABlackCar" - "JJ" had actually busted
out early. Hoist by his own petard, JJ was busted in
another, and even more unpleasant way, by the PP
management. And he was stripped of his prize, together
with $40 000 in another account.
Field also ran afoul of PokerStars when, already banned,
he apparently opened new accounts, funding the accounts
via accomplices and the PS transfer facility. When this
was discovered, PokerStars threw the book at this multi-accounter,
along with his "friends" and bans were handed out all
round, precluding Field from participating in at least
one major and lucrative tournament. For reasons best
known to himself, "JJ" exacerbated the issue by publicly
apologising....admitting that he had continued to
multi-account after the ban!
Both PokerStars and Full Tilt multi-accounting bans were
handed to Nick "gbmantis" Niergarth after the discovery
of a sophisticated cheating scandal involving other
players including JJProdigy. Niergarth played in the
biggest tournaments on both sites regularly and was
caught using the accounts of "friends" to play, taking
over late in tournaments after he had already been
eliminated.
Full Tilt pro and CardRunners instructor Brian Townsend
was caught multi-accounting in some of the biggest
online poker games online. Playing 25-50 Pot Limit Omaha
all the way up to 200-400 Pot Limit Omaha, Townsend, who
is respected as a formidable cash game player and uses
the online screen name "sbrugby", created a second
account as "Stellarnebula" under another 'handle' to
disguise his identity from opposing players. He was
accused of doing the same at PokerStars using the screen
name "Makersmark66."
British pro Mark Telscher made the multi-accounting
headlines in the widely publicised "TheV0id" affair,
which cost him a huge prize purse when PokerStars
stripped him of a WCOOP first prize worth $1.2 million -
one of the biggest in online history. A successful and
experienced player, Telscher set up "TheV0id" account in
the name of his sister Natalie. He was then found to
have used the account to play after he had himself been
eliminated. The duo initially kicked up a huge fuss but
PokerStars prevailed.
Then 20-year-old Justin "ZeeJustin" Bonomo was accused
by both Party Poker and Pokerstars of multi-accounting
and suffered a ban and the confiscation of some $100 000
from his accounts. Reports suggest that he brought
suspicion on himself by boasting on a poker forum about
his discovery of a PartyPoker software flaw that allowed
a player to rapidly click on the Party Poker icon and
open up new sessions. Each new Party Poker session could
be logged in with a different account, and this is what
he was accused of doing, using up to 6 accounts in the
same multi-table tournament. It transpired that he had
multiple accounts and was entering multi-table
tournaments at both Party Poker and Poker Stars.
Online Casino News courtesy of
InfoPowa
More news here.
Top of page |
Home |
News |
Forum |
Webcast |
Vortran |
Accredited Casinos |
Evil Ones |
Pitch a Bitch |
Online Gambling Resources |
Poker
|