KENTUCKY OFFICIALS STILL WANT TO MAKE MONEY OUT OF
DOMAIN DEBACLE (Update)
31 October 2008
IGC attorney represents owners of 61 domain names
'seized' by Judge Wingate
Further disclosures in the attempt by the state of
Kentucky to seize international domain names became
public this week following moves by the Interactive
Gaming Council and the Interactive Media Entertainment
and Gaming Association to challenge county court Judge
Thomas Wingate's findings (see previous InfoPowa
reports).
IGC legal representative Jeff Ifrah presented
credentials that are hard to ignore, claiming that he
represents the owners - all IGC members - of 61 out of
the 141 domain names temporarily 'seized' by the
Franklin Circuit Court judge in covert proceedings last
month.
The Judge's findings, which overwhelmingly supported the
actions of lawyers working for the state of Kentucky and
Governor Steve Beshear are the subject of a Motion of
Stay by the IGC and a Writ of Mandamus to the Kentucky
Court of Appeals by iMEGA. The next hearing on the issue
by Judge Wingate is scheduled for December 3rd, which he
has set as a deadline for domain owners to avoid
confiscation by blocking their websites to Kentucky
residents.
However, Card Player Magazine this week claims that up
to a billion dollars in collective 'retributions' could
still be a primary motivation of state officials. When
the issue first surfaced in the public media, private
lawyers acting for the state were upfront but not
specific in listing 'compensation' as one of their
objectives in addition to ensuring that Kentuckians were
denied access to online gambling websites not approved
by the state.
Although the judge has not yet imposed any pecuniary
measures, the magazine quotes Jeff Ifrah, the lead
attorney for the Interactive Gaming Council as saying
that Kentucky and its private attorneys will do
everything they can to make the sites pay up, despite
the [current absence of pecuniary findings] in the
judge's ruling.
Ifrah said that if Kentucky actually gains control of
the sites’ domain names, it's lawyers will use what
Ifrah characterised as “extortion” to hold the sites
hostage until they pay up. The owners of those companies
wishing to claim exemption from domain confiscation by
blocking Kentuckians will apparently also be required to
physically meet with state officials and lawyers,
handing over documentation identifying the owners,
directors, and officers of the sites concerned. However,
Ifrah says the sites will not allow that to happen.
The IGC's Motion of Stay has already resulted in Judge
Wingate postponing his confiscation deadline to December
3rd, and is now awaiting the attention of the
three-judge Court of Appeals which next sits on November
18th. The petition asks the Court of Appeals to step in
before irreparable harm can be done.
In a seperate interview with Poker News Daily this week,
Ifrah said: “The only court that is going to do anything
is the Court of Appeals. Judge Wingate had already
decided that he was going to sign off on [Kentucky
Governor] Beshear’s actions. The Appellate level will be
the first time that anyone is starting with a blank
page. We filed on Tuesday and the Commonwealth will now
come back with its response. The Court of Appeals can
then decide the arguments.”
Ifrah added that in addition to the owners of the 61
domain names he represents, his legal firm has also
tried to motivate other legal representatives in order
to speak with a unified voice. He expressed surprise
that the owners of some of the domain names under threat
had not defended their assets by legal representation,
speculating: “Either they think this will blow over or
that we’re doing such a good job that they don’t need to
pay for lawyers. For a significant period of time after
this case began, no one really knew about it. I can’t
imagine that someone doesn’t know this is going on, but
it’s possible.”
Card Player Magazine reiterated the question on
everyone's lips - if Judge Wingate's Kentucky county
court is permitted to get away with a ruling carrying
such massively negative international implications, how
will it be practically implemented on companies and
registrars, many of whom are not in the United States,
let alone Kentucky. There are more than 500 registrars
globally, and international cooperation would be
essential in order for Kentucky to take possession of
the gambling sites’ domain names.
This week Whittier College law professor and Internet
gambling legal expert I. Nelson Rose joined other legal
gurus in condemning the Wingate rulings. In an
interview, Rose was brutally frank, saying that he
thought the judge's findings "silly." He went on to
comment: "I think that local courts and government
officials haven’t accepted the reality of the Internet.
They’re having trouble coping with it. The idea that a
county judge could seize the worldwide domain names of
international companies seems silly.
"I also thought that the Judge was probably wrong on the
idea that a county judge can grab domain names simply
because he considers them contraband. He was wrong on
the question of whether there was a violation of
Kentucky state anti-gambling law.
"Having read the [Wingate] decision, I think it’s worse
than that. Judge Wingate declares web names to be the
same as slot machines. The theory is that it helps with
gambling and is therefore a “gambling device.” Under
that theory, a car is a gambling device because it
transports you to play. A house is a gambling device.
Money is a gambling device. Everyone knows what a
gambling device is."
Online Casino News courtesy of
InfoPowa
More news here.
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