BANKS GEARING UP FOR UIGEA IMPLEMENTATION (Update)
4 September 2009
December 1st final implementation date could
see an abundance of confused overblocking
With 2009 entering its last quarter, reports are
surfacing that some US banks are already starting to
gear up for the implementation of the Unlawful Internet
Gambling Enforcement Act regulations on December 1st.
Even at this early stage, the reports indicate an
unfamiliarity with the law, which many have previously
criticised has imprecise, that may lead to banks being
overly zealous in blocking financial transactions with
gambling companies. Earlier this year at least two state
lotteries - exempt from federal anti-gambling laws -
complained about banks imposing blocks that were not
justified on certain transactions.
Poker News
Daily reports that Nevada State Bank recently mailed
customers advising: "In compliance with the U.S.
Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act, we are
required to notify you that you are prohibited from
processing transactions derived from Internet bets or
wagers where such bet or wager is unlawful under any
applicable Federal or State law."
PND correctly
points out that it is debatable whether any federal law
makes the playing of Internet poker illegal - an issue
that legislators and enforcers have shown a reluctance
to address in court. It also questions the wording,
emphasising that the UIGEA applies only to deposits sent
to Internet gambling sites, not to withdrawals made from
the site to a bank.
California Bank & Trust
appeared to similarly confused, advising customers that
it "will not process transactions derived from Internet
bets or wagers." More can be expected, given that the
banks both belong to the Zions Bancorporation, a holding
company based in Salt Lake City that oversees eight
banks in eight states: Nevada, California, Arizona,
Texas, Oregon, Washington, Colorado and Utah.
"The problem is that banks will have every right to
overblock to make sure they comply with the UIGEA," PND
accurately observes - the UIGEA gives them an out in
cases of erroneous blocks.
Time is running out
for the best immediate hope of fighting the UIGEA and
eventually relegating it to the scrapheap - Barney
Frank's Reasonable Prudence in Regulation Act seeking to
postpone the implementation of UIGEA by a year to allow
his HR2267 proposal to regulate and license online
gambling in the United States to be debated.
The
"Reasonable Prudence" bill has yet to exit Frank's House
Financial Services Committee although it has already
attracted 34 co-sponsors.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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