KHANAWAKE GAMING COMMISSION PUBLISHES FINAL REPORT
ON INTERNET POKER SCANDAL
18 September 2009
Expensive debacle for Tokwiro, and Russ
Hamilton confirmed as main beneficiary of cheating scam
In a blast from the past, late Friday the Kahnawake
Gaming Commission published its final report on the
UltimateBet online poker scam which took place more than
three years ago, confirming that cheating did occur on
the Tokwiro Enterprises subsidiary online poker site,
and that former World Series of Poker main event
champion Russell Hamilton was primarily responsible,
although some 31 other individuals were associated in
varying degrees with one of online poker's biggest
cheating scandals (see previous InfoPowa reports).
It was an expensive affair for Tokwiro, which ended
up disbursing $22 million to players prejudiced by the
hole card scandal, and had to pay a further $1.5 million
in fines to the KGC. Added to that has been the cost of
the investigation, and the undoubtedly significant
amounts of budget that Tokwiro has had to allocate to
rebuilding its reputation.
KGC Chairman Dean
Montour drew a line under the debacle in stating:
"Despite the unfortunate circumstances that resulted in
this cheating, we are satisfied that the actions taken
by the Commission provided an equitable result for
affected players - our first priority.
"We
remain optimistic that this experience and the lessons
learned from it will result in a higher standard of
gaming regulation for companies licensed and regulated
within the Mohawk Territory of Kahnawake and elsewhere,"
Montour added.
The 11 page report confirms that
certain parties had the ability to view hole cards, and
this was enabled by illicit software placed on the
UltimateBet servers prior to November 2005. A third
party account was then used to view players’ hole cards
and the information passed on to the other players in on
the scam.
The user names on the accounts
maintained by those responsible were changed often in an
apparent attempt to avoid detection.
The 1994
WSOP Main Event champ Russell Hamilton is again named by
the Commission as the individual it believes primarily
responsible for the cheating, adding that 31 other
unprincipled individuals were associated in varying
degrees with Hamilton when the alleged cheating took
place.
Names were not released to the public in
the report, which will not please many in the industry
who have been calling for all involved to be publicly
named and shamed.
23 accounts with 117 different
usernames were used to facilitate the cheating and the
money was disbursed using player-to-player transfers on
the site, the report discloses, adding that since the
incidents UltimateBet has taken significant steps to
modify its control systems to prevent cheating and other
improprieties in the future.
The Kahnawake
authorities have provided full details of its detailed
investigation - including the identities of all those
involved - to Canadian law enforcement authorities, who
will determine whether criminal charges should be laid
against one or more of the individuals involved, the
report concludes.
Prior to the UltimateBet
scandal, similar cheating allegations had been
investigated against UltimateBet's sister site Absolute
Poker.com, resulting in that site having to pay a $500
000 fine to the KGC.
The full report can be read
here:
http://www.kahnawake.com/gamingcommission/kgc091109b.pdf
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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