December 10, 2007
Dan Michalski likes nothing more than to sit at a table and play Texas hold ‘em.
But it’s been harder for the North Texas man to find a good game lately, because Dallas police keep raiding everything from VFW halls to underground poker games, ticketing players, arresting operators and confiscating everything from the chips to the tables.
Players fear that the crackdown on poker won’t stop at city borders, but spread throughout the state as long as Texas outlaws the games where the house gets a percentage of the pot.
“It’s a shame,” said Michalski, a poker blogger, player and editor of pokerati.com. “It’s not like the people running these rooms are getting rich. A lot of people in good rooms are just trying to provide a service. What’s wrong with them being able to pay the rent, buy food, with the money?
“This is frustrating, to say the least,” he said. “These laws themselves are questionable.”
Police say they are following the law, which says poker games in which the house gets a percentage of the pot, a rake, are illegal.
And police say they’re going to track them down and bust them.
In recent years, raids of organized poker games where the house gets a rake have picked up in Dallas, and now Tarrant County law enforcement is pledging to shut down illegal gambling.
“If we find it and it’s in our jurisdiction, then we’re going to work it,” said Mike Johnston, executive chief deputy of the Tarrant County Sheriff’s Department. “We haven’t run across an ongoing poker situation where the house gets a cut.
“But with all the World Series of Poker on TV, it’s naive to say it’s not going on,” he said. “If we find it, we’ll get warrants and shut them down.”
This in a state where former gubernatorial candidate Kinky Friedman once joked, “We invented Texas hold ‘em here, [but] we can’t even play it.”
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Recovered from the Poker Players Alliance archive index. This is the archived item as preserved.








