May 20th, 2008
The strangely selective and self-defeating crackdown on Internet gambling.
On July 16, 2006, the CEO of BetOnSports.com attacked an anti–online gambling bill that the House of Representatives had overwhelmingly approved a few days before. “We want to be regulated,” David Carruthers wrote in the Baltimore Sun. “We want to be taxed. We want to be licensed. Instead of dealing with us constructively to address issues of mutual concern, these legislators prefer to pretend that they can control the Internet. Instead of protecting the public, they would rather waste time on public posturing to their partisan base.”
It wasn’t hard to understand why Carruthers was upset. The bill, part of the “American Values Agenda” championed by House Republicans, would have classified him as a felon, subject to a five-year prison sentence for the crime of accepting bets from Americans. What Carruthers evidently did not realize was that the U.S. Justice Department already considered him a felon. On the very day his plea for legitimacy appeared in the Sun, Carruthers was arrested at the Dallas/Forth Worth International Airport during a layover between London and Costa Rica.
Carruthers, a native of Scotland, thought he was running “the largest online wagering company in the world.” But according to Catherine Hanaway, the U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of Missouri, he was running a racketeering conspiracy. Now awaiting trial in St. Louis, Carruthers faces up to 20 years in prison if convicted of racketeering or mail fraud, which he supposedly committed by advertising that BetOnSports was “legal and licensed.” Never mind that BetOnSports was legal and licensed in the U.K., where it was incorporated, and in Costa Rica, where its operations were based.
Some Bets Are Off (Reason Magazine, 06/08) – Click here to go to the article and read more.
Author Contact Info: Jacob Sullum, Reason Magazine








