Poker Players Alliance News

U.S., Antigua battle over WTO sanctions for U.S. ban on online betting

September 30th, 2007

The United States estimates
that its Internet gambling restrictions have only cost Antigua and
Barbuda $500,000 in annual lost revenue – a figure the tiny Caribbean
nation’s chief counsel flatly rejected Friday.
Antigua, the smallest
country to ever win a World Trade Organization case, is seeking the
right to impose $3.4 billion in commercial sanctions against the U.S.
for its failure to comply with a ruling on its online betting ban.

Washington stopped U.S. banks and credit card companies last year from
processing payments to online gambling businesses outside the country.
The decision closed off the most lucrative region in a market worth
$15.5 billion. About half of the world’s online gamblers are based in
the United States.

In March, the WTO upheld the U.S. right to prevent offshore betting as
a means of protecting public order and public morals. But it said it
was illegal to target online gambling, without equally applying the
rules to American operators offering remote betting on horse and dog
racing.

After losing the WTO case, Washington declared its intention to
explicitly remove Internet gambling from its obligations under the
WTO’s treaty on trade in services. Australia, Canada, Costa Rica,
India, Macau, Japan and the 27-nation European Union have all joined
Antigua in filing compensation claims as a result, under a procedure
that is separate from the U.S.-Antigua sanctions arbitration.

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Unlawful gambling at fire halls charged

September 29th, 2007

State police are accusing a veteran Westmoreland County lawyer and a business partner of participating in unlawful gambling by organizing Texas Hold ‘Em poker tournaments at fire halls in Hempfield and Seward.

Defense attorney Lawrence J. Burns, 63, of 16 Romar Ave., Derry Township, and James L. Hricko, 41, of 1400 Swede Hill Road, Hempfield, both were charged Thursday with three first-degree misdemeanor counts of violating the state’s gambling devices statute.

Since early August, state police have executed three search warrants in connection with the case, seizing almost $43,000 in alleged gambling funds, Trooper Rebecca Fabich and Cpl. Robert Erdely said Friday in a news release.

Fabich went undercover on May 16 to play in an advertised poker game and a cash game at the Adamsburg and Community Volunteer Fire Department in Hempfield, police said in an affidavit of probable cause filed with the criminal complaints.

The Hempfield tournament was advertised through a sign outside the fire hall and a Web site, www.riverloc.com, registered to Burns, the affidavit states.

Less than three months later, police raided a tournament at the Seward Volunteer Fire Hall, according to documents Burns’ attorney filed last month seeking the return of seized money and property. The charges filed this week do not describe the Aug. 3 game in Seward.

Law enforcement authorities contend poker tournaments that are advertised, and held for profit and not for the benefit of a licensed charitable organization, are illegal.

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Presidential Candidate Scorecard

September 28th, 2007

Poker tourneys gamble with law

September 28th, 2007

Two Texas Hold ‘em poker tournaments in the Triangle this month each
attracted dozens of players hoping to win a big prize. Both events had
at least one world-class poker player on hand.
And both were in
violation of North Carolina’s gambling laws, according to the head of
the state’s Alcohol Law Enforcement agency, which enforces them.

But
only one of the tournaments, on a back road outside Benson, ended early
when officers stormed through the front door and arrested everyone. The
other, at a restaurant in Raleigh’s Glenwood South district, went to
the final round, with the winner headed to a resort at Cabo San Lucas,
Mexico.

According to North Carolina law, any person who operates
a game of chance or who bets on a game of chance involving cash,
property or anything of value is guilty of a misdemeanor. But society’s
embrace of poker — on TV and for recreation and charity fundraisers –
coupled with the inconsistent enforcement of state gambling laws, makes
it difficult to know what’s good, clean fun and what’s going to bring
down the law.

“You have got to be so careful,” said Dean Ogan of
Rocky Top Hospitalities, which hosted the Texas Hold ‘em tournament at
its Hi5 restaurant on Glenwood Avenue last week. “There are so many
laws and stipulations.”

Ogan said his company checked with the
ALE to make sure the Texas Hold ‘em tournament did not break any laws.
Over 300 people registered, hoping to win a grand prize of tickets for
two to Cabo San Lucas. The second-place winner was awarded a
high-definition television; third place got $100.

The Hi5 poker
tournament was sponsored by high-profile companies, Time Warner Cable,
Turner Broadcasting System Inc. and radio station G105. The official
dealer for the night’s eight finalists was Greg “Fossil Man” Raymer,
who took home $5 million in 2004 when he won the World Series of Poker
grand prize.

ALE Director Mike Robertson said his agency was not
aware of the tournament at the Hi5. He said if there was an exchange of
cash or other prizes such as the television and the vacation to Cabo
San Lucas, then the tournament was illegal.

“That TV in that tournament came from somewhere. Somebody had to pay for it,” Robertson said the following day.

But in the eyes of some prosecutors, there is a difference.

Wake
County District Attorney Colon Willoughby said that although charity
tournaments or events such as the one held at Hi5 may be technically
against the law, his office tries to use “ordinary common sense” when
the proceeds are clearly for charitable purposes or where the purpose
is to fill a restaurant or bar with patrons.

“I don’t think
that’s what the legislature intended us to focus on,” said Willoughby,
who said those events contrast to gambling houses where people pay an
entry fee to play and the proprietor takes a cut of the pot and profits
from food and drinks….

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PPA Volunteer Form

September 27th, 2007

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Gambling ordinance dies in NB council

September 27th, 2007

The idea to permit social card games in the city died abruptly Monday afternoon, when the North Bend City Council said doing so could be more trouble than it’s worth.

“I think it’s a hassle we don’t need. There are plenty of places to go,” said Councilor Janet Rubin at the North Bend City Council work session, after Mayor Rick Wetherell said the city doesn’t need to spend time collecting licensing fees and overseeing card tables when The Mill-Casino Hotel is in town.

North Bend does not allow card rooms in the city, but Coos Bay does permit them and has done so since 1987.
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In Coos Bay, social card games are defined as games between players in private homes, private businesses and private clubs of public accommodation, where no house player, house bank or house odds exist and there is no house income from the operation of the game.

Councilors Barry Hayes and Larry Garboden agreed with Wetherell and Rubin’s sentiments, while Bill Richardson questioned whether a social card game could be well regulated by the city.

Only Councilor Frank Amatisto, who first suggested the idea at the council’s last work session, Sept. 10, fought for the ordinance. At the time, he said he would like to allow local businesses to operate Texas Hold’em card games in the city.

“I think you are putting the people who do have businesses in the area at a disadvantage. There are places in town where we could have it,” Amatisto said, Monday. However, when asked which businesses, he said he didn’t know.  “Texas Hold’em is getting to be such a popular game that it is a disadvantage to businesses in North Bend. If they wanted to have it, they don’t have the opportunity to do it.”

In Coos Bay, applicants must go through background checks, pay a nonrefundable $65 investigation fee and pay $25 for work permits for each employee involved in or supervising card room activities. People who have been convicted of a felony in the past 10 years or of five misdemeanors within five years of the date of application, those who have been convicted of any crime involving gambling within the last five years; or those who have had a license revoked or suspended three times by the Oregon Liquor Control Commission, the last of which occurred in the last five years; are not allowed to operate a card table.

Several businesses in Coos Bay, including the Eagles Lodge, The Timber Inn, Mak’s Old City Hall and The Silver Dollar, run card games.

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High-stakes poker lures better players to dog track’s card room

September 26th, 2007

Spurred by the three-month success of high stakes poker, the
Naples-Fort Myers Greyhound Track’s poker room will be getting bigger
in October.

“Our business has probably doubled,” said Card Room Manager Cindy Fra.
The track’s card room transition from low stakes to high stakes has been nothing short of remarkable, Fra said.

“Everyone is thrilled about it,” she said.

In October, the track will add six more tables pushing the card room’s total number of tables to 30.

Much of the credit to the card room’s success can be attributed to Gov. Charlie Crist, Fra said.

“He
understood what it was about. The new governor has been great for us,
great for the players and great for the tax base,” she said.

In
July, Crist dealt Florida pari-mutuels a stronger hand to compete
against the Seminoles. The new law allowed poker rooms at race tracks
to have its poker rooms open seven days a week — and have tournaments
with higher stakes, including a maximum buy-in of $800.

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Poker Database Submission Form

September 25th, 2007

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Obama flush with poker prowess

September 24th, 2007

Barack Obama’s triumph in the 2004 U.S. Senate race earned him a memorable send-off from his friends in the Illinois Legislature — they emptied his wallet in a take-no-prisoners night of poker.

“We brought him down to earth real quick,” said state Sen. Terry Link, chuckling at the memory.

Obama was a regular at the low-stakes games — sometimes stud poker, sometimes draw — designed to break up the tedium of long legislative sessions. Poker, beer and cigars were staples; Democrats and Republicans, lawmakers and even the lobbyists who Obama sometimes rails against dealt the cards and placed their bets.

The traits Obama displayed around the card table those many nights are ones he brings to his presidential bid and are certain to be evident — and analyzed — if he wins the White House.

By his poker buddies’ accounts, Obama is careful and focused. He’s not easily distracted and doesn’t give away his intentions unless it’s to his advantage. He’s not prone to taking risky chances, preferring to play it safe. But he’s also serious and competitive: When he plays, he plays to win.

“It’s a fun way for people to relax and share stories and give each other a hard time over friendly competition,” Obama said by e-mail. “In Springfield, it was a way to get to know other senators — including Republicans.”

Obama, then a state senator, was a founding member of the group. He became known as a cautious player with a good poker face, someone who paid more attention to the game than to the chatter and laughter that accompanied it.

Read the rest of the article at CNN

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September 24th, 2007


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