Thursday, April 22

New Jersey Introduces Internet Gaming Bill

Aggressive Players

A newly proposed law in New Jersey could allow the state’s licensed casinos in Atlantic City to offer internet gambling to residents within state lines. New Jersey Assembly Bill 2570, introduced into by Assemblyman John Burzichelli, would enable New Jersey residents to place wagers on casino games, including poker, via the Internet.

“We’re happy that New Jersey has taken this issue into their own hands,” said Interactive Media Entertainment and Gaming Association (iMEGA) chairman Joe Brennan Jr. “New Jersey is recognized as having the toughest gaming regulators in the US, but as a leading gaming state with a long track record of doing things the right way, Internet gambling will have a great home here and the opportunity to begin normalizing the industry.”

The bill states that Atlantic City casinos must apply for a permit to establish internet wagering, with the permit valid for one year and subject to renewal. The annual fee for an internet wagering permit is expected to be at least $200,000, with the renewal fee to be at least $100,000 to cover the costs of regulation by the commission and the division.

Once in place, gambling regulations will be implemented for the conduct of internet wagering that will be consistent with the regulations of the governing casino. Those regulations will include age restrictions, credit and debit procedures, game corruption checks, and features to assist problem gamblers.

New Jersey took the first step toward legalizing online gaming in the United States in January. Then, Lesniak introduced a bill that called for New Jersey residents to vote on a constitutional amendment that would permit state-regulated sports wagering in Atlantic City casinos and to state residents via an intra-state internet gambling system.

Should New Jersey succeed in becoming the first state to approve intrastate online gambling, it is expected that other states will follow suit. Iowa, Florida, and California have all been considering legislation as a means of straightening out state deficits. New Jersey is currently facing the worst deficit in the nation, but experts believe the state could earn hundreds of millions of dollars per year by regulating sports betting and online gaming.

The matter of when the legislation will pass remains up for debate. Poker Players Alliance (PPA) Executive Director John Pappas told CardPlayer magazine, “I think it’d be difficult for states to enact intrastate regulation by the end of this year. It is our goal to have something passed at the federal level this year. I think it’ll be a race to see who gets there first.”

Congressman Barney Frank (D-MA) remains focused on pioneering a federal solution on Capitol Hill. Frank recently added a 66th co-sponsor, Representative Charles A. Wilson from Ohio’s Sixth Congressional District, as he prepares to go into the markup phase for the proposed for HR 2267. Frank has until June 1st to work out the details of the legislation in order for the bill to be passed.

Il futuro del Poker Online gioco d'azzardo negli Stati Uniti

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Online Poker Operator Comes Forward In Kentucky Gambling Case

Aggressive Players

The Kentucky Supreme Court ruled against the online gambling domain owners in the Kentucky forfeiture case due to the fact that none of the owners of the domains had come forward to represent themselves. Now, one of the online poker operators has come forward to represent themselves in this on-going domain dispute. Yatahay Limited is the operator of True Poker, an online poker room. The domain TruePoker.com is on the list of 141 domains that the state of Kentucky is attempting to seize. The Supreme Court did not rule on the case and they gave a three week window for any gambling roperator to join the online gambling domain dispute.

Since a poker operator has come forward, the case will return to the Supreme Court and the Justices will finally resolve this issue without all of the political maneuvering being done by the state government of Kentucky. “We’ve overcome the technicalities that gave the Commonwealth their short-lived victory,” iMEGA Chairman Joe Brennan said in a written statement. “The court can now make a decision based on Kentucky law.” The next decision is whether the Supreme Court will accept Yatahay Limited as an owner of one of the domains. If they aren’t accepted, it would be reasonable to assume that other operators will come forward. The wording of the Supreme Court verdict gives indications that the verdict will likely favor the domain owners once they’ve met all of the technical requirements that have been put in place by the Supreme Court.

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Thursday, April 15

New Hampshire Governor Considers Legalizing Internet Gambling

Aggressive Players

With the state budget stretched and deficits building, New Hampshire Governor John Lynch is looking for ways to provide a much needed revenue injection for the Granite State. One way avenue he is considering, according to The Nashua Telegraph, is legalizing internet gambling, including online poker.

“The governor is working on developing a comprehensive strategy to address the revenue shortfall,” spokesman Colin Manning told the Telegraph. “There are a number of options the governor is looking at.”

Lynch expects to unveil his internet gambling plan within the week and, to this point, no details about it are known. One would assume that a tax would have to be paid by any company that offers online gambling, but even that is pure speculation right now.

Interestingly, the state’s House is currently debating a bill that would permit up to 17,000 slot machines and table games at licensed locations throughout New Hampshire. Lynch has come out in opposition to the bill, which has already passed through the Senate, because it does nothing to halt the proliferation of gambling.

Supporters of the bill are, perhaps understandably, confused as to how Lynch could be concerned with the proliferation of gambling, yet want to make online gambling legal. Former State Senator Bob Clegg said, “The governor is worried about proliferation of gaming, but it sounds like he’s going to make every computer terminal in every home and every BlackBerry — including those BlackBerrys held by kids in high school — a gambling facility.”

It should be noted that Clegg is currently serving as a lobbyist for a golf club that is looking to build a casino and resort in Hudson. He also says that his Hudson facility would create 3,800 jobs, far more than legalized online gambling would create.

State Senator Lou D’Allesandro agrees with Clegg, saying, “I haven’t seen his proposal, but if the governor is afraid of proliferation, what easier way to proliferate it than online gambling. Anytime you get something online, you run the risk of who’s playing, what it involves, the extent of play. We’ve had so many problems with things online.”

New Hampshire would not be the first state to consider legalizing online gambling should Lynch’s plan make any progress. In March, New Jersey Assemblyman John Burzichelli introduced Assembly Bill 2570, which would allow New Jersey casinos to offer internet gambling to the state’s residents. The casinos would have to acquire a license to do so and would be required to adhere to strict regulations. The California and Florida state governments are also considering internet gambling legislation.

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Monday, April 12

Mixing Drinking And Gambling Rarely A Good Idea

Aggressive Players

When it comes to perceived vices, drinking and gambling are usually right up there with swearing and prostitution.

But for casino regulars, mixing booze and bets can be a mixed bag.

Many of those who frequent traditional table games say that drinking alcohol clouds judgment to the point of leading to bad decisions that can extend and amplify the house’s edge. (This is why casinos give out drinks for free.)

At the poker table, save for professionals such as Scotty Nguyen - who has developed a reputation for playing while drinking - most players agree, noting that drunkenness at the table inhibits your ability to read opponents, thus negating a powerful and critical part of the game.

In my experiences at casinos, I’ve seen in-game drunkenness work both ways.

This past weekend, for instance, while wagering on March Madness in Las Vegas, I met a man at the blackjack table who was so drunk that he couldn’t place his chips in the betting circle without assistance. (The pit boss chased him off so the guy didn’t end up puking on someone.)

Another guy insisted he became an infinitely better blackjack player when he was drunk, chalking it up to something about the booze tempering his inhibitions to bet big.

Sure enough, the drunker he got, the more he wagered - and won.

In Bay Area cardrooms, most of my observations surrounding players who mix booze and bets have come at the poker table.

One time, a gentleman announced his arrival at the table with a simple, “Folks, I’m wasted.” He proceeded to play blind, without looking at his cards, and push all-in on three consecutive hands. He lost the first two with trash hands to players with smaller stacks.

On the third hand, he got called by the biggest stack at the table, a guy who was practically salivating at the chance to take the drunk’s chips. The big stack flipped over pocket kings - a great hand for the situation. The drinker turned over an ace-nine and won the pot when an ace came on the turn.

During another epic poker session, a different fellow sat for hours at the table without playing a hand. Over the course of 20 cycles around the table, the guy polished off eight or nine beers. Finally, on the button, he decided to play, re-raising two raisers with an all-in.

The drunk eventually lost the hand to a player with ace-king. His hand: 9-6. Later the inebriated guy admitted that he misread the hand, thinking he had a pair of nines.

He blamed his screw-up on the beer.

The lesson here is to be smart. If you choose to drink and gamble, don’t do either to excess.

And if you’re playing against a drunk, remember that Lady Luck rarely discriminates between the sober and the intoxicated, and she might just decide to work against you when you need her most.

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Sunday, April 11

Identifying Poker as a Game of Skill in Massachusetts

Aggressive Players

Representatives of the Poker Players Alliance spoke in front of a Massachusetts State Legislature committee last week to support a proposed bill that would classify poker as a game of skill.

No state legislature has made such a declaration, though a few district courts across the country have made similar rulings. The PPA sees the skill argument as an important battleground for poker because many jurisdictions’ definitions of gambling depend on whether a game’s results are predominantly due to skill or chance. Having poker declared a skill game would go a long way to ensuring people the right to play poker live and online.

The hearing went well, with PPA Massachusetts state director Randy Castonguay and litigation support director Patrick Fleming presenting their arguments unopposed. Andrew Woods, executive director of the Global Poker Strategic Thinking Society — which was founded by a Harvard Law School professor — also spoke in favor of the bill.

“I believe if a legislature takes this position, it would be precedent-setting,” Castonguay said. “It would put us on course for victories in other states.”

The presentation went off with little fanfare in front of the Massachusetts State Legislature’s Joint Committee on Economic Development and Emerging Technologies. It was more than seven hours into the day’s session when the issue was addressed, and most of the representatives had already left for the day. The three witnesses spoke for less than half an hour combined, including questions. Rep. Brian Wallace, who introduced the bill, identified as H4069, missed the hearing because of a family obligation.

That reception might make it seem that the legislation is unlikely to pass, and that is a fair assessment of its chances as a standalone bill. However, the PPA hopes to get the bill attached to a larger bill that would allow for resort-style casinos to be built at existing racetracks in the state.

The casino bill has failed to pass in previous years but appears to have gained some momentum. To show how far poker has come in trying to get a skill-game clause attached to the casino bill, just two years ago the PPA found itself fighting against an attempt to get an addition to the bill making Internet poker illegal.

“If the casino bill passes, I don’t see much opposition to this little blurb of poker being recognized as a skill game as something that would hang up the bill,” Castonguay said. “I don’t think it would be a sticking point to them.”

The PPA sees this as such a key issue that executive director John Pappas plans to join Castonguay in Massachusetts to put the full-court press on key legislatures in the state with a series of meetings beginning Thursday.

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Friday, April 9

European Court of Justice Opinions Question National Monopolies On Online Poker

Aggressive Players

The landscape of the European online poker and casino gaming world continues to get murkier as two recent opinions from the European Court of Justice (ECJ) question the legalities of the Austrian and Swedish gaming laws.

In the first opinion, Advocate General Jan Mazak ruled on a case involving Ernst Engelmann, a German citizen who operates two online casinos in Austria. Engelmann was found guilty of unlawfully organizing games of chance in Austria and the case was appealed to the regional court of Linz. This regional court sought the opinion of the ECJ on three points of Austrian gaming laws and whether they violated the European Union (EU) treaty that allows for freedom of trade across national boundaries.

Mazak, after reviewing the case history, ruled on the three points that the regional court had requested clarification on. Mazak stated that the requirement that companies needing to be physically located in Austria is a restriction on freedom of establishment and is a violation of the EU treaty. Mazak ruled that this direct discrimination prohibits companies with their seat in another Member State from being holders of a license to operate a casino.

Part of the reason for that segment of the Austrian law – that Austria was looking to protect its citizens through having gaming operations located in the country and bound by its laws – was unfounded in Mazak’s opinion. Mazak ruled that companies that are a part of the EU are bound by the laws of the EU treaty. The decision stated, “In fact, any undertaking established in a Member State can be supervised and penalties imposed on it, regardless of the place of residence of its managers.” Thus, Mazak ruled against the location of operations argument used by the Austrian government.

In the other opinion, Advocate General Yves Bot was asked by the Stockholm Court of Appeals to rule on the case of two editors of national newspapers. Otto Sjöberg and Anders Gerdin were the editors-in-chief and publishers of two Swedish newspapers who accepted advertising from gaming companies located outside of Sweden. In late 2003 and 2004, they published advertisements for lotteries offered on such gaming sites as Expekt, Unibet, Ladbrokes, and Centrebet, all of which are established in Malta and the United Kingdom. They were convicted of violating Swedish gaming laws through promotion of companies not located in Sweden and were fined SEK 1,000 (approximately $137).

While Bot opinion stated that the punishment for the violation was appropriate as to the Swedish law, he did question the decision in the Swedish courts. At issue is a question of discrimination, according to Bot. In his opinion, Bot stated, “In the present case, although Swedish legislation prohibits, without distinction, the promotion of gambling organized abroad and the promotion of gambling organized in Sweden without a license, the penalties laid down for infringement of that prohibition are different. Thus, whereas penalties of a fine and imprisonment for up to six months are laid down for persons who advertise gaming organized abroad, those who advertise gaming organized in Sweden without a license do not incur equivalent criminal penalties, but only administrative penalties.”

The opinions laid out by Mazak and Bot are not binding, however. They are simply opinions and must go in front of the full ECJ before a decision is rendered on either case. At this time, there has been no date set for a final decision on the two cases.

The European Betting and Gaming Association (EGBA), which has been battling the movement towards the nationalization of online gaming in Europe, has hailed the opinions of the two Advocates General as potentially groundbreaking in the online gaming industry. Sigrid Ligné, the Secretary General of the EGBA, was especially pleased with the Austrian ruling when she said, “(With AG Mazak’s opinion) In this context, there is no acceptable justification to prevent reputable European competitors from offering online poker and casino games to Austrian players.”

Ligné appealed to free market economic theory when she said about the Swedish opinion, “It is remarkable that leading national newspapers, which are financed through and very much dependent on the sale of advertising, are unfairly deprived of substantial sources of revenue.” Ligné also noted that the two Swedish companies that conduct the country’s online gaming operations, Svenska Spel and ATG, advertise heavily inside Swedish borders and also use other EU member states in advertising on television to draw customers.

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A Look at the History of Gambling in Alabama

Aggressive Players

Rancor is rising and mud is flying, but a mess is normal when it comes to gambling in Alabama. The fight ties the reprobate to the religious, the crusader to the criminal and hardens an already cynical public. The imbroglio between gaming kingpins and public servants is merely the latest chapter in a historic tale fraught with corruption, favor and murder.

Early days

When times were dire, Alabama had no problem nestling up to sin. According to a medscape.com examination of the pathology and history of Southern gambling, the Heart of Dixie implemented a lottery in the years following the Civil War to finance public projects. Such efforts were common throughout the devastated former Confederacy.

The largest of these operations was the Louisiana State Lottery, born from Act 25 of the1868 Louisiana State Legislature granting the Louisiana State Lottery Company a 25-year monopoly and a $40,000 tax exemption. A decade later, Louisiana State Lottery Company tickets had spread nationwide.

Understandably, competing interests in neighboring states tagged the lottery “The Serpent.” Owing to its proximity to the Bayou State and its status as Alabama’s most sizable city, Mobile became a target for lottery tickets and money flowed westward from the Azalea City. So in 1878, legislation in Montgomery prohibited the sales of Louisiana Lottery tickets in Alabama. Other regional states followed suit and in 1879 the lottery charter was withdrawn.

Though Louisiana lottery officials managed to have the charter renewed within years, anti-gambling forces in the Heart of Dixie gained a potent foothold. In the decades following, popular sentiment fell in line with the pulpit.

Alabama’s laborious and notorious 1901 state constitution prohibited games of chance and still cite it as legal only through additional amendments. The legislature also passed provisions to the state criminal code then that made gambling a crime.

Sin City

The most nefariously bloody chapter of the state’s gaming history unfolded in the mid-20th century on the banks of the Chattahoochee River separating Alabama from Georgia. Traditionally a mill town, Russell County’s Phenix City, Ala., needed an economic boost when the municipality went bankrupt during the Great Depression with more than $1.1 million in debt and by 1933 had moved into federal receivership.

City leaders opted to turn vice to their advantage and enacted a series of fines and licenses over gambling and the use and sale of liquor, regardless of state law. The town revenue increased — $228,000 a year in 1945 — but gambling was still illegal as far as the powers in Montgomery were concerned.

With Ft. Benning over the river in Columbus, Ga., gaming and prostitution was stoked by the 100,000 men stationed at the base who were eager to leave their inhibitions behind in the barracks.

In the midst of belt-tightening World War II, Phenix City improved its police force and built its first fire department. By 1948, they had their first hospital.

Predictably, organized crime moved in and began to run gambling, narcotics and prostitution in town. That control also crept into city hall as racketeers rigged local and state elections and held leadership positions in the chamber of commerce, on school boards, hospital boards and in service organizations. Some also boasted membership in the Ku Klux Klan.

Some citizens fought back when local businessman and crusader Hugh Bentley formed the anti-crime group the Russell Betterment Association (RBA). The bombing of Bentley’s home brought unwanted attention and saddled the border town with an infamous reputation.

Attorney Albert Patterson had seen enough. He had moved his family to Phenix City in the 1930s and worked his way up the political chain, first on the local school board, then in the state senate. Following the explosion, Patterson decided to join forces with RBA. Realizing the power to clean up the city would have to come from Montgomery, the RBA in turn backed a Patterson bid for state attorney general.

Though underworld forces attempted election tampering, Patterson won the Democratic primary, tantamount to winning the general election in the political scene of the day. It seemed a new era was set to dawn.

Ten days after securing the nomination, Patterson was shot three times, assassinated outside his law office on June18, 1954.

Phenix City Mayor Homer Cobb’s response was swift. He ordered all businesses selling alcohol closed on Sundays. Alabama Gov. Gordon Persons placed the town under martial law and sent in the National Guard. Ft. Benning declared the town off limits to personnel, as guardsmen conducted round-the-clock raids on nightclubs, warehouses and gambling dens.

Patterson’s son John, also an attorney, was tapped to carry the mantle forward in the 1955 election. He went on to prosecute those indicted for his father’s murder, winning one conviction and eventually ascending to the governor’s office.

Tweaking the law

In 1971, pari-mutuel wagering at dog and horse tracks was found constitutional by the Alabama Supreme Court. Justices ruled that while Section 65 of the constitution prevents the legislature from authorizing a lottery, it does not prevent gambling that doesn’t constitute a pure game of chance. Therefore, the degree of skill involved in dog and horse racing made it legal.

It wouldn’t take long before a quartet of dog tracks were operating around the state. Milton McGregor built two, one near Birmingham and one east of Montgomery in Shorter. Mobile’s dog track, owned by a group of familiar and powerful names like Maisel, opened southeast of town near Theodore.

Greenetrack in Eutaw was opened in 1978 and eventually earned a national reputation as a “killing fields” track before animal rights groups removed injured greyhounds from its kennels in 1998. Chief investor Paul Bryant, Jr., son of legendary Alabama football coach and demigod “Bear” Bryant, withdrew from the operation then and moved his money to a Texas track.

In 1980, an amendment to the constitution made Jefferson County the first county to authorize limited charitable bingo. Since then, 18 additional amendments have permitted bingo in various counties and cities. The Indian Gaming Regulatory Act of 1988 gave the green light to casinos on Alabama’s Indian lands.

Despite protestations that the act violated the 11th Amendment of the U.S. Constitution limiting federal judicial power over states, money flowed onto the reservations.

Coziness between elected officials and gambling interests is common. In 1993, Mobile Mayor Mike Dow led the formation of Jobs for Alabamians Coalition (JACO), a PAC to get the Alabama Legislature to pass a constitutional amendment for a statewide lottery and casinos in downtown Mobile, Prichard and at the state’s four dog tracks.

Then-Mobile City Attorney John Lockett — former Gov. Don Siegelman’s one-time law partner — defended Dow’s association with JACO to the press, saying it was no different than him being a member of the League of Municipalities. Joining Dow in JACO were the mayors of Birmingham and Tuskegee and racing baron Milton McGregor. Lockett currently sits on the bench of the 13th Judicial Circuit Court.

According to McGregor, gubernatorial candidate and former state GOP chair Winton Blount III arranged a 1993 meeting with McGregor and a pair of long-time personal friends, buddies who were also top casino executives with Promos, an entity seeking expansion into Alabama. McGregor told former Press-Register reporter Cathy Donaldson that Blount attended part of the meeting and talked about casino benefits. When the politico later denied the meeting, Donaldson said the gambling king called Blount “a hypocrite” In the early 1990s, former Gov. Jim Folsom, Jr. was pilloried when it was revealed he flew to the Cayman Islands in McGregor’s private airplane. “I was run over by the church bus,” Folsom said publicly after losing the 1994 gubernatorial election.

Folsom’s allegations about influence are not without merit, as religion has long been the stalwart opposition to any gambling propositions. The Alabama Baptist Convention remains on record with formal resistance to all efforts. The state’s churches remain a formidable political force as evidenced by the fact that more than a third of Alabama’s counties — 26 of 67 – remain dry. However, 12 of those dry counties contain municipalities with some legal alcohol sales within city limits.

In 1998, Mobilian Don Siegelman won the gubernatorial election by promising to bring a referendum before the people, an effort to allow a state lottery that would ostensibly fund educational efforts. Simultaneously making the rounds on Goat Hill was a bill to allow video poker and blackjack at the state’s dog tracks.

“People better wake up and start asking some questions. I think it was a joint effort with the gambling interests and the governor’s office working together,” State Rep. Steve McMillan of Bay Minette told media. “We even had legislators saying that if the video poker didn’t pass, they would not support the lottery.”

The Siegelman lottery attempt failed.

According to a 1999 article published by the now-defunct Harbinger newspaper, Mobile attorney Richard Dorman has been a friend of Siegelman’s since the former governor’s college days and was chair of the Alabama Education Lottery Foundation, a PAC founded with intentions of funding the Siegelman lottery attempt. Dorman reportedly had a prior history with gambling as he once represented two entities involved with tribal gambling efforts near Atmore.

In 2003, an amendment allowed electronic bingo at Macon County’s VictoryLand racetrack, opening doors and elevating the furor.

In 2004, the state’s highest court rendered an opinion on the future of bingo. In Ex Parte Ted’s Game Enterprises v. Ted’s Game Enterprises (893 So.2d 376) the Alabama Supreme Court held that if chance is the dominant factor, an electronic game is prohibited. The court also noted the broad prohibition of such games throughout state history, and specifically noted bingo needed exemption by additional constitutional amendments.

Gov. Bob Riley was tenuously linked with regional gambling interests in 2005 when his former Congressional press secretary Michael Scanlon pled guilty to conspiracy in the Jack Abramoff scandal. It was revealed that Riley signed a letter opposing Alabama gambling on behalf of the U.S. Family Network, an Abramoff front tied with competing Indian gaming in neighboring Mississippi. Riley denied knowledge of the association.

A 2002 U.S. Senate Indian Affairs Committee report said Abramoff told William Worfel of Louisiana’s Coushatta Tribe that Mississippi Choctaw Chief Phillip Martin gave $13 million to Riley’s 2002 campaign in order to protect Choctaw gaming. The report also said Scanlon received $4.5 million over two years to protect the Choctaw’s gaming interests through a scheme known as “Operation Orange.”

In 2007, Lagniappe outlined ties between McGregor and Alabama State Attorney General Troy King, who received almost $65,000 in campaign donations from PACs affiliated with McGregor. The story included allusions from figures such as attorney Julian McPhillips that King was aware of McGregor’s power and made decisions accordingly.

“I’m not saying McGregor put King up to anything,” McPhillips stated, “I just think King’s trying to curry favor.” McPhillips also alluded to King’s prosecution of gaming facilities and individuals in White Hall, Ala. as being motivated by McGregor’s influence.

The Alabama Department of Revenue filed tax liens against Greenetrack in 2009 saying their electronic bingo hall owes more than $72 million in unpaid taxes.

Then, lawsuits filed by individuals in the fall of 2009 claim Greenetrack authorities rigged electronic bingo machines to pay out $20,000 to former Birmingham Mayor Larry Langford. A similar suit claims Langford received the same “benefit” at McGregor’s VictoryLand track outside Montgomery.

Langford attorney Michael Rasmussen dismissed the claims. “Those machines aren’t owned by local companies,” Rasmussen told media. “They’re operated by these national companies, and it would take something like the (federal National Security Agency) to break in and manipulate them.”

It was the least of Langford’s troubles. On Oct. 28, 2009, the mayor was convicted in federal court of 60 counts revolving conspiracy, bribery, fraud, money laundering and tax evasion. He faces up to 805 years in prison when he is sentenced March 5.

Even now, the marriage between seemingly competing ideologies continues. An Associated Press report from early February of 2010 revealed that gambling interests used political action committees to donate thousands of dollars to the Christian Coalition of Alabama, a traditional gaming opponent.

Race PAC finance reports show not only $8,000 in funds donated to the Christian Coalition last year, but the collection of money from gambling interests and other PACs funded by gambling interests. A similar group, Watch PAC, received funds from gambling interests and also reported $4,500 in contributions to the Christian group during the same period. The coalition previously received funds from groups tied with Mississippi Indian tribes that operate casinos.

Coalition Chairman Randy Brinson of Montgomery claimed the funds were unsolicited and that the use of PACs hid the money’s origin. “In fact, to ensure that this is not an issue in the future, we will no longer accept any contributions from any PAC for any purpose,” Brinson told media.

Yet two days before the donations story broke, Brinson held a conference criticizing Gov. Riley’s efforts to shut down Alabama casinos. A spokesman for the governor noted the coalition’s extreme reversal of positions on the gambling issue.

Within the last months, Gov. Riley has increased efforts to shut down the electronic bingo facilities across the state, claiming they violate the letter of the law. It has set him in direct opposition to McGregor and resulted in the magnate and others closing facilities around the state. Only Greenetrack is open at the time of this article.

In retaliation, McGregor has spearheaded an effort to have the legalization of gambling brought before voters.

Country Crossing Casino developer Ronnie Gilley flatly told the Montgomery Advertiser he believes the recent crackdown is rooted in neighboring states and competing interests, pointing to the Choctaw money that allegedly flowed into Riley coffers.

David Barber, the head of Riley’s newly minted Illegal Gambling Task Force resigned in January 2010 after winning $2,300 while gambling at a Choctaw casino in Mississippi. Riley appointed Mobile County District Attorney John Tyson to replace him and Tyson has steamed ahead with new vigor in the governor’s quest. Coincidentally, Tyson is a former King political rival, having lost the 2006 general election for state attorney general to the incumbent.

A legislative bill introduced Feb. 5, 2010 – The Alabama Bingo Control Act (ABC Act, SB 381) sponsored by Sen. Marc Keahy (D-Grove Hill) – would answer McGregor’s pleas. Were it to pass, it would not only allow gaming in 10 “tourist destinations” around the state, but would take the unprecedented move of establishing a state gaming commission to oversee operations. Gaming operators would be taxed at 28 percent of their gross receipts while vendors would be taxed 20 percent of gross. A Senate committee approved the measure 6-2 less than a week later.

On Feb. 17, Attorney General King held a press conference announcing his opinion that he and not the governor had direct authority over the task force but said he will decline from such for the time being. He instead suggested cessation of the raids on casinos and further clarification from the state supreme court before an eventual public referendum, effectively echoing McGregor’s cause.

Tyson responded with intent to oppose intervention from the former political rival.

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Sunday, April 4

Online Casino Gambling May Soon Come To Iowa

Aggressive Players

Iowa may become the first state in the US that will allow their residents the right to do what they are already doing, to gamble online at a casino. With an estimated 50,000 Iowans betting online, lawmakers are seeking apiece of the revenue for the state.

The online gambling issue is a debate that is taking place at a federal level, but individual states may beat the federal government to law changes. Iowa Representative Doug Struyk is among a group that is working on gathering facts on the issue.

If approved, Internet gambling in Iowa could bring the state an estimated $11.5 million a year in tax revenue. With the economy limiting the state budget, that is $11.5 million that some legislators believe could be put to good use.

Unlike the current system where online players deposit money directly into playing accounts at online websites, Iowa residents would have to deposit the money at local casinos. After depositing the funds, the player would then be authorized to gamble at an online casino.

If a player wins, they would have to then return to the casino to collect their money. If they lose, again they would have to deposit money at the casino before being allowed to play again.

Another stipulation under the plan being discussed would call for the betting to take place only from an Iowa Internet address. The minimum deposit to play would be $50, and the maximum $500. The only game that could be played online under this plan would be poker.

Several states are considering similar proposals that would legalize online gambling. California, Florida, and New Jersey all have lawmakers pushing for some form of legalized Internet betting.

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Thursday, April 1

Tips for Building the Poker Pot

Aggressive Players

When you are playing poker, especially a longer handed game like Texas Hold ‘Em, you have several opportunities to raise the betting pot. Raising the pot is important, after all, the higher the pot, the higher you can win. A lot of players focus on their hand and their own bets, often forgoing the opportunity to raise the pot all together, but you do not want to overlook that pot.

Raise Early

If you are playing a game like Texas Hold ‘Em where you have several chances to raise your hand, start the raising off early. If you wait until the River to raise the pot, then chances are you will not trick the other players in to going all in. Instead, plant smaller raises early on and keep them coming. This will build a level of confidence in the other players and they are more likely to follow you in the excitement.

Raise Often

Do not just place one large raise and expect another player to get into a betting battle with you. This technique may work on more aggressive players, but most players will see a large sum of money and shy away, folding their hand. A better strategy is to raise the same amount, but in smaller increments over time. The other players are less likely to take notice this way, and you can ride that high hand all the way to the pot.

Raise Carefully

Always pay attention to the betting styles of your opponents. For example, if you are playing with a modest player who frequently folds their hand when the bets get high, do not expect that player to get in to a betting war with you. A modest player does not ride on poker adrenaline rushes and they are more likely to fold regardless of how well you play. If you are playing against a loose or widely aggressive player, then you can easily get them to raise the pot by raising against them. Aggressive players have a hard time letting go and chances are they will match you bet for bet. If you are sure of your hand, work their loose betting style to your advantage. Whatever you do, do not scare off the other players. There is little since in forcing everyone at the table to fold early when the pot is still small.

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Tuesday, March 30

Poker Pros Gear Up For Heads-Up Tournament In Las Vegas

Aggressive Players

Professional poker has become one of the most watched sports on television over the past couple of years, and 2010 will bring more big events to viewers. In March, sixty-four of the top players in the world will meet in Las Vegas for the vastly popular National Heads-Up Poker Championship.

Among the players that will participate in the event at Caesars Palace are defending champion Huck Seed and 2009 World Series of Poker Main Event champion Joe Cada. They will be joined by a who’s who of professional poker players.

Phil Hellmuth will be in attendance, as will Daniel Negreanu, Phil Ivey, Chris Ferguson, and Vanessa Rousso. The players will compete for their share of the $1.5 million prize pool. Although the money is nice, most players will be focusing on becoming the Heads-Up champion.

“We’re excited to bring this annual tradition back to Caesars Palace,” said Executive Vice president of NBC Sports, Jon Miller, “The National Heads-Up Poker Championship’s compelling poker action has become a must-see for the casual and hardcore poker fan alike.”

The tournament is as cut throat as any played all year by these top players. It is single elimination, and it is run in a bracket style that is similar to the one used by the NCAA for the college football championship.

The event begins on March 4th, and will run for four days. The tournament will not be televised live, but will play out on NBC over six weeks in April and May. The first place winner will take home $500,000, with second place winning $250,000.

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Monday, March 29

Canadian Study Shows Poker Reduces Stress

Aggressive Players

A university in Canada has just released the results of a study that measured cortisol levels of subjects who were engaged in a poker game. The study found that cortisol levels decreased as the game went on.

A Canadian University has linked online gambling with reduced stress. An earlier study showed that online gambling is beneficial to the brain and researchers are now excitedly reporting that it is a stress buster as well. The study consisted of several people playing a game of poker.

Researchers focused the study on stress and what can be done to alleviate it. The subjects in this study were asked to play at a poker table while researchers measured the level of cortisol, known as the stress hormone, periodically throughout the game. They found that cortisol levels decreased by as much as 17 percent from the time the subjects began playing to the end of the game.

Researchers that were part of this study also claimed that any casino game will have a similar effect on stress. While this statement was not as concrete as the one about poker, they are confident that other casino games will cause the same results.

The research team believes that the reason the stress hormone is reduced with poker because players are able to focus on the game and forget about daily responsibilities. Any pastime that allows people to think of something other than what they worry about all day long is going to earn major brownie points. Once the news of this study spreads, poker operators can expect to see an increase in players.

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Tuesday, January 26

The Top Winners and Losers of 2009

Aggressive Players

Without a doubt, 2009 has been one of the most entertaining years in online high-stakes poker. With everything from the durrrr Challenge, to the story of Isildur1, there has always been something going on worth talking about.

Below are summaries of the top five money earners, and top five losers of the year, including a month-by-month graph of their results.

To see more stats and hand replays from throughout the year, head to MarketPulse.

Patrik Antonius

It only makes sense to have the year’s top earner at the top of the list, so without further ado, we bring you the 2009 story of Patrik Antonius.

Patrik Antonius just might have hit the life jackpot. He was at one-time a model and tennis pro, before becoming one of the most respected, and feared, poker players in the world. He made the list of the top 10 top profit earners in 2007 under the username FinddaGrind with over $1.3 million earned.

In 2008, he made another $1.3 million, this time as part of Team Full Tilt.

This January Antonius made over $2 million and never dropped below that point. His year was filled with million dollar swings, but in the end, the Finnish pro always found a way to come out good.

On top of being the most profitable player on the year, Antonius was also busy breaking the records for the largest pots ever played online. Despite all of his profits, Antonius has fallen behind in the durrrr Challenge and needs to make close to $1 million in the second half to have a chance.

However, he finished 2009 as the top earner with a massive profit of over $8.9 million.

Phil Ivey

This year Phil Ivey has done exactly what Phil Ivey does every year: Win. In 2008, Ivey was the top online earner with over $7.3 million in profit. In 2007 he was the third largest earner with $1.9 million and this year he ends in second place with $6.3 million.

His story is the same every year: Any players, any game, any stakes. He’ll sit, and most of the time he’ll win. But even Ivey isn’t immune to the swings, starting off the year in the red he had to spend a couple of months getting back to even.

After an $800k loss in May, it was pretty much profit from that point on. Add these winnings to his two WSOP bracelets, Main Event final table appearance and prop bets won, and you have one hell of a good looking year.

Brian Hastings

CardRunners pro Brian Hastings has had one of the most interesting years out of anyone online. He started the year with a backing deal for playing the nose-bleed stakes against Gus Hansen.

Even with Hansen bleeding chips for months, Hastings struggled to get even for the majority of the year, finally showing a profit come August.

Come the end of November, it started to look as though Hastings would be having a positive year, but nothing too spectacular, or worth talking about. That was until he sat down with Isildur1 for possibly the biggest session in online poker history.

By the end of the single session with the game’s most explosive player, Hastings had made $4.2 million in profit; effectively ending Isildur1’s run at Full Tilt’s high-stakes tables.

The win was steeped in controversy when information came to light that Hastings, along with two fellow CardRunners pros Brian Townsend and Cole South, merged their hand history databases together to allow for an in-depth study of Isildur1’s heads up game.

For the full scoop on this controversy, head to: Full Tilt Suspends Brian Townsend.

theASHMAN103

Ashton “theASHMAN103” Griffin is only 20 years old, and began playing poker seriously in high-school. His downfall has always been bankroll management and tilt issues.

After a series of massive swings he went broke right at the beginning of the year, but Griffin finally got his head in the right spot coming in to April of 2009 when he was forced to get a stake to get back in the game.

Thanks to winning a prop bet for making $500k playing nothing higher than $25/$50 No-Limit immediately before the event was set to start, Griffin was able to enter into the $25k heads-up shootout, which he went on to win for another $500k.

Griffin’s heater continued over the next two months going from broke to the fifth most profitable player on the year. To read a full interview with Griffin about his heater, and life in poker, head to: Ashman103: The Interview Transcript.

Ilari Sahamies

Ilari “Ziigmund” Sahamies is one of the most well-known and entertaining online players in the world. Above all else he seems to have a love for gambling with sick amounts of money.

For a few days, Sahamies had convinced a few of the nosebleed players to convert the $500/$1,000 Pot-Limit Omaha tables into $3,000/$9,000. Along with all the massive flips Sahamies played over the year, it’s safe to say he is the biggest gambler at the tables.

But despite his love for gambling, Ziigmund is still one of the most profitable players in the world. The occasional swing aside, Ziigmund’s graph is mostly un-eventful, hovering around the $2-$3 million mark for the majority of the year.

It wasn’t until Ziigmund set his sights on Isildur1 that his graph took a violent swing upwards. After taking a few million from the unknown player, Ziigmund finished his year up an impressive $3.2 million.

Isildur1

True identity still unknown, Isildur1 showed up on the poker scene Sept. 16. He splashed around in medium to high-stakes for about a month before starting to take shots in the nosebleed games.

The true story of Isildur1 started on Nov. 7 when he began his first serious upswing by crushing well known players like Haseeb Qureshi and UgotaBanana. After these wins, Isildur1 seemed fearless, willing to play anyone at any stakes.

Soon Isildur1 set his sights on Tom “durrrr” Dwan and over the next three days he absolutely destroyed him for over $4 million. At his highest point on Nov. 15, Isildur1 sat with over $5 million in profit, only to lose it all, mostly to Ivey and Antonius, by the 21st.

After making another quick run back up to almost $3 million in just one week, Isildur1 began his largest downswing.

It was during the downswing where Isildur1 shattered all the records for the largest pots of all time. He first broke the record with an $878k pot versus Patrik Antonius, only to break that record a few days later losing the first pot worth over a million at $1,356,947.

Mostly a result of losing over $4.2 million in a single session to Brian Hastings, Isildur1 saw his roll get almost entirely crushed, sitting down over $2 million for the remainder of the month.

With his only hands being played at the medium stakes tables, it appears at this point as if Isildur1’s run at the highest stakes games online is through.

David Benyamine

In 2008, David Benyamine was the sixth most profitable online player in the world. He finished the year having made almost $3 million profit and had snagged himself one of the most beautiful girls in poker, Erica Schoenberg.

At the very end of 2008, Full Tilt Poker dropped Benyamine as a red-name pro. As a result, he began 2009 playing under the username “MR B 2 U SON”. He played under that username until July of 2009 when his Team Full Tilt status was re-instated.

At the time of the username switch, Benyamine was down $731,128 on the year. Things continued to get worse for the French pro as he struggled throughout 2009, finishing down $2.9 million. To top it all off, many sources have reported an end to his relationship with Schoenberg.

All in all, 2009 might just have been the worst year in Benyamine’s career.

LarsLuzak

Sami “LarsLuzak” Kelopuro is a 22-year-old Finnish poker pro who showed up on the high-stakes scene in 2007. He made over a million dollars in both 2007 and 2008, plus a rumored large profit from $250/$500 No-Limit sessions played on Betfair poker.

Despite hopes of cementing his name as one of the top players in the world, 2009 turned out to be a complete disaster for Kelopuro.

Starting the year with an $810k loss, Kelopuro was almost able to grind his way back to even in February before beginning a landslide of losses.

At no point in 2009 did Kelopuro show a profit, despite his continued efforts at the games highest stakes. After reaching nearly $4 million in losses on the year, Kelopuro disappeared from the high-stakes games, sparking rumors of a busted bankroll.

With a laundry list of impressive results from both cash games and tournaments, it’s safe to assume the poker world will hear more from Kelopuro in 2010.

Tom “durrrr” Dwan

Tom Dwan has to be considerd one of the most entertaining poker players in the world. As a result, there has been more time spent talking about Dwan in 2009 than any other online player.

His year began by losing over $4 million in the first two months, only to grind back up to over $1.4 million in profit just four months later. However, the massive swings were only one of Dwan’s many stories on the year.

The first came with the introduction of the durrrr Challenge. After almost two months of speculation and rumors, Patrik Antonius stepped up as the first competitor, and the challenge was underway.

After a short period of consistent play between the two competitors, the Challenge took a hiatus as both players chose to focus on busting a new fish splashing around at the highest stake tables available.

It didn’t take Dwan, and the rest of the online regulars, long to bust a new fish calling himself Martonas, and the challenge seemed as if it would resume.

But it wasn’t long before another new face showed up on the scene and began stirring the pot. Luke “fullflush1” Schwartz proved to be as strong at the table as he was mouthy, focusing the majority of his insults at Dwan, including the now infamous “cork it durrrrballs”.

Schwartz successfully made over $700k at the tables before cashing out, and buying a house with his profits.

The next big story for Dwan came with the third unknown player to splash around in the big game. Unfortunately for Dwan, this player, Isildur1, would end up taking him for over $5 million, before giving it all away to everyone else.

Shortly after losing the majority of his online roll, Dwan became the newest member of Team Full Tilt, and began grinding his way back towards even. By the end of 2009 Dwan had brought himself back to -$4.3 million from his November low point of -$6.8 million.

On the bright side, he is ahead in the durrrr Challenge by over $937k.

Gus Hansen

This year’s story for Gus Hansen is simple: He made $3 million in the first month, mostly off Tom Dwan, then proceeded to lose almost exclusively for the remainder of the year. Although there were months in which he showed a profit, Hansen’s graph on the year is anything but encouraging.

Due to his consistent negative results, Hansen has become one of the most popular online players amongst the other regular high-stakes grinders. As he explained in an interview with PokerListings, the high-stakes games on Full Tilt simply follow him from table to table.

As a result, Hansen chose to play almost exclusively 7-Game for the remainder of the year, at times killing absolutely all high-stakes action for all other variants.

For a look into high-stakes, and how some of the other players in the game view Hansen, head to: State of the High Stakes Poker Nation.

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Saturday, January 23

Poker Casino Vacations

Aggressive Players

Many people every year from around the world travel to the United States so that they can visit some of the many casinos in the country and try there luck at winning money. Gambling is a time when people come together and have a fun time talking and betting on games. The StarPoker regions we’re going to look at today are the premiere destinations to travel too if you’re looking for a place to gamble.

Not only will you be able to find a lot of casinos in the regions we’re going to look at, but you’ll also be able to take part in some great events if you choose too. All of the areas have been popular tourist hotspots throughout the USA for some time now which means there are activities for the entire family and not just casinos in the area.

Las Vegas

Las Vegas is obviously the number one choice for Full Tillt Poker players looking to take a vacation for gambling. The city is filled with more casinos then most other things and you’ll be amazed by the bright lights hitting your face while driving up and down the strip at night. The Las Vegas experience is one of a kind and if you’ve never been to Vegas then it should be the first place you visit when you want to take a casino vacation. With dozens of casinos in the area you need to make sure that you don’t just visit one of them and you spend a bit of time at each casino. Every one of the casinos offers something unique and different then the rest of the casinos and you won’t get the full Vegas experience unless you visit a good half dozen of the casinos. Some of the notable casinos you should visit in Vegas are The Bellagio, The Venetian, MGM Grand and the Monte Carlo.

Los Angeles

If you’ve been to Vegas already and want to experience something different or you just don’t think you’ll enjoy the bright lights of Vegas then the next best choice for a casino vacation is in Los Angeles. There are some great FullTilt gems tucked away throughout the Los Angeles area and some great action can be found on a daily basis in the area. The casinos are usually filled with rich folks from the area as well so there is plenty of money splashing around that you can win. You’ll also have the chance of meeting a celebrity while playing in one of the LA casinos as there frequented by stars who enjoy poker and such games. Some of the casinos in the LA area you should look up if you’re planning a trip are The Bicycle Casino, Commerce Casino and The Crystal Casino.

Mississippi

The Mississippi area is full of StarPoker casinos and although they aren’t quite the size or of the same extravagance of the Vegas casinos you’ll still find some great action. The casinos aren’t as close together in the Mississippi area either which means you might only be able to visit a couple casinos on your trip depending on how long you visit the area.

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Monday, January 11

South Carolina Attorney General Appeals Poker Skill Game Ruling

Aggressive Players

The fight for five poker players in South Carolina is far from over. According to the Associated Press, the state’s Attorney General will appeal the October ruling that Texas Hold’em, the world’s premier poker genre, is a skill game.

It’s a familiar debate as the poker industry enters 2010. Is Texas Hold’em a game of skill or is it ultimately determined by chance? South Carolina Attorney General Henry McMaster filed an appeal with the state’s Supreme Court, the Associated Press explained on Thursday: “McMaster’s appeal says he doesn’t think whether there is skill or just chance involved has anything to do with lawmakers’ attempt to ban gambling. The attorney general skipped the Court of Appeals and filed with the state Supreme Court, saying the question deals with the constitution’s wording on gambling.”

Five poker players were charged in Mount Pleasant, South Carolina back in 2006. According to the favorable ruling by Judge Markley Dennis in October, the buy-ins for a weekly home game in the South Carolina town varied between $5 and $20. The small blind was $0.25 and the big blind was $0.50, with pots ranging between $5 and $10. Fifty cents was taken from several pots in order to provide food and drink for players, but the “house” did not profit from the game.

The game got ugly on April 12th, 2006, when police officers raided it and began arresting participants on the grounds that they were playing in a “house used as a place of gambling.” The defendants, under the guidance of the Poker Players Alliance (PPA), argued that poker is a game of skill, not chance, and therefore did not constitute illegal gambling. The trial court heard the case in February, which featured World Poker Tour (WPT) host Mike Sexton recap hands played on the roving tournament series to demonstrate poker’s skill component.

Dr. Robert Hannum was also brought in to testify last February. The October ruling explains, “Dr. Hannum also testified that a statistical analysis of professional poker players demonstrated that past performance was a reliable indicator of future success, establishing that the skill of the player was the predominant factor in determining wins and losses.” The lower court ruled that poker was a game of skill. However, because South Carolina’s laws were vague on whether that mattered, the five defendants were found guilty.

An appeal was filed, setting up October’s ruling. Judge Dennis candidly explained, “This Court agrees with Appellants that the South Carolina Supreme Court, if faced with the question, would adopt the dominant factor test for the purpose of defining gambling.” He added, “It should also be noted that the South Carolina Attorney General has consistently applied the dominant factor test when providing opinions about whether certain activities are legal.”

Judge Dennis harped on the overwhelmingly broad nature of South Carolina’s gambling statute, which could be construed to mean that nearly any game played with cards or dice is illegal. Judge Dennis specifically called out Bunco, Go Fish, and Solitaire as possible infractions of state law, saying, “Simply put, [the law], as written, has the potential to make criminals of virtually every man, woman, and child in the state of South Carolina.” Twenty of the original defendants pled guilty to gambling charges, while five fought against the state.

According to the Charleston Post and Courier newspaper, the filing by the Attorney General was 57 pages long and McMaster is a Republican candidate for Governor. The Courier revealed, “No timetable has been set on when the case will be heard, and more rounds of legal filings are expected. The legislature is expected to take up a bill legalizing social card games next year.”

Tom "durrrr" Dwan Recupera Nel mese di dicembre

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Saturday, January 9

Online Gambling Summary Spain 2009

Aggressive Players

Spain continues to lead the way in Europe’s push for the liberalization of online gaming operations. The Spanish passion for sports betting and online casinos has ensured that this market is ripe for the picking come 2010.

Big brands lead the way

The Spanish gambling market is peppered with the biggest names in the industry. The 2009 top spots for Casino, Poker and Bingo action have been awarded to these popular operators:

On the casino front, it’s City Club Casino leading the charge. This new online casino is powered by a world-class Playtech gaming platform, and offers multiple categories of dazzling online casino games.

Nobody bluffs quite like the Spanish and Winner Poker is their site of choice. This super-hot Poker room provides all the action in an exciting online poker gaming platform.

JackpotCity Online Bingo brings the fun of Bingo to Spain. The popularity of this game simply keeps on growing.

Record Jackpots

A mega €126 million lottery was won by a 25-year-old Spanish lady from Mallorca. This bonita preciosa could hardly contain herself as she soon found out she was richer than her wildest dreams.

Big-Time Local Winners

Javier P played Azteca on July 7th and won €254,046

Eduardo O played Keno on Aug 5th and won €49,722

Javier B played Lotto Madness on Sep 3rd and won €37,430

New Casinos

A quality new operator in Spain is Crown Europe Casino. This PlayTech powered gaming den is plenty exciting with generous sign-up bonuses and exclusive promotional offers.

Business News

PartyGaming and Bwin are locked in merger discussions to create €2 billion online gaming operation. And William Hill and other big industry players are looking poised to expand into the Spanish market in 2010.

Great New Products

JackpotCity Casino is releasing the Hellboy video slot on 14th Jan 2010. This Microgaming favorite is licensed to Dark Horse Comics and features a 5-reel, 20-payline multi-coin game with mega-jackpots.

Sports Betting

The crown-jewel of sports betting is the FIFA 2010 World Cup in South Africa. This is toted to be the biggest-ever online sports betting bonanza and Spanish pundits are already gearing up for it.

Regulation/Legality

The increasing liberalization in online gaming regulation in many autonomous regions in Spain means that private enterprise is playing a more significant part in this sector.

Looking ahead to 2010

The Spanish market is showing robust signs of online gaming expansion. This can be seen by the number of Spanish soccer teams already being supported by online gambling companies. Many online gaming operators have already singled out Spain as an attractive gaming destination.

WSOP � recommencer avec une caution Phil Ivey

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Sunday, January 3

Tom “durrrr” Dwan Recovers In December

Aggressive Players

What a year it has been for the professional casino gambling poker gambler Tom “durrrr” Dwan. November was an expensive month for Dwan, as we saw him be shut out of day after day, which cost him millions of dollars. If were the head to head confrontations against “Isildur1? that left this poker gambler in the negative after every game. Dwan achived a highest record of his own in November, except one that he would very much like to forget. Dwan lost nearly $6.37 million in november alone, which is the most costly loss for a single gambler in the history of online poker.

Dwan decided to change his tactics and lower the stakes, in hopes of recuperating some of his November defeat during December. Placing bets as low as $25/$50 a hand, Dwan administered to reconstruct his winnings, collecting a enormous $1.57 million on one of the most respectable Online Poker rooms around, Full Tilt Poker. After only 33,369 tracked hands and 26 days into December, Dwan is well on his way to recuperating from some of that $6.37 million lost in November.

The 2009 year certain was full of rises and downturns for Tom “durrrr” Dwan, and the poker community is looking forward to seeing his improvement roll over into 2010. Dwan is all but happy to see his luck turn in different direction. He has regained just about 25% of his November defeat and is quite stimulated to see the cards be put in his favor, lets just hope that carries on to take place.

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Unemployed Learn To Deal Cards At Casino School

Aggressive Players

FARMINGTON HILLS, Mich. - A school for aspiring casino dealers is luring laid-off Ohio residents across the state line to Michigan for a fresh start in the gambling industry. But they plan to return to Ohio, ready to compete for jobs.

ABC School of Bartending and Casino College in southeastern Michigan teaches students how to count poker chips, deal cards and manage a game of blackjack, among other skills. Instructor Lee Chau says many students from Ohio are hoping his classes will give them an edge over other applicants for jobs at casinos to be built in Columbus, Cleveland, Cincinnati and Toledo.

“Come on now, 20 at a time,” Chau coached Rose Leitaert, a 57-year-old laid-off restaurant worker from Michigan, as she tried to pick up a stack of chips during a recent class. “They aren’t going to let you work unless you can hold them all at once.”

Chau, who teaches blackjack, roulette and craps, said he has trained nearly 200 Ohio residents in the past two years. Most of the people in his classes are unemployed workers from Ohio and Michigan vying for one of the estimated 7,500 full-time jobs created by Ohio’s planned new casinos.

In November, after months of acrimonious debate, Ohio voters approved Issue 3, a state constitutional amendment that allows casinos across the state.

During nearly 300 hours of training for a dealer “certification,” students learn how to properly count chips, manage a game and deal blackjack and basic poker games.

The program costs about $1,000.

The certification is not required to work in a casino, but graduates of the course say it gives them a leg up on other applicants.

The college plans to open locations in Cleveland and Columbus next spring.

Chen, a former Atlantic City card dealer, said he fields dozens of calls weekly from Ohioans who want to sign up for the course.

“This shows the community and residents of Ohio are anxious for the jobs Issue 3 will bring and they are preparing themselves,” said Jennifer Kulczycki, a spokeswoman for Quicken Loans, owned by Cleveland Cavaliers owner and casino backer Dan Gilbert.

John Pifer, who directs the Sacramento, Calif.-based Casino College, which has operations in more than 20 U.S. cities, said the casino jobs appeal to people who are down on their luck.

“This is a very low-stress job, and you don’t have to be a rocket scientist to do it,” Pifer said. “It is something an average guy can go do and make $50,000 to $60,000 a year. Gaming survives all economies.”

Adam Smith, 24, enrolled in the course after campaigning for Issue 3.

“The more games you know, the better the chance you can end up in the casino,” said Smith, who is from the Dayton area. “They say these jobs are for Ohio, and I am going to do what I can to be one of the first people to get one.”

From The Plain Dealer, http://www.cleveland.com

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