
Congress
Rethinks Its Ban on Internet Gambling
By SEWELL
CHAN
Published: July 28, 2010
WASHINGTON
— With pressure mounting on the federal government to find new revenues,
Congress is considering legalizing, and taxing, an activity it banned
just four years ago: Internet gambling.
On Wednesday,
the House Financial Services Committee approved a bill that would effectively
legalize online poker and other nonsports betting, overturning a 2006
federal ban that critics say merely drove Web-based casinos offshore.
The bill
would direct the Treasury Department to license and regulate Internet
gambling operations, while a companion measure, pending before another
committee, would allow the Internal Revenue Service to tax such businesses.
Winnings by individuals would also be taxed, as regular gambling winnings
are now. The taxes could yield as much as $42 billion for the government
over 10 years, supporters said.
The two
measures — which are backed by banks and credit unions but have divided
casinos and American Indian tribes — are far from becoming law. A bill
to legalize online poker sponsored by Senator Robert Menendez, Democrat
of New Jersey, has not yet had a hearing. The Congressional timetable
has little spare room before the midterm elections, and the Obama administration
has not taken a position.
But the
vote suggests a willingness by Congress to look for unconventional ways
of plugging holes in the budget and comes as struggling states have also
been looking to extract revenue from the gambling industry, which took
a hit as consumers cut back on travel and entertainment during the recession
but continues to reap billions of dollars in annual profits. The committee
vote Wednesday was 41 to 22, with seven Republicans joining most Democrats
on the panel in favor of the measure.
Last
year, Colorado expanded casino hours, raised maximum-bet limits and permitted
roulette and craps, while Missouri eliminated a $500 loss limit at riverboat
casinos. Delaware and Pennsylvania have weighed proposals to allow the
conversion of slots parlors into full-service casinos, making further
inroads into the eroding Atlantic City gambling industry.
Opponents,
who only four years ago, when Congress was controlled by the Republicans,
secured a law that banned the use of credit and debit cards to pay online
casinos, said they were aghast. “People sometimes resort to drastic things
when they are strapped for cash,” said Representative Robert W. Goodlatte,
Republican of Virginia, who called the new proposals “unfathomable.”
Representative
Barney Frank, the Massachusetts Democrat who leads the Financial Services
Committee, has been the legislation’s champion.
“Some
adults will spend their money foolishly, but it is not the purpose of
the federal government to prevent them legally from doing it,” Mr. Frank
said.
The committee’s
top Republican, Representative Spencer Bachus of Alabama, noting the passage
of far-reaching changes in financial regulation this month, said that
“after all the talk last year about shutting down casinos on Wall Street,”
he was incredulous that members would vote to “open casinos in every home
and every bedroom and every dorm room, and on every iPhone, every BlackBerry,
every laptop.”
Mr. Bachus
said lobbyists had spent “tens of millions” to overturn the 2006 law.
“They’ve had quite a bit of success in turning votes,” he said.
Mr. Bachus
said lobbyists had spent “tens of millions” to overturn the 2006 law.
“They’ve had quite a bit of success in turning votes,” he said.
Representative
Brad Sherman, Democrat of California, said in an interview that the money
was an attractive source of financing for other programs. “We will not
pass an Internet gaming bill,” Mr. Sherman predicted. “We will pass a
bill to do something very important, funded by Internet gaming.”
He added,
“Forty-two billion dollars over 10 years has an effect.”
The legal
status of online gambling has long been murky. The Justice Department
asserts that the Wire Act of 1961 prohibits it, but prosecutors have largely
left individual gamblers alone.
To crack
down on the activity, a 2006 law — inserted at the last minute into an
unrelated bill in one of Congress’s last actions before Democrats took
control — banned financial institutions from transmitting payments to
and from gambling operators.
In the
same year, the authorities arrested David Carruthers, a British online-gambling
executive, as he changed flights at a Texas airport. He was sentenced
to 33 months in prison for racketeering. Last year, the authorities ordered
four banks to freeze the accounts of online payment processors that owed
money to some 27,000 people who had used offshore poker sites.
But the
enforcement actions have barely put a dent in the industry, experts say.
Gamblers have used online payment processors, phone-based deposits and
prepaid credit cards to circumvent the ban. By some estimates, American
online gambling exceeds $6 billion a year.
“Today,
any American with a broadband connection and a checking account can engage
in any form of Internet gambling from any state,” Annie Duke, a professional
poker player, testified in May on behalf of the Poker Players Alliance,
which hired a former Republican senator from New York, Alfonse M. D’Amato,
to lobby for the bill.
“Today,
any American with a broadband connection and a checking account can engage
in any form of Internet gambling from any state,” Annie Duke, a professional
poker player, testified in May on behalf of the Poker Players Alliance,
which hired a former Republican senator from New York, Alfonse M. D’Amato,
to lobby for the bill.
Michael
Brodsky, executive chairman of YouBet.com, an online site for parimutuel
horse racing, said, “As with Prohibition, illegal online gambling is thriving
as an underground economy.”
Banks
and credit unions said the 2006 law was poorly drafted — so much so that
the Obama administration delayed, to June 1 of this year, the deadline
for banks to comply with the law, to address concerns about its enforceability.
In 1999,
the National Gambling Impact Study Commission urged the prohibition of
Internet gambling. Attorney General Eric H. Holder Jr. has said he would
not support efforts to legalize online gambling, a view shared by most
state attorneys general.
“Because
Internet gambling is essentially borderless activity, from a money-laundering
and terrorism-financing perspective, it creates a regulatory and enforcement
quagmire,” said James F. Dowling, a former special agent with the Internal
Revenue Service.
And Mr.
Bachus released a November letter from the F.B.I. in which Shawn Henry,
the assistant director of the cyber division, said it would be difficult
for companies to verify the age and location of their customers.
The bill
contains measures intended to protect minors and combat compulsive addiction.
It would allow states and Indian tribes to “opt out,” so players from
those states and reservations would not be able to make online bets. But
those governments would have a potentially lucrative incentive to allow
the activity since they could then collect taxes from Internet casinos.
The bill
contains measures intended to protect minors and combat compulsive addiction.
It would allow states and Indian tribes to “opt out,” so players from
those states and reservations would not be able to make online bets. But
those governments would have a potentially lucrative incentive to allow
the activity since they could then collect taxes from Internet casinos.
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