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Category Archives: Gambling
Betting machines should require ID cards to protect vulnerable gambling addicts, report says – The Independent
Posted: March 29, 2017 at 11:58 am
A scheme to help gambling machine addicts will not properly protect at-risk individuals without significant changes such as the introduction of an electronic ID system, according to new research.
People who feel their gambling is out of control can register to exclude themselves from specified bookmakers, meaning they should be barred, but flaws in the system mean some individuals are able to continue placing bets, new research for leading charity GambleAware has found.
The report said the multiple operator self-exclusion scheme (MOSES) has been a positive step, but a minority of customers had dodged self-imposed bans which rely on staff recognising gamblers who have registered.
Managers said the system is not always effective because employees don't spot people who have registered andself-service machinesare often sited out of view.
More than half of the bookmakermanagers questioned said the biggest issues was the volume of gambling addicts staff had to keep tabs on. This is a particular problem for shops with large numbers of customers or a high turnover of staff, the report said.
Controversial fixed-odds betting terminalspresent by far the biggest danger, staff said. The machines allow customers to wager up to 100 every 20 seconds and have come under fire for their addictive potential.
One manager questioned told researchers: The volume of exclusions, all of which seem to be FOBT, makes the situation more difficult to manage due to the location of most FOBT zones in our shops.
The scheme began in April 2016 and around 2,800 problem gamblers have now registered. There are plans to expand it, meaning identification issues could get worse as staff have to recognise more customers.
There are challenges in upholding 100 per cent of exclusions in the current scheme format, which cannot be overcome unless there are significant changes to the systems used by operators, the report stated. It said there was appetite to introduce membership cards or an electronic ID requirement.
A spokersperson for gambling charity GamCare said there would "always be problems with a self-exclusion system, but these are much less common in casinos than bookmakers because most have membership schemes in place".
Louise Duffy, lead researcher at Chrysalis Research, which carried out the analysis, told The Independentthat membership cards were a common suggestion from staff she interviewed.
She said: "The idea is that all customers are given an ID or membership card that will need to be used in order to use the machines. Customers who have self-excluded would not be able to use the machines because their card would be registered as having self-excluded." However, Ms Duffy acknowledged that this would require "significant investment".
Gambling addicts also reported that they wanted to ban themselves from all betting shops in an area but under the scheme they must specify particular shops, allowing the potential for gaps to emerge.
"[You] should be able to just say all betting shops in a 30 mile radius of your address, instead of trying to explain to someone on the phone various addresses when they don't live in your area," one customer told researchers.
Iain Corby, deputy chief executive of GambleAware told The Independent: As the industry expands self-exclusion to protect more vulnerable people, we encourage them to find ways to make it work on a larger scale, which will involve addressing issues like anonymous play, staffing levels and machines being out of sight of staff.
This takes us one step closer to a universal self-exclusion scheme, which should strengthen the protections available for at risk individuals wherever they gamble. We encourage the industry to tackle some of the areas identified in this research, including the potential to notify all shops in their local area rather than a shop at a time.
Mr Corby added: For those most at risk of gambling related harm, the report shows that linking self-exclusion to treatment makes the greatest difference."
The Senet Group, the industry body that runs the scheme and is backed by bookmakers including Ladbrokes Coral, William Hill and Paddy Power, agreed that a more joined up approach is needed to protect those with addictions.
"Establishing a fully integrated system would enable customers to exclude from any form of gambling with a single click or call. This should surely be our long term goal," said Wanda Goldwag, chair of the group.
"The same companies who fund MOSES are amongst those investing in an equivalent scheme for online gambling. It must make sense to look at how far we can go in delivering these schemes in as joined up a way as possible.
Trade body, the Association of British Bookmakers, hailed the self-exclusion scheme as a success, pointing out that more than four in five customers surveyed said it had helped them reduce their gambling and 71 per cent had not used the betting shops from which they had banned themselves.
Malcolm George, ABB chief executive, said it was "a highly encouraging result and another example of why betting shops offer gamblers the safest and most responsible place to have a bet."
Bookmakers have come under increasing pressure to crack down on problem gambling, particularly on FOBTs, as the Government undertakes a review of the machines. In January MPs on the the All-Party Parliamentary Group on FOBTs recommended far stricter controls, including cutting the maximum stake per spin from 100 to 2 and increasing the time between bets.
Carolyn Harris, APPG chair, said in January: The time for prevaricating is over. These machines are easily accessed in the most deprived areas, sucking money out of the pockets of families. I support a responsible gambling industry, but there is nothing responsible about how FOBTs are currently being operated. I urge the Government to take action now.
Bookmakers have been accused of being slow to take action because the machines are so lucrative. The UK's biggest bookmaker, Ladbrokes Coral, today announced full-year revenues for 2016 of 2.3bn, up 11 per cent on a year earlier. Fully 36 per cent of group sales and 56 per cent of UK retail sales, came from FOBTs.
Nicholas Hyett, equity analyst at Hargreaves Lansdown said the Government's upcoming review was "concerning". He added: "Reforms that undermine profitability, such as significantly reducing the amounts that can be staked at any one time, would have serious consequences for the group."
Graham Jones, MP for Hyndbournaccused the gambling industryof "behaving like the tobacco industry".
"Its aim is to hoodwink the public, he told The Independent. "It claims it is taking measures but in reality its main toxic product, FOBTs are now generating the majority of their profits."
People who feel they might have a problem with gambling should visit the GambleAware website, or alternatively call the national gambling helpline on 0808 8020 133
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Trump has casino trademark in Jordan but gambling is illegal – Fox News
Posted: at 11:58 am
DUBAI, United Arab Emirates The president of the United States holds a trademark in Jordan for a Donald Trump casino, despite the fact that gambling is illegal in the kingdom. It is one of four he received before he ran for office, and suggests that the former casino executive may have had wider hopes for businesses across the Middle East than was previously known.
To keep the trademarks active, the Trump Organization would need to reapply for them during Trump's four-year term, raising potential ethical concerns for his company in Jordan, a stalwart U.S. ally in the fight against the Islamic State group and a mediator in relations between Israel and the Palestinians.
The Trump Organization told The Associated Press that its "decision to enforce its intellectual property rights is nothing new," while declining to discuss whether it knew how controversial gambling was in the kingdom.
Jordan's government acknowledged the trademarks, but that doesn't mean gambling is in Jordan's future.
"That does not give any right to the company to practice any activities unless it is formally registered as a company in Jordan and licensed to practice," government spokesman Mohammed Momani wrote in an email. "Needless to say, gambling is illegal in Jordan, so if a company applies for this, it will be disapproved."
Richard Painter, the chief White House ethics lawyer under George W. Bush, said the casino trademark raised new concerns about the Trump Organization's international entanglements. He is part of a lawsuit alleging Trump is violating the U.S. Constitution by allowing his business to accept payments from foreign governments
"We don't want foreign governments in a position to pay off our politicians with special treatment," Painter said.
Trump for years tried to enter the Mideast as a businessman, seeing it as an open market for his profitable business of licensing his name to construction projects. He applied for and received trademarks in Egypt, Israel and Saudi Arabia, Turkey and the United Arab Emirates.
Trump shut down some of his companies in the days after beating Hillary Clinton in the November election, including several connected to a possible venture in Saudi Arabia. While most recent presidents have sold their financial holdings to avoid conflicts, Trump has said that is not necessary. Instead, he has turned managerial control over to his two adult sons, vowing not to pursue more deals abroad and appointing a lawyer to screen his business for conflicts.
Meanwhile, his sons recently opened a new Trump golf course in Dubai as a developer there still plans for another. The developer, DAMAC Properties, offered $2 billion in new deals after Trump's victory, which Trump declined.
As the Trump Organization remains composed of hundreds of companies in a complex, interconnected web, it makes the full scale of his deals before becoming America's 45th president difficult to understand, a mystery only deepened by the president's unwillingness to release his tax returns.
In Jordan, Trump applied for four trademarks with the Industry, Trade and Supply Ministry in June 2008 and won its approval in February 2009. Those trademarks, retained by an organization under Trump called DTTM Operations LLC, include holding his name for developing commercial, residential and hotel property, as well as running restaurants, bars, cafes or a golf course.
The trademarks expire in February 2019, about halfway through Trump's term in the White House.
Among those businesses listed was "gambling and casino services, and the provision of casino facilities," according to one of the trademarks.
Trump once owned three Atlantic City casinos, but the businesses nearly destroyed him financially.
Jordanian law explicitly bans gambling. However, a secret deal in 2007 signed by Jordan's then-tourism minister would have allowed a Britain-based developer to open a casino on the Dead Sea. It also made the government potentially liable for hundreds of millions of dollars to the developer if it breached the 50-year agreement.
The deal caused a major political scandal that reverberated for years in Jordan, a nation ruled by King Abdullah II. Amid the 2011 Arab Spring protests, the king appointed as prime minister Marouf al-Bakhit, who personally signed off on the 2007 casino deal. Al-Bakhit's appointment outraged Islamists and he stepped down from the role eight months later. The deal was rescinded.
It's unclear whether Trump knew the controversy surrounding the casino proposal when his company sought the trademark a year later. Alan Garten, an executive vice president and chief legal officer at the Trump Organization, described the company's decision as "broad trademark protection" to guard against others using the Trump name.
"While the trademark registration also included casino-related activities, the company has never pursued a casino," he said.
In the Middle East, Jordan remains a crucial partner for the U.S. The kingdom hosts more than 650,000 Syrian refugees displaced by that country's grinding war, while also taking part in the U.S.-led coalition battling the Islamic State group. Jordan has hosted Americans training Syrian rebel fighters.
Jordan also serves as custodian of the Al Aqsa Mosque compound, the third-holiest site of Islam, located in east Jerusalem on the same spot that Jews revere as the Temple Mount. Jordan routinely mediates in conflicts over access to the sites and has warned that moving the U.S. Embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem is a "red line" that would inflame the Arab and Muslim worlds.
On Feb. 2, King Abdullah II briefly met with Trump in Washington. The same day, the White House issued a statement saying "the construction of new (Israeli) settlements or the expansion of existing settlements beyond their current borders may not be helpful" in achieving peace between Israelis and Palestinians. However, the White House stressed it hadn't "taken an official position on settlement activity."
The casino trademark, however, raised new questions about what the White House could ask for, said Painter, the former chief White House ethics lawyer.
"If we're going to get involved in trying to work out Middle East peace, Jordan is a key player," Painter said. "We're going to have a lot of different things on the table and I guess this casino is going to be part of what's on the table. ... That's just corruption."
___
Associated Press writer Karin Laub in Amman, Jordan, contributed to this report.
___
Follow Jon Gambrell on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/jongambrellap . His work can be found at http://apne.ws/2galNpz .
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Too Far: With Raiders’ move, legalized gambling is on its way – Chambersburg Public Opinion
Posted: at 11:58 am
Graham Messner, For Public Opinion 4:47 p.m. ET March 28, 2017
Raiders owner Mark Davis, center, meets with Raiders fans after a speaking engagement in Nevada recently. The NFL has approved a move from Oakland to Las Vegas.(Photo: Associated Press)
Can we quit pretending that legal gambling is a bad thing?
Do we realize that what is worse is what we have now? Our current system (wink, wink) is called illegal gambling. Illegal gambling is where the muck lives. Illegal gambling is, at its highest level, where match fixing scandals are born.
Thats all about to change.
The first salvo across the bow is the Oakland Raiders' move to the United States gambling capital of Las Vegas.
Think about it.
The NFL was so against legalized gambling that it wouldnt even let Las Vegas host the Pro Bowl in 2013. That was absurd. The Pro Bowl isnt even a real game.
But Las Vegas is giving the Raiders $750 million in love money. Funny how things change.
Of course, the NFL isnt admitting it is heading the way of giving the nod to legalized gambling, but no private or public entity ever tells you that allowing a little gambling is truly the path to full-blown gambling. Slot machines lead to table games and table games lead to video gambling in bars (at least thats the Pennsylvania model).
Its all in the name of revenue.
I guess its easier to make money on peoples vices than to tighten the belt and get rid of redundant programs and/or jobs.
I get it.
I also understand where people get skittish about legalizing sports gambling, but I can guarantee you that legalizing sports gambling would actually legitimize the whole thing. Legalized gambling allows for the point spread to shift and is monitored in real time. If some crazy betting occurs on a certain games, thats a red flag and the odds can change in real time and even the game can be blacked out from wagering.
Plus, legalizing it everywhere would cut off a major money stream to organized crime. Its not like legalizing marijuana, whereas illegal marijuana is actually still sold on the black market for a cheaper price than what the government sells it for legally. A bet is worth the same amount any way you slice it.
Thats the way it works in Las Vegas.
The fact that this Commonwealth of Pennsylvania sells lottery tickets and gets revenue from casinos while cracking down on Super Bowl pools and/or the number of fish tickets a veterans organization sells is whacky. Just legalize it all, monitor it, profit share and be done with it.
Both NBA Commissioner Adam Silver and NHL Commissioner Gary Bettman have given a wink and a nod toward moving forward with being OK with more legalization of sports gambling. The NFL is right on their heels. Its free money.
Im just not surethe opposition for keeping the current national illegal system makes sense. Who cant make a bet if they really want to? Everybody knows a guy who will take a wager and anyone who has problem with gambling is still going to have a problem with gambling. Just go online if you dont think you can bet on sports. Lottery tickets are gambling.
Of course, while everyone focuses on the gambling aspect of moving an NFL team to Las Vegas, there areso many, many more ways to get into trouble in Sin City. A young player who has a propensity for getting into trouble is going to be at the trouble smorgasbord every night. Money will fly out of their hands and their bank accounts.
There isnt anything you cant do in Las Vegas if you want to take part in spooky deviant behavior. If I were the NFL, thatd be a much larger concern than legal betting. Its the (insert bad behavior description here) capital of the USA.
And by the time the Raiders actually move to Las Vegas (2019 or 2020), it wouldnt have mattered what city they decided to move to would have been, because legalized gambling will have likely spread to a city near you.
After all, its free money and were running out of vices to tax.
Things have gone too far for too long.
Graham Messner has been a writer for many years and has also been involved in real estate, fundraising and coaching. He can be reached at toofar@gmx.com.
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Too Far: With Raiders' move, legalized gambling is on its way - Chambersburg Public Opinion
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Kansas racetrack advocates betting on gambling reform bill – Topeka Capital Journal
Posted: March 23, 2017 at 2:33 pm
A coalition led by managment at the four state-owned casinos in Kansas challenged Thursday a House bill modifying state tax and voting law to make operation of parimutuel racetracks with slot machines and simulcast gaming a more attractive investment for billionaire Phil Ruffin and other business moguls.
The House Appropriations Committees hearing on House Bill 2173 invited testimony from opponents who addressed their legal, moral, ethical and regulatory objections.
The legislation was endorsed by horse and dog industry enthusiasts and individuals convinced breathing life into the Woodlands in Kansas City, Kan., Wichita Greyhound Park, or Camptown Greyhound Park in Frontenac would instigate job growth and deliver much-needed revenue to the cash-strapped state government.
Under the bill, the state tax rate on revenue from slot-machine enhanced racetracks would be reduced from 40 percent to 22 percent. In addition, the measure would allow citizens of Wichita and Sedgwick County to participate in a referendum to determine current sentiment for opening a greyhound track despite failure of a similar ballot question in 2007.
Kevin Fowler, a Topeka attorney representing operators of four casinos authorized by the state, said enactment of the House bill promised to embroil the state in protracted litigation over constitutional, statutory and contractual issues and to expose the state to hundred of millions of dollars in financial liability.
The bill seeks to dramatically change existing Kansas law by authorizing closed racetracks to reopen and operate as full-time casinos that will emphasize slot machines and simulcast gaming while providing limited live racing programs, Fowler said.
A significant unresolved issue in the debate is whether amendments to the Kansas Expanded Lottery Act to accommodate racetrack casino investors could trigger a provision in the law requiring repayment of $61 million in fees paid the state, plus interest of $50 million, to companies operating casinos in Dodge City, Mulvane and Kansas City, Kan., and the casino in Pittsburg scheduled to open March 31.
Kimberly Svaty, who represents the Greater Kansas Racing Alliance organization supportive of the bill, said the most prominent critics of the bill were gambling investors wary of competition.
As legislators, the only deal you have before you is what is good for the people of the state of Kansas, Svaty said. You must weigh whether a protectionist policy for state-owned casinos is unfairly holding back one of the oldest and most established industries in the state.
If we are a state that champions private industry and private investment and free competition, she said, we should allow an investor to reinvigorate a key part of our states entertainment and let the people of this state choose with their dollars.
There is a provision in the House bill that would allow a racetrack gaming manager perhaps Ruffin, the former Wichita resident, billionaire and Donald Trump confidante to assume payment of $110 million to meet the states obligation to the four casino operations. Its unclear, however, whether those casino managers would file suit seeking damages related to undermining of their businesses.
There is precedent for amendment of the controversial gaming law narrowly passed by the 2007 Legislature and signed by Democratic Gov. Kathleen Sebelius.
In 2014, Gov. Sam Brownback signed a bill that lowered the threshold from a minimum investment of $225 million to $50 million to make it attractive enough to build the Kansas Crossing Casino in southeast Kansas.
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Kansas racetrack advocates betting on gambling reform bill - Topeka Capital Journal
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Extensive gambling ban proposed – Pacific Daily News
Posted: at 2:33 pm
Steve Limtiaco , slimtiaco@guampdn.com 6:57 p.m. ChT March 23, 2017
The building, that formerly housed the Liberation Day carnival casino operations, as seen on Oct. 21, 2016. Games of chance continue to be held at the site, during specific days and times, in celebration of village fiestas, according to signage posted on the building doors.(Photo: Rick Cruz/PDN)
Casino-style gambling and related devices should be banned entirely on Guam, including at the annual Liberation Day Carnival and village fiestas, according to a bill introduced Wednesday by Sen. Telena Nelson, D-Dededo.
The color game and the dice game beto beto,typically found at the Liberation Carnival, but not in the casino,would not be affected by the proposed ban, according to the speakers office, because the bill specifically targets the ability to conduct casino-style gambling.
Bingo, lotteries and cockfighting also would continue to be allowed.
Guam law currently allows all types of gambling at the carnival, and during village fiestas, with authorization from the governor. Nelsons bill would eliminate the governors authority to authorize gambling at those events.
Sen. Telena Nelson is announced as the 34th Guam Legislature's majority whip at the Guam Legislature inHagtaon Dec. 26, 2016.(Photo: Frank San Nicolas/PDN)
We are closing the loophole in the law that permits casino gambling at fairs and carnivals. Nelson said in a written statement, announcing her bill. Public offices are becoming dependent on profits from professionally managed and equipped gambling enterprises at the Liberation Carnival fair grounds that are otherwise prohibited from operating under the laws of Guam.
Speaker Benjamin Cruz, D-Tumon, who co-sponsored the bill, said, The people of Guam have decisively rejected casino-style gambling at the voting booth five times since the year 2000. Its time our laws honestly reflect that fact.
Cruz, a former family court judge in the Superior Court of Guam, said he has witnessed the impact of gambling addiction.
Until you look in the eyes of a child who is forced to sell herself to feed her little brother because her mother gambled away her paycheck, dont tell me addictive gambling is a victimless act, Cruz said.
The casino at the Liberation Carnival fairgrounds at Tiyan is being used by mayors for their village fiestas, with the governors permission, months after the summer carnival ended.
Sen. Mike San Nicolas, D-Dededo, in February introduced a bill to prevent the casino from being used outside of the Liberation Carnival by requiring all fiesta-related gambling to be conducted within the village celebrating the event.
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House gambling bill gets ok as questions remain – Holmes County Times Advertiser
Posted: at 2:33 pm
By Dara Kam | The News Service Of Florida
TALLAHASSEE - A key House committee Tuesday approved a gambling measure aimed at creating a new agreement with the Seminole Tribe, though a tribe representative recently called the proposal a "non-starter" and major differences remain with the Senate.
The proposal (HB 7037) would continue to allow the tribe to have exclusive rights to operate "banked" card games, such as blackjack, at five of its casinos. In exchange, the Seminoles would have to guarantee $3 billion in payments to the state --- earmarked mainly for education --- over seven years.
Despite the House Ways and Means Committee's 11-7 vote in favor of the legislation, the proposed agreement remains troubled.
The Seminoles have objected that it is unlikely the U.S. Department of the Interior, which must sign off on gambling-related agreements between tribes and states, would approve the deal. And the Senate is expected to approve a bill next week that would be much more friendly to the pari-mutuel industry.
Lawmakers are tackling the thorny gambling issue after a federal judge late last year decided that the Seminoles can continue to offer the blackjack games, even though a 2010 agreement giving the tribe the authority to conduct the games expired in 2015.
Rep. Mike La Rosa, a St. Cloud Republican sponsoring the House legislation, called his proposal a "straightforward bill" that provides certainty for the state's gambling industry which "has been in disarray for the past few years."
But critics objected that the proposal gives short shrift to pari-mutuels. The measure would, among other things, ban popular and lucrative "designated player" poker-style games operated by numerous cardrooms throughout the state, an activity at the heart of the legal dispute between the Seminoles and the state.
"The pari-mutuel industry has been a friend to this state. They've helped provide a lot of dollars for a lot of things to happen. They by-and-large are getting treated less well than they deserve for the service they've rendered the state," Rep. Joe Geller, D-Aventura, said.
Rep. Joe Abruzzo, D-Boynton Beach, said lawmakers need a special session to fully address the gambling issue.
"There's no way the Senate is going to remotely take any of this that doesn't have anything for our existing businesses and pari-mutuels," Abruzzo, a former senator, said.
But Sen. Bill Galvano, a Bradenton Republican shepherding the upper chamber's proposal, was more optimistic.
"It's only week three (of the 60-day legislative session) and at this point I am more focused on the fact that gaming bills are moving than the differences," Galvano, who is slated to take over as Senate president in November 2018, said in a text message late Tuesday.
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House gambling bill gets ok as questions remain - Holmes County Times Advertiser
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A bet with your life: Gambling addiction – Hockessin Community News – Hockessin Community news
Posted: at 2:33 pm
March is Gambling Awareness Month, which aims to educate people about the dangers of addictive play and that there's treatment for those in need.
Nobody starts out thinking theyre going to lose their house, family or commit suicide from an addiction. Yet those are familiar horror stories in the world of problem gambling.
March is Gambling Awareness Month, which aims to educate people about the dangers of addictive play, ways it can be prevented and that theres treatment for those in need.
A Wilmington man working as an administrator at the Delaware Council on Problem Gambling decided to share his story about the dark side of gambling addiction and how it nearly cost him everything.
For whatever reason, I just thought I was a defective human being, said the former gambler, who requested anonymity. I grew up in a very loving home. I didnt have any addicts for parents. I didnt have anything in my past that would suggest maybe this is why I acted the way I did.
The Wilmington man began gambling when he was 18 and living in New York, where hes originally from. It was 1973 and he and his friends bet on horse racing at Belmont Park, home to the third and final leg of the Triple Crown.
At the time, he said, betting was for recreation, and he only did it at Belmont a total of three or four times.
Wasnt really a problem
In 1982 he was 27 and in his final year of law school at Widener University. His gambling had increased tenfold. He said hed travel to Atlantic City about six times a year. And he lived close to Brandywine Raceway in Wilmington, so hed go there about 24 times a year.
It was a form of entertainment to get away from school, he said. It wasnt really a problem.
The same year he graduated law school, he also got married and began working at a law firm.
He said sometime around the late 80s or early 90s he started to lose lots of money gambling. The more his career progressed, the more stressful his job became. So gambling became his coping mechanism.
Adding to the stress: becoming a proud father to two young children.
Although his wife had always known he gambled, the man said he wasnt telling her how much he was losing. While he didnt keep track of how frequently he was gambling at this point, he did say he was spending a minimum of $300 per visit at the casino.
Sometimes if Id lose that, Id hit the ATM and get out a few hundred dollars more, he said. Thats what led me to not be open and honest.
Its easy for gamblers to hide their habit because there arent any physical signs or symptoms. Nonetheless, he said, it could still prove devastating.
Despite his frequent loses, he said it wasnt an issue to him because he was earning six figures from his job.
I was making good money, he said. But I was also spending. Through gambling, I was wasting a lot. I rationalized it saying, hey, we live in a nice home. My wife drives a nice car. Were used to going on vacation. Shes not really lacking anything. So whats the harm?
The truth, however, is that it was harmful.
We couldve had a lot more for our kids college educations, he said. But I just thought this is the price that we have to pay for me to be able to continue with a high-stress job.
Money is crack
He said he was able to keep his wife in the dark about his habit because he handled their bills and finances, which is common among closet gamblers.
His wife first learned of his addiction in 2007. The mans brother, who was his accountant, told him he owed tens of thousands of dollars. His brother told him to break the news to his wife.
Obviously, as you could imagine, it caused a lot of turmoil in our relationship, he said. I had promised and swore to her I wouldnt gamble anymore at that point.
But those were empty words.
I couldnt stop. And I continued to gamble and continued to lie more, he said. I continued to be deceitful and exploit the trust my wife had in me as a spouse, because I felt I needed to gamble in order to function.
He said his addiction was so bad that winning didnt really matter. He instead got his high off of gambling itself.
When you get to the point when you are a disorder gambler, the money is secondary. The money is basically our crack, he said. Thats what we use to get high.
And that meant more debt.
Once you are in such a deep hole, you come to the point where you assume youre never going to get out, so it didnt matter anymore, he said.
Escape
He hit rock bottom when he suffered a mental breakdown in the summer of 2015. His debt ballooned to six figures.
I was contemplating suicide, he said. I reached the point where I was either going to kill myself or take a flight to a country where there was no extradition agreement within that state, and Id never see my family again.
He said he thoughtfully considered death for months. But on the day of reckoning, he decided to come clean to his family, because he didnt want to leave them behind.
He checked into the Rockford Center, a psychiatric facility in Newark. He was there for a week. On the same day he was discharged, Aug. 3, 2015, he attended his first Gamblers Anonymous meeting.
For the first time, I heard people sharing their experiences and emotions and what they went through. And I totally connected, the Wilmington resident said. I found there were people that were from my planet. That gave me hope that maybe I still had value as a human being.
He said it wasnt until he quit playing that he learned gambling addiction is a mental disorder. In 2013, the American Psychiatric Association classified problem gambling as a non-substance-abuse-related disorder in edition five of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders.
The APA is the leading psychiatric organization in the world and has members in 100 countries, according to its website.
After the Wilmington mans first GA meeting, he spent six to nine months working on his recovery. This included going to GA meetings four times a week and meeting with a therapist.
He was prescribed Naltrexone, a medication that substance-abuse addicts use to decrease their urges.
He said he also gave up his legal practice in August 2015, because the high stress on his job is what led him to addiction.
He instead took a job at the Delaware Council on Problem Gambling in late 2016. Hes heard heartbreaking tales about people with gambling addiction.
I know people who have actually attempted suicide and ended up hospitalized, ended up in comas for weeks and had to relearn how to do their daily activities, he said. I know people that had to live in their cars because theyve had their homes taken away.
Fellow Delaware Council employee Charles Sygowski echoed those tales.
Ive talked to people whove definitely had their cars repossessed or had gone to foreclosure on a mortgage or were kicked out of apartments or houses they were renting, said Sygowski, DCPG director of office administration.
This August the Wilmington man will celebrate two years of abstinence. Although he quit playing, he doesnt condemn casinos.
Ask me if I think gambling should be illegal and I think the answer is no, he said. Just like I dont that because there are alcoholics that we should ban alcohol. Most people gamble for recreation.
Through all of his gambling troubles, the mans wife and adult children have stuck by his side. He still is six figures in debt, but he said hes not worried, because hes happy.
This is the best time of my life, he said. It sounds like a real Hollywood ending, but its absolutely the truth. First of all, I became a grandfather six months ago. And I think how close I became to missing that. Its pretty chilling.
Prevention
The DCPG relies on educating people about ways they can prevent themselves from becoming problem gamblers.
This includes going into high schools. The councils director of office administration said students should be aware of the dangers of gambling, similar to the effects of doing drugs or drinking alcohol.
Research shows that the brain is not fully developed until your early 20s, Sygowski said. We advise or try to make kids aware that it is to their advantage to wait until they are of legal age before engaging.
Dover Downs Hotel & Casino advocates for responsible gambling. Steven Keener, assistant vice president of casino operations, said its important for guests to recognize when theyve reached their limit.
When the fun stops, when they are at the property too long, they should recognize it is time to call it a night, Keener said. Customers judgment is used when it is time to leave a ballgame, an evening out at a dinner or any other events. A guests judgment will serve them well at these events, including the casino.
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Smartphones are making Kenya’s gambling problem even worse – Quartz
Posted: at 2:33 pm
Smartphones have been hailed in Africa for everything from improving emergency and rural health care to enabling e-commerce and better supply chains. But in some cases, their contribution to improving society may be debatable.
According to the Digital Skills Observatory, a research group funded by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and run by Mozilla, smartphone usage in Kenya seems to increase the amount of time people spend gambling.
One third of respondents in seven regions of Kenya reported using their phones for betting. In some cases, being able to use gambling apps and sites was the primary reason for getting a smartphone.
Gambling provides them with a (false and risky) promise of better days, the report (pdf. p 49), released notes.
Kenya is home to the third largest gambling market on the continent after South Africa and Nigeria. The explosion of the industry over the last decade has boosted cyber cafes, online betting platforms, makeshift casinos, and imports of inexpensive slot machines from China. Kenyas betting revenues are expected to reach 5.1 billion Kenyan shillings by 2020, a 142% rise from 2014.
Other African countries home to large populations of unemployed youth are also seeing an increase in gambling, especially sports betting. In Uganda, local communities have tried to ban it.
SportPesa, a Kenyan online sports betting platform, was the second most-visited website by smartphone users polled in the projectafter Google and ahead of Facebook. The survey found that three other gambling sites were among the 20 most visited URLs by smartphone users.
Bettors can place wages as low as 10 shillings ($0.10) and use the web to research and place their wagers. Respondents said they used winnings to furnish their homes or buy new electronics. Some believed crime in their neighborhood had been reduced because local men are preoccupied with betting.
Still, the harm appears to outweigh the good. According to the survey, half of respondents spent more on gambling than they earned.
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Gambling site seeks ‘Head of Trump betting’ – CNET – CNET
Posted: at 2:33 pm
Technically Incorrect offers a slightly twisted take on the tech that's taken over our lives.
Would the president consider suggesting to one of his own staff that they should apply?
"Ability to detect fake news."
That's just one of the necessary characteristics for a job opportunity that will surely entice thousands of applicants.
Posted by Irish gambling site Paddy Power, the job title is one that would spawn one of the world's great business cards: Head of Trump betting.
Please imagine how that would go down at networking events.
The job description on the Paddy Power Betfair job board (Paddy Power and Betfair merged in 2016) is written with marvelous sleight of hand and tongue in cheek.
For example: "We are looking for a Head of Trump Betting to manage our newly launched 'hub' of specials around the president. We're looking for a marriage of more convenience than Donald's to Melania."
Which is swiftly followed by: "With more than 100 special bets online, the successful candidate will monitor and manage existing Trump markets while devising new specials to launch. They will also need to build a wall around the hub to ensure foreign bets don't get in."
You might think this job sounds easy. Please consider some of the Trump bets that are already on the site.
Currently, Trump is a 3-1 shot to be impeached this year. North Korea stands as the 9-1 favorite for its citizens to be banned. Ireland is merely a 100-1 shot.
Already existing as a Trump Special is: "The UN to relocate their headquarters outside of the US during Trump's presidency." That's a 9-1 shot. Also at 9-1 is "Trump to have a US Navy ship named after him."
Perhaps, then, the imagination required in this job will only give some candidates a sinking feeling.
You might think this job rather frivolous, a mere PR exercise. In some sense, that might be true. But as Paddy Power explains in the job description, this requires technical acuity, as well as personal strength.
Here's one accountability point: "Being able to harness high volumes of data using real-time trading applications in a high-pressure environment when timing will always be of the essence. Or, failing that, an ability to make something up on the spot and stand by it resolutely, shouting down anyone that disagrees."
The White House didn't immediately respond to a request for comment.
There must be some temptation, however, for those on the inside who already leak a little, to take advantage of some of these bets, given their insider knowledge.
Here are three more current bets that might sway insiders.
"Trump to convert to Scientology" is at 25-1. "Trump to re-open Alcatraz as a working prison" stands at 14-1.
For the more daring, at 100-1 is: "Joe Biden meets Trump at an event and punches him right in the face."
Technically Incorrect: Bringing you a fresh and irreverent take on tech.
Batteries Not Included: The CNET team reminds us why tech is cool.
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Gambling bills inch ahead, but agreement is elusive – Sun Sentinel (blog)
Posted: at 2:33 pm
A new gambling deal is creeping forward in the Florida House, but serious doubts remain that any deal can get done before the legislative session ends in May.
A wide gap exists between the House bill and a proposed deal in the Senate. Adding to the difficulty, the Seminole Tribe of Florida opposes both bills.
The House gambling bill, which passed the House Ways and Means Committee on a largely party-line vote of 11-7 on Tuesday, essentially keeps the current regime in place, with a few important updates.
The original deal with the Seminoles, signed under Gov. Charlie Crist in 2010, covered 20 years but gave the tribe the exclusive right to blackjack for the first five years.
But after 2015, the tribe kept right on dealing. Thats because it maintained that so-called designated player games, blackjack-like card games that the state allowed to take place at parimutuels, were too similar to blackjack and therefore violated the 2010 agreement. Such a violation allowed the tribe to have blackjack through 2030, and after back and forth lawsuits between the tribe and the state, the courts agreed with the tribe.
Under the House gambling bill, these designated player games would end. The bill also would end long-dormant gambling licenses and would up the amount of money the Seminoles owe to the state each year.
According to tribal spokesman Gary Bitner, the Seminoles are on track to pay $306 million to the state this fiscal year.
But the House bills sponsor, state Rep. Mike La Rosa, R-St. Cloud, said his bill would require the Seminoles to pay $325 million the first year of the deal and more in subsequent years, for a grand total of $3 billion in the first seven years.
In return, the Seminoles would get nothing more than they already have.
A similar payment plan, created under a proposed gambling deal Gov. Rick Scott hatched with the tribe last year, would have given the Seminoles the exclusive right to craps and roulette, but the Legislature didnt approve the deal. This years Senate bill keeps those terms.
The House bill also would not allow parimutuels to stop horse or dog racing but continue operating casinos, and would not allow counties to bring in slot machines upon voter approval, two things the Senate bill also allows.
This seems like the one area where its OK to restrict business, Ways and Means vice chairman Joseph Abruzzo, D-Wellington, said of the House bill. I dont believe in all cases that that is fair and right.
Abruzzo called for a special session specifically on gambling issues, or else a constitutional amendment.
Getting a compact signed with the Seminole Tribe is our first goal, La Rosa said. Unfortunately, the actions of others have undercut the deal and cut the revenues we receive.
La Rosa said the state now receives about $250 million a year, considerably less than the $306 million the tribe says it will pay this year.
According to Bitner, the tribe has continued to make the same payments to the state, despite the court decisions in its favor.
While the Seminoles would appear to pay more and get nothing in return under the House deal, the tribe also opposes the Senate deal because of the expansion of slot machines. Voters in eight counties, including Palm Beach, have already approved slot machines in their counties. And in some cases, parimutuels that would get slots under the Senate deal would be in direct competition with Seminole-owned casinos.
The House bill has one more hearing before going to the floor for a vote. The Senate bill has already cleared committees. But its only after the bills reach the full House and Senate, when the two chambers have to iron out a bill that the tribe will agree to, that the game truly begins.
dsweeney@SunSentinel.com, 954-356-4605 or Twitter @Daniel_Sweeney
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