PGCB Drops First Ever Fines On VGT Operator And Parx Online Casino – Play Pennsylvania

Posted: April 23, 2021 at 12:10 pm

The theft of a coinbox wasnt exactly on the same scale as the fictional Oceans Eleven casino heist caper. Still, the August 2020 plunder of $3,202.81 from a video gaming terminal, or VGT, made a bit of Pennsylvania gaming history.

Jeffrey M. Murphy went to Loves Travel Stops & Country Stores #324 in Mifflintown, PA at 12:27 a.m. Aug. 21, 2020 and entered the VGT area.

He did not leave for three hours and 19 minutes. And no one noticed him or his behavior.

While there was video surveillance, employees with other duties at the convenience store and truck stop did not keep an eye on the monitors, nor did the machines gaming operator, Second Street Gaming, LLC.

Second Street promises 24/7 monitoring on its website, but that was not the case that night. At the time, it was the only Second Street location operating overnight.

Murphy was in the VGT room making furtive movements, according to authorities. He also used several tools to pry out the cash box from one of the five machines, which operate much like a slot machine.

But the theft went unnoticed until 8 a.m.

Murphy, who has a criminal record that includes fleeing a court hearing following a domestic disturbance incident and a bail revocation hearing, has since been prosecuted for the theft, according to PA regulators.

PA currently has 215 VGT machines at 43 truck stop locations, with five machines at each location. A 44th location shut down recently following a sale. Total adjusted revenue from March 2021 for VGTs was more than $3.6 million, a record.

Second State, affiliated with an Illinois VGT company, B&B Amusement, began working in PA in 2018.

The PGCB hit Second State with a fine of $10,000 earlier this week during a PGCB meeting. Loves is a family-owned company with 30,000 employees in 41 states. PGCB fined Loves $7,500.

Both companies agreed to the fines and undertook additional training, asserting there would be no repeat.

The punishments are the first in the relatively young VGT segment of the PA gaming industry. VGTs launched in the fall of 2019.

Regulators also took action against another company earlier this week.

Parx Casino had two video slots online for a brief period about 15 minutes before Parx had regulatory approval for the games.

Two patrons discovered the games online during that time. They played and both lost before the games were taken down.

As a result, Greenwood Gaming & Entertainment, Inc., Parxs parent, was fined $5,000 by the PGCB. And the losing players had wagers returned. A Greenwood rep present at the meeting noted that the mistake was self-reported by Parx to the PGCB and that additional measures are now in place to prevent a future occurrence.

The penalty was the first for online gambling in PA.

Lead image credit: AP Photo/Brandon Wade

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PGCB Drops First Ever Fines On VGT Operator And Parx Online Casino - Play Pennsylvania

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