Aristocrat granted Nevada licence

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Nevada Gaming Commission also awards licence to player identification service provider GambleID

Aristocrat has been granted an online poker licence in Nevada and has become the latest service provider to have its application approved by the state Gaming Commission.

The Sydney-based has signed an agreemeent with Amaya to offer Ongame poker software, and will now look to secure a partnership with a licensed online poker operator in Nevada.

The deal enables the gaming supplier to integrate the Ongame product in its freeplay nLive platform and provide a real-money version where US regulation permits. This week Aristocrat also announced an agreement to provide NYX Gaming Group with slots for regulated European markets.

Las Vegas-based geolocation and player identification service provider GambleID also received a licence at yesterday’s meeting, becoming the 23rd company to secure a licence. The firm’s successful application follows that of SecureTrading, an ID verification, geolocation and payment processing service provider which was approved last month.

Several operators have been granted a licence in Nevada during the last 12 months, including Caesars and Boyd, with Gibraltar-licensed operator 888 the most recent, securing approval in March.

Analysis: New California poker bill could end tribal standoff

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The drafting of two tribe-backed bills this year is sparked by Nevada launch and Cali Senator Rod Wright’s unpopular legislation

As details emerged yesterday of a new California online poker bill backed by eight tribes including the highly influential Pechanga, a key message was sent to the state’s tribes and politicians.

Whereas 12 months ago most of California’s tribes were divided over if and how online poker should be legalised in the state, this year there is impetus for these groups to work together to create their own language to suit the needs of the Native American community. Rather than criticise or suggest varying amendments to Senator Roderick Wright’s bill – which almost all were unanimously united against – two tribe-backed bills are now in circulation, with another influential Native American tribe, San Manuel, having drafted one already earlier this year.

Frustrated by Wright’s bill which would allow state racetracks to offer online poker and would have insisted tribes waive their sovereignty during the licensing process, the state’s tribes have instead decided to take matters into their own hands. And that could finally mean a breakthrough.

Michael Lombardi, chairman of the Gaming Commission of the Augustine Band of Cahuilla Indians, told eGaming Review the dissolution of the influential COPA consortium last year has also helped reduce the difference of opinion existing among the tribes, as well as concerns of a power shift to Nevada or federal government. The Pechanga-backed bill would rule out interstate compacts, something Nevada, with its limited population, is already pushing hard for.

“Senator Rod Wright’s legislation has galvanised opposition of all the tribes,” Lombardi said. “For most of them, if not all, the time has come for online poker in California. New Jersey and Nevada have taken their attention, and the last thing the tribes want is an interstate agreement with Nevada, or a federal bill giving all the power to Washington”.

With two tribe-backed draft bills circulating this year, legalised online poker in a state with a population of approximately 37.7m is finally beginning to look achievable. Lombardi went as far as giving a bill a “50-50 chance” to be passed later this year as an emergency measure, however other sources pointed towards 2014 as a far likelier target.

Any bill would have to go through the Senate Governmental Organisation Committee, chaired by Wright himself, whose bill is still the only one to actually be introduced in the state legislature.

Below eGR analyses the potential of each of the three California online poker bills, starting with the proposal which emerged this week..

The Internet Poker Consume Protection Act of 2013

The draft bill was sent to tribal leaders this week and is backed by eight tribes including Pechanga, Agua Caliente and Borona, and would allow tribes and card rooms to apply for a 10-year licence, but not racetracks.

The legislation has been crafted to ensure the majority of any revenues from online poker go to tribal groups first and foremost. It requires California to opt out of any future federal bill, as well as “internet gambling agreements between states or foreign jurisdictions”.

Moreover, in what seems to be a provision to prevent businesses outside California buying their way in to the market as an operator on the back of a tribe’s licence, “licensees must be able to pay upfront fees and establish [an] online poker business based on its own creditworthiness and assets”. In contrast, 888 plans to offer a B2C poker site in Nevada through Treasure Island’s licence, with funding from the All American Poker Network.

Although this would seem to price smaller tribes out of the market, the legislation calls for “reasonable fees” which are “not to exceed rationally based expected costs”. By way of comparison, Wright’s original legislation imposed a prohibitive $30m licence fee.

The legislation also calls for a ‘bad actor’ clause to block any operator that continued to operate in the States after the passage of UIGEA in 2006, and excludes racetracks from applying for a licence, while a go-live date of 1 January 2015 would be enforced.

Although Pechanga chairman Mark Macarro is in talks with state politicians to address the issue, the bill currently has no sponsor and no agreed licence fee or tax rate, making it very much a work in progress.

With eight tribes putting their name to the bill, it is the clearest sign yet they are ready to collaborate to help bring legalised online poker to California. This sentiment is expressed in the co-written cover letter, pointing out “reacting to proposals by the state and commercial interests was not the best way to arrive at a set of principles and policies”.

The tribes plan to meet in two weeks’ time to discuss the bill and any changes they wish to see.

Authorisation And Regulation Of Internet Poker And Consumer Protection Act Of 2013

Correa’s bill is also in draft form and is backed by San Manuel, one of the first tribes to quit COPA last year amid frustration at a lack of progress over online gambling regulation.

Few details have been released so far, except for the tax rate, set at 10% of gross gaming revenue. Similar to the Pechanga bill, the legislation would only allow tribes and card rooms to apply for a licence.

The bill is very similar to the Pechanga bill, with the key difference being that Correa outlines a three-tiered licencing process, depending on a licensed tribe’s level of involvement and gross gaming revenues.

Lombardi told eGR this bill and the Pechanga bill “could become one bill” at a later date because of their similarities, in a bid to gather more united support, with tribes set to meet this Friday to further discuss the bill’s specific provisions.

The Internet Gambling Consumer Protection And Public-Private Partnership Act of 2012

Senator Wright’s bill has been under consideration in the state legislature since early last year, although it was only changed to cover just poker in June.

Due to opposition from tribes against the $30m licensing fee, eligibility of state racetracks and ADW firms, as well as the requirement to waive sovereignty during the licensing process, Wright took his bill off a Senate committee agenda.

However Lombardi said that following the two tribal draft bills, “Wright’s legislation will go nowhere, it won’t get out of committee”.

New Pechanga-backed California bill circulated

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Legislation would include ‘bad actor’ clause and exclude racetracks from applying for a licence

A new draft bill to legalise online poker in California has been sent to tribal leaders and is backed by eight tribes including Pechanga, Agua Caliente and Borona.

The draft legislation proposes tribes and card rooms that have held approval to operate land-based businesses for at least five years can apply for 10-year online licences. The bill also calls for a ‘bad actor’ clause to block any operator that continued to operate in the States after the passage of UIGEA in 2006, and excludes racetracks from applying for a licence.

A source close to the matter told eGR the draft bill was finalised on Monday this week following months of talks. He also said the legislation remains a work in progress, with no sponsor on board and finer details such as a rate of taxation and licence fee yet to confirmed.

The new proposed California legislature offers no time period for allowing companies who took bets post-UIGEA into the market, deeming them “unsuitable for any licence under this bill”. While New Jersey’s legislation removed such a provision in December last year, a similar clause was added to Nevada’s egaming laws in February, excluding operators taking bets after UIGEA for five years.

Unlike the bills put forward by Wright and Correa, the legislation would not accept applications from racetracks. While this measure will be popular with tribes, it is likely to lead to criticism from racing entities and Wright, who serves as chairman of the Senate Governmental Organisation Committee where any egaming bill introduced would face a hearing.

There are now three bills in contention in California, including one proposed by Senator Rod Wright. An eGR source revealed the San Manuel tribe was involved in initial discussions for the new bill, but dropped out to back the legislation sponsored by Senator Lou Correa.

Similar to Correa’s bill, but unlike Wright’s, this new bill would also allow tribes to retain their sovereignty while applying for a licence.

The bill would enforce a go-live date of 1 January 2015, with the California Gambling Control Commission required to release egaming regulations within 270 days of the bill’s passage. Once a tribe has submitted its licence application, the Commission would have 90 days to review it.

The other tribes supporting the bill are the Yocha Dehe Wintun Nation, Lytton Band of Pomo Indians, Pala Band of Mission Indians, Paskenta Band of Nomlaki Indians and Viejas Band of Kumeyaay Indians.

It had been rumoured Pechanga, whose chairman is Mark Macarro (pictured), would seek to introduce its own bill rather than back Correa’s.

The legislation also includes measures ensuring tribes ensure player identity and location verification, segregated accounts for customer funds and the prohibition of bots.

Atlantic Club challenges Stars bid to revive casino sale

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Seller Colony Capital disputes PokerStars’ argument that the 26 April deadline should not have been enforced

New Jersey operator Atlantic Club has hit back at a lawsuit filed by PokerStars’ parent company Rational Group claiming it was entitled to terminate the contract to purchase the struggling casino.

Colony Capital, the seller of the casino, has also stated it does not have to repay the US$11m the Rational Group has so far invested in the venue. The company states it is entitled to keep all money paid towards the $15m total acquisition cost because Stars did not obtain an interim casino authorisation in New Jersey by the stipulated termination date 26 April, according to NorthJersey.com.

The PokerStars lawsuit was filed to obtain a temporary restraining order blocking Colony Capital from cancelling the agreement signed in December last year. Receiving a licence by this date was impossible once state regulators informed PokerStars in late March the application process, originally scheduled to last 120 days from December, had been delayed, according to the Rational Group’s lawsuit filed last week.

The plaintiffs then suggest they were given one day’s notice from Colony Capital that the purchase agreement would not be extended, however this is the key dispute in the filed documents, as Eric Matejevich of Colony Capital, said he warned Rational a month before 26 April.

It was reported that Stars only completed its full application in mid-April, despite having been expected to do so in January.

PokerStars’ argument in the lawsuit is if any provision in the purchase agreement is invalid, such as the 26 April termination date, “all other conditions and provisions of this Agreement shall nevertheless remain in full force and effect”. The Atlantic Club retort states in contradiction “plaintiffs agreed to a termination provision that included the surrender of advances and a termination payment as the cost of securing an opportunity to acquire the Atlantic Club”.

PokerStars stated it was offered the opportunity to pay $6m for a 10-day extension to the purchase agreement by Colony Capital, while its counter-offer to pay $4m for an indefinite delay was rejected.

Colony Capital declined to comment, while Rational Group were unavailable to, but a source close to the matter told eGaming Review “the contract cannot self-terminate prior to the regulators receiving the complete application and having 90 days”.

“That would be sometime in August for the contract termination,” the source added.

Illinois impasse

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Not all of Illinois’ riverboat casinos supported the state’s failed online gaming legislation, as Tom Swoik of the Illinois Casino Gaming Association explains

I represent the two Harrah’s (Caesars) casinos, the three Penn National casinos and the Rivers Casino owned by Midwest Gaming. Some of my members are in favour of internet gaming, and some are not.

We had two major issues with last year’s original internet bill – the first was it aimed to set up one platform run by the state. So we had discussions with the bill author, Senate president John Cullerton, and with all the groups involved, and managed to convince them if they wanted to have a state-run platform for some of the smaller casinos, that was fine, but the larger casinos could use their own platform.

They agreed with that, so the issue was taken care of.  The other issue we still need to get a handle on is exactly what the tax rate is going to be.

There are several things we were proponents of in the new gaming expansion bill that included internet gaming. For example, there would be a separate tax for table games versus electronic gaming devices. Overall the bill would provide a 10-15% tax decrease, depending on how you look at it, so that is favourable.

There are several negative things in this huge bill. Two of our main issues are; Firstly, we’re opposed to having slots at racetracks, because it would see six new racinos set up. Then there are the five new casinos, including one in Chicago, which can also have slot machines at the two airports.

It would mean a change from having ten casinos to 23 and nearly tripling the number of authorised gaming positions at a time when our revenues have dropped by over 30% since 2007. If there is to be expansion, we would support the casino in Chicago. We support expansion if it is done in a reasonable manner that the market place can support.

I think it would be very difficult for a company which has taken internet bets after UIGEA in 2006 to get a licence in Illinois, even with the way the new legislation is written. Overall we would prefer to see companies which have not complied with laws be unable to get a licence. That’s an issue we’re working on, which can maybe be resolved either way by whoever does the final issuance of the licence.

The regular legislative session ends on 31 May. We have two-year legislative cycles here and January started the beginning of the new one. So if the bill is not passed in the spring, the legislators could come back in the fall veto session and pass it, or they could even amend the same bill next year and continue to work on it, or come up with a whole new one. So 31 May is the deadline for the spring session, but it’s certainly not the deadline for gaming expansion.

Tom Swoik is executive director of the Illinois Casino Gaming Association and represents the state’s two Caesars-owned casinos, three Penn National casinos and the Rivers Casino, owned by Midwest Gaming and Entertainment.

Access denied

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Tom Washington asks whether laws blocking post-UIGEA operators have a place in the industry and explores the impact they will have

As online gambling regulation develops across the US, the biggest differentiator between states is arguably the inclusion or omission of so-called ‘bad actor’ clauses. The laws, designed to block companies that accepted US bets after the introduction of the Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act of 2006 (UIGEA), have been at the forefront of both regulators and operators concerns as widespread legalised online gambling becomes a reality.

In the past six months alone, language punishing post-UIEGA activity has been added, amended and even removed entirely from states’ egaming frameworks. These laws of course change things for operators and the competition they will face, but more broadly they significantly affect the ability to form interstate relationships in order to share liquidity.

Nevada’s ‘bad actor’ clause was an 11th hour amendment introduced in the form of AB 114 by Assemblyman William Horne, which passed – along with a change allowing interstate compacts – on 21 February. Initially prohibiting post-2006 operators for 10 years and subsequently reduced to five, it relates specifically to interactive gaming and how that person or business responded to UIGEA.

Some saw it as an attempt to undermine New Jersey’s regulation – signed into law earlier the same week – by highlighting its lack of retribution for post-UIGEA operators. The Garden State had included a provision addressing those who “knowingly and willfully offered, accepted, or made available bets, wagers, or stakes” online after 31 December 2006 last May.

It was seen at the time as means of blocking PokerStars and Full Tilt from its soon-to-be regulated market, however this was cut from the bill in December. The difference of opinion held by Nevada and New Jersey, two leading lights in gambling regulation, marks a key dividing line in this evolving US market.

Some would say it puts New Jersey in a position of strength, as fewer barriers to entry mean it will likely boast the most popular poker operators’ software and therefore attract greater player numbers. Others will say Nevada’s five-year lock-out clause will make it a more attractive, sustainable partner for interstate compacts sought by other, perhaps more conservative states.

Jeff Ifrah, a partner with Ifrah Law, predicted back in August 2012 that New Jersey’s ‘bad actor’ clause would never see the light of day, saying at the time: “[I] imagine New Jersey wants to maintain a competitive edge over Nevada and to encourage the top operators and their software to locate to New Jersey.

“To do so, New Jersey will clearly have to drop provisions like the tainted assets provision in the current section of the bill. The provision serves one purpose – to provide a competitive advantage to US-based software providers and operators.”

Since then some states have followed Nevada’s lead and others New Jersey’s. Illinois’ bill, having initially gone to the extreme of blocking operators that had accepted bets in the past 10 years, was altered in March to only include operators actually convicted of doing so.

Best intentions

Historically, suitability checks have allowed gaming authorities to determine whether to grant a licence to gambling entities, based on the corporation or individual’s criminal history, outstanding liabilities, and other conduct that may raise red flags about the applicant’s likelihood to abide by the rules. However Ifrah argues that the new ‘bad actor’ and ‘tainted assets’ clauses relating to online gaming remove a regulator’s discretion to consider these factors.

“These clauses, imposed by the legislature and incorporated into the law, mandate that if an applicant has committed a certain action – usually a violation of the law – the applicant is prohibited from receiving a licence, no matter what other mitigating factors might be found in the applicant’s history,” he explains.

In many peoples’ minds, such language is aimed squarely at PokerStars, the online poker giant targeting a return to the regulated US market despite continuing to accept wagers until 2011. On 15 April that year PokerStars, along with Full Tilt, Ultimate Bet and Absolute Poker were finally forced to exit the US, with their owners facing indictments over civil and criminal charges.

The arguments for blocking these companies have been well documented, with many opining that particularly PokerStars – currently applying for an interim casino licence in New Jersey – would have a huge competitive advantage by using its database of US players and well-known brand.

However, many would also argue these provisions would and should exist despite any impact on competition. Despite boasting a long history of stringent licensure, Nevada’s gambling regulators, much like New Jersey’s, are approving online operators and suppliers for the first time.

This all means caution is the name of the game, and punishing post-UIGEA activity now appears to be as important, if not more, as traditional suitability checks. Karl Rutledge, an associate with Nevada law firm Lewis & Roca, argues such provisions should be seen a “tool to shield consumers from abuse” in a situation where the person or company holds a special position of trust such as in gambling.

Conversely, Nevada Gaming Control Board chairman AG Burnett believes the law is designed to protect those who have “done the right thing” and “paid attention to whatever laws were out there, however unclear they may have been”.

“The laws protect the regulatory system in that were a previous actor allowed into the state after having taken bets in the US in derogation of federal law, this might reflect poorly upon the state and perhaps even worse, allow entry by an actor who may or may not agree with your rules, depending upon how much money is at stake,” Burnett says.

Backlash

Yet there were many who saw Horne’s amendment as a move by the industry’s heavyweights to prevent their biggest competition gaining entry into the Nevada market. It was after all the American Gaming Association (AGA) – whose key members include the likes of Caesars Entertainment and Boyd Gaming – which later called on New Jersey’s gaming regulators to block PokerStars’ licensure in the state, claiming the operator has a history of “systematically flouting US law”.

The AGA’s very public criticism was soon attacked by PokerStars’ legal representatives who argued an approval of the association’s petition “would empower the AGA’s thinly veiled anti-competitive campaign against the entry of a competitor into the market”. As the number one poker site in the world, the implications of PokerStars’ entry into the US market should not be underestimated.

Even bwin.party’s CEO Norbert Teufelberger, who described PokerStars’ New Jersey push as “their all-in card in the US”, admitted in March: “If PokerStars don’t get in [to New Jersey], it will really just be between us and Caesars.” He will still be hoping for a two-horse race.

Despite the public dispute, Rutledge argues US casino operators are not behind these laws. “I really don’t believe that this blocking is due to the universal wishes of incumbent operators,” he says. “While in any industry there is a desire to protect one’s business and opportunities from increased competition, at the same time some operators were looking to partner with companies that were blocked by AB 114.

“These operators realised the value in partnering with people that understand the internet gaming model and thus were looking to rely on their expertise. It cannot be said, therefore, that it was the collective wishes of incumbent operators to block such service providers from being able to service this industry.”

Ifrah, who penned PokerStars’ pertinent response to the AGA’s claims, agrees that regulators should not take into account the wishes of an incumbent operator in a suitability determination. “It bears no relevance to the factors that the suitability determination is designed to assess,” he says.

“A gaming authority may consider market factors in deciding whether to issue a licence for instance, in an oversaturated gaming market, the authority may find that licensure would not be the best course of action for the applicant, market, and economy. However, it would be inappropriate for a gaming authority to be influenced by the demands of competitors that merely fear healthy competition.”

Wider impact

The multiple variations of this law provide weight to the argument that a state-by-state patchwork of regulations is unsustainable for a successful US market in the long-term. With the absence of federal online regulation, states including Nevada are now taking a serious look at how interstate – or even international – compacts will work, in order to pool player liquidity and subsequently increase profitability.

These relationships are set to be extremely tricky to form for reasons including the multitude of differing tax rates and types of product offered, let alone the added layer of complexity brought by states blocking and accepting certain operators based on past activity.

One theory is that two groups of regulated states will emerge. One faction, on the east coast including Pennsylvania and Delaware, will follow New Jersey’s lead on most of the key points which make up its regulatory framework in order to ease the path to interstate agreements. Others, perhaps on the West Coast, could follow Nevada’s stricter guidelines.

“There will be states which look at this like Nevada does and then some where strong lobbying influences exist where [post-UIGEA operators] might be able to prevail. It’s all politics,” says Frank Schreck, the chair of Vegas-based Brownstein Hyatt Farber Schreck’s Gaming Law Group.

Yet the question of suitability in relation to gambling licensure is far more complicated and encompasses more than the indictments of what was dubbed ‘Black Friday’. For European operators aiming to enter the US market, not through a casino acquisition as in PokerStars’ case but through a partnership with an existing licensee, any hint of wrongdoing outside of North America could spell trouble.

Take William Hill for example, which gained a land-based licence in Nevada last year. During its lengthy hearings in front of the state’s Gaming Control Board and Gaming Commission, both its relationship with online joint venture partner Playtech and its presence in grey territory Australia were called into question.

Commission chairman Peter Bernhard queried whether the company was “still at Playtech’s mercy” and expressed “concern” whether the operator had ever acted outside of Australia’s gambling laws. The response from William Hill was swift, pulling out of Australia with almost immediate affect and later initiating a buyout of Playtech’s stake in the William Hill Online JV.

The British bookmaker’s predicament is one faced by many European gaming companies, in that being whiter than white from a licensing perspective is absolutely crucial in order to be selected as a suitable partner by a US casino.

European perspective

Eyebrows were raised in February when Boyd and MGM’s software partner bwin.party’s CEO Norbert Teufelberger was detained by police in Belgium and questioned over his company’s continued, unlicensed presence in the country. Would this see Nevada’s regulator take a dim view of the company, or worse cause its partners to get cold feet about their relationship?

It seems neither were the case, and Schreck credits US regulators – though none have yet heard bwin’s application – for making an effort to understand the regulatory environment facing European operators.

“I think the regulatory agencies, at least in Nevada, understand Europe and understand countries like Belgium have flaunted EU law,” he says. “So they don’t hold it against operators like bwin.party as they understand that EU law prevails and some countries aren’t following it. A country cannot punish somebody either civilly or criminally for doing internet gambling unless they have a licensing scheme and regulations in place.”

Preventing companies from obtaining a licence to operate would appear a unique concept to the gambling sector. The likes of PokerStars may have settled with the US Department (with no admission of wrongdoing) over charges relating to their post-2006 US operations, however there appears to be little in the way of precedent set by other industries.

Indeed, in recent years, some of the largest and most successful corporations in the world have been the subject of legal actions with the DoJ which have ended in settlement agreements, deferred prosecution agreements, or even a finding of liability or guilt. Yet they continue to operate and thrive because their governing regulations do not contain what Ifrah calls a “one strike” provision such as a ‘tainted assets’ clause.

“There is simply no good reason for online gaming providers to be subject to stricter regulations than, for instance, Citibank, Goldman Sachs, and other financial institutions which continue to operate despite a history of alleged wrongdoing,” he argues.

“In making a determination as to a corporate applicant, gaming authorities should not automatically exclude the corporation based on past conduct, but consider who was making the decisions at the time of the alleged wrongdoing. It would be more appropriate to exclude an individual that has made a bad decision on the company’s behalf that to exclude an entire corporation.”

Yet as Burnett argues, a DoJ settlement is not the crucial deciding factor as to suitability. “The focal point lies in their actions, what they knew, and why they did what they did outside of any settlement with the DOJ,” he says. “It lies with what our investigators find and how the company responds to that. We define suitability in the same general context as we use in the land-based space.

“The applicant, be it an entity or individual, must have those characteristics we deem worthy of whatever approval they are seeking. Some of these characteristics include honesty and integrity, for example. In my own personal opinion, I feel the laws [blocking post-UIGEA operators] also covertly show deference to the federal government, and a respect for its earlier attempts to do the same thing,” he adds.

The two sets of polarised opinion remain and will remain a big factor in the US online gambling market. Regulators and politicians are no doubt under pressure from both sides, with worthy arguments for both an open, competitive market place and one that does not allow a post-UIGEA operator to succeed. The eventual winners of this battle might just win the war.

Ultimate Poker ends Iovation agreement

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Players had shown concern at service provider’s ties with Black Friday-indicted Ultimate Bet

Ultimate Poker has terminated an agreement with player verification service provider Iovation after players expressed concern at its ties with Black Friday-indicted operator Ultimate Bet.

Iovation is a partner of CAMS, the service provider supplying geolcation, payment processing and age verification services to Fertitta Interactive’s Ultimate Poker, which last month became the first operator to accept a real-money bet in Nevada.

However, Iovation also provided software to the now defunct Ultimate Bet, which accepted US players after UIGEA in 2006. Ultimate Bet was involved in a cheating scandal between 2004-8, with the Kahnawake Gaming Commission discovering the owners had used a tool to view players’ hold cards. The majority of affected players were later refunded as part of a US$15m settlement.

In a post on the TwoPlusTwo forum, Chris Danek, poker product manager at Ultimate Poker, said the operator has now “discontinued the use of all services from Iovation” as of 9 May. He acknowledged users’ concerns, adding he hoped “this makes our players feel more comfortable”.

Ultimate Poker, an interactive subsidiary of Las Vegas-based Station Casinos, became one of the first operators to obtain a licence from Nevada’s Gaming Commission in October 2012.

In recent months Fertitta Interactive has signed a number of deals in preparation of its real-money launch. As well as the deal with CAMS, it recruited professional player Antonio Esfandiari as its brand ambassador and signed an affiliate marketing deal with Income Access.

WMS shareholders approve SciGames takeover

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Shareholders to receive US$26 a share with acquisition to be completed by end of 2013

WMS shareholders have voted in favour of the merger agreement which will see SciGames acquire the business by the end of 2013.

Of the votes cast at Friday’s meeting, more than 99% of those present voted in favour of adopting the merger agreement which will see shareholders receive US$26 a share.

In addition, more than 85% of voters were in favour of the non-binding advisory proposal for compensation related to the acquisition. All voting represented approximately 75% of WMS shareholders eligible to do so.

WMS chairman and CEO Brian Gamache described the meeting as “an important milestone” towards the eventual acquisition. “In the meantime, we remain focused on commercialising new innovative game content and products for our casino operator customers,” he said.

The US$1.5bn takeover was announced in January, with SciGames CEO Lorne Weil calling the acquisition the “opportunity of a lifetime”. However in its recent first quarter results, the games, technology and service provider revealed it has already paid $4m in fees and expenses related to the acquisition, contributing to a $11.6m year-on-year decrease in total revenues.

Earlier this month, the Delaware Lottery selected a joint bid by SciGames, 888 and Williams Interactive to provide it with online gambling services.

Betfair Hollywood Park to close this year

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Racetrack closure is a further setback to Betfair’s California exchange wagering plans

California racetrack Hollywood Park will close at the end of 2013, one year after securing a five-year naming agreement with Betfair.

The closure will come as a blow to Betfair, who had hoped to offer exchange betting at the racetrack in the future.

In a letter sent to the California Horse Racing Board (CHRB), Betfair Hollywood Park president Jack Liebau said attempts to improve the struggling racetrack’s business model were “without success”, in particular after spending “millions” in vain on lobbying to offer slot machines.

“In the absence of a favourable change in racing’s business model, the ultimate development of the Hollywood property was inevitable,” he said. “Sadly for we who love racing and Hollywood Park, it was simply a matter of time.”

The 75-year-old racetrack had been owned by Churchill Downs between 1999 and 2005 before being sold to the Hollywood Park Land Company consortium.

Although exchange wagering is not yet operational in California, the CHRB approved rules last year and issued provisional licences to Betfair TVG and Churchill Downs. However, in March, the Office of Administrative Law disapproved of the regulations, requiring the CHRB to resubmit them.

However, the Thoroughbred Owners of California have delayed a vote on whether it would accept exchange betting at the state’s thoroughbred tracks until the summer.

The 75-year-old Hollywood Park racetrack was also owned by Churchill Downs between 1999 and 2005.

Betfair acquired horse racing TV and wagering network TVG for US$50m in 2009 with a view to launching a betting exchange in California as soon as it became legal to do so.

William Hill signs New Jersey sports betting partnership

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Hills to supply a full Las Vegas-style sportsbook should sports betting legislation be passed 

William Hill has finalised a deal with New Jersey racecourse Monmouth Park to become the track’s official sports betting provider.

As a result of the partnership Hills will become the sponsor of the Haskell Invitational, one of America’s biggest horse races. The event is to be renamed the William Hill Haskell Invitational, and will take place on 28 July.

The deal also includes provisions for federal sports betting legislation, with the operator to supply a full Las Vegas-style sportsbook, with William Hill US CEO Joe Asher pledging that “one day sports betting will be legal in New Jersey.”

“When it is, William Hill will be there,” Asher added. “In the meantime, we are really excited to sponsor the William Hill Haskell Invitational, one of America’s great races for three-year-olds at one of America’s great racetracks.” Oral arguments on the potential regulation of sports betting in New Jersey are due to begin soon.

Dennis Drazin, an advisor to Monmouth Park operator Darby Development LLC, explained that having “carefully evaluated” which operator would leave the business in the best position to succeed, it “decided to partner with a world leader”.

“We are thrilled to announce this partnership for sports betting at Monmouth Park and happy to have William Hill as the proud sponsor of the William Hill Haskell Invitational,” he said.

Having enacted a law to legalise sports betting in 2012, New Jersey has met with strong opposition from America’s major professional sports leagues and the National Collegiate Athletic Association. In February this year a federal court ruled that any attempt to regulate the vertical would be in violation of federal law, prompting an appeal from the state. This will be heard in the Third Circuit Court of Appeals on June 26.

Robin Harrison