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Washington Post and 60 Minutes Highlight Need for Player Protection (Update)

December 8, 2008 (InfoPowa News) — The Las Vegas Review-Journal carried a thought-provoking piece by columnist Jane Ann Morrison this week, examining the impact of the recent Washington Post and 60 Minutes programs on the Absolute Poker and UltimateBet cheating scandals.
 
Morrison opines that the widespread publicity generated by the "double whammy" in print and television coverage improved the odds of Congressman Barney Frank's moves to legalize and regulate online gambling in the United States. And she was not alone in that view; Bo Bernhard, director of gambling research at UNLV's International Gaming Institute, thought so, too, she reported.
 
Two national news outlets presenting online poker players as fraud victims strengthens the position of those who want to legalize online gambling … and tax it, Morrison wrote.
 
"The heart of the Washington Post story was that poker players were cheated out of more than $20 million over four years through scams uncovered at AbsolutePoker.com and UltimateBet.com, two online poker sites. The Washington Post's two-part report ran Nov. 30 and Dec. 1 in the Review-Journal, and the '60 Minutes' segment aired Nov. 30," she recapped, explaining that Frank's proposal would overturn the UIGEA, but would likely not include the legalization of sportbetting due to pressure from the NCAA.
 
The article also points out that in these economically stressed times, taxation of a legalized and regulated business could provide much needed cash for government or state programs.
 
Bernhard told Morrison that he has mixed feelings about legalizing online poker, the most likely online betting activity for legalization. "I'm torn. I believe in my Nevada soul that a gaming industry that's regulated properly, licensed, subjected to the rigors, is a good thing," said the son of Nevada Gaming Commission Chairman Pete Bernhard. "But I'm also sensitive to the problem gambler and the underage gambler."
 
Morrison points out however that, like many Nevadans, his philosophical bent is that people should be allowed to do what they want.
 
Bernhard speaks from experience, having headed the first research project to study Internet gambling by Nevadans, requested by the state's Gaming Control Board.
 
Morrison asks the rhetorical question: why would Nevadans want to play online given the abundance of land facilities in the state? She answers: "The same reasons folks in other states without casinos gravitate toward online poker: convenience, lower stakes, and speed. Apparently this is a young man's form of recreation, and a young man with more education and more money.
 
The article recalls that Bernhard's study found that 3.7 percent of Nevadans in the survey of 1,000 respondents said they played poker online in the last five years, about the same percentage as the rest of the country. Their biggest concern? "Nevadans aren't sure of getting a square deal with online poker," Bernhard said.
 
Morrison writes that the study showed that online poker players were not concerned with the ability of websites to cheat them. They trusted the sites (obviously a mistake on their part in the wake of the two cheating operations uncovered). They didn't trust the other players.
 
"They were definitely convinced that collusion took place among other gamblers at virtual poker tables," the 2007 study concluded.
 
The piece discusses the now well-known facts surrounding the cheating scandals, fairly reporting on the many millions in refunds paid or being paid to prejudiced players at the two websites.
 
Morrison reports that there are aditionally concerns about underage gambling, compulsive gambling, and the potential for money laundering and organized crime influence if online poker is legalized, but it appears that this is the direction in which government and the major U.S. gaming companies are headed.
 
"The sympathetic approach of the Washington Post and '60 Minutes' makes it seem like it's practically the government's job to protect poker players," Morrison notes. "But in reality, the casino companies are coming around to the belief that if they can make money through online betting without spending billions to build a property, it may be time to drop their opposition. And if it's taxable, that's bound to get government support.
 
"But the question remains, if the software is so vulnerable that players were cheated of more than $20 million, can government regulation really protect the online bettor?"