-
ADD TIME NEWS
- NEWSLETTERS
Risky Business
Is this the end of online gambling's lucky streak? A day after the arrest in a Dallas airport of David Carruthers, ceo of Internet gaming firm BETonSPORTS, authorities last week charged the 48-year-old, along with 10 others connected to the Costa Rica–based company, [an error occurred while processing this directive] with racketeering conspiracy relating to the illegal provision of sports betting in the U.S. Complying with a court order, the firm also suspended services to the U.S., home to 85% of its business.
Shares in rival operators tumbled over fears of a U.S. crackdown on firms taking bets from America, where online gaming is ruled illegal. Thanks to fuzzy rules governing offshore operations, U.S. gamblers still stumped up around half the industry's $12 billion in revenue last year.
Offshore sports betting the kind marketed by BETonSPORTS is judged illegal in the U.S. under laws originally drawn up in the '60s; sites offering casino-style virtual gaming claimed they were in the clear. But others weren't chancing it: organizers postponed an Internet gaming conference scheduled this week in Las Vegas, blaming execs' jitters over landing in the U.S.
Still, not everywhere is off-limits. Gibraltar-based PartyGaming, the world's biggest online poker operator, pledged to pare down its reliance on U.S. punters; some 46% of its new poker players came from outside the U.S. in the three months to July, double the share a year earlier.
In its sights? The legions of gamblers in China, Japan and the rest of Asia. The firm won't reveal its hand, but Asia "could well be a significant growth area" for PartyGaming, says Richard Hunter, head of U.K. equities at Hargreaves Lansdown Stockbrokers. Plus it would be "a strategic hedge" against a U.S. crackdown. What's Mandarin for dead man's hand?
Most Popular »
- 'Tear Down This Wall': Reagan's Speech That Ended the Cold War
- Are You Getting Scammed by Facebook Games?
- Priests Spar Over What It Means to Be Catholic
- Military Fears Gains with Muslim Soldiers May Be Lost
- The State of Hillary: A Mixed Record on the Job
- Stresses at Fort Hood Were Likely Intense for Hasan
- Hasan's Therapy: Could 'Secondary Trauma' Have Driven Him to Shooting?
- Why We Look at Some Web Ads and Not Others
- Brazil Student Expelled for Mini-Dress
- China Woos Africa and Not Just for Its Resources
- Are You Getting Scammed by Facebook Games?
- Priests Spar Over What It Means to Be Catholic
- China Woos Africa and Not Just for Its Resources
- Why We Look at Some Web Ads and Not Others
- 'Tear Down This Wall': Reagan's Speech That Ended the Cold War
- I Can Has Swine Flu? A Cat Comes Down with H1N1
- The Secrets Inside Your Dog's Mind
- Military Fears Gains with Muslim Soldiers May Be Lost
- Let's Bail Out the Pot Dealers!
- To Help the Kids, Parents Go Back to School







RSS