#107 8 Copyright 2004, all rights reserved worldwide. Gambling
and the Law7 is a registered trademark of Professor I Nelson Rose, Whittier Law
School, Costa Mesa, CA
Poker Tournaments in Bars, Clubs, Online ...
Everywhere
ANothing succeeds like success.@
Alexandre Dumas
The astounding success of poker on television and
the Internet has created a poker phenomenon in the United States. And everyone wants a piece of the action.
Toys AR@ Us ran out of poker gift sets at Christmas, and
so did Nordstrom. Run a search for Apoker@ at BarnesandNoble.com and you get 670 titles,
including kits for home Texas Hold >Em tournaments.
Stores sell poker clocks, lamps and bed sheets. For $5, I bought a computer game of Dogs
Playing Poker from Office Depot.
(Incidentally, The Art of Gambling: Through the
Ages by Arthur Flowers and Anthony Curtis asserts that those poker dogs are
America=s best known art B and I believe them. I=ve had AA Bold Bluff@ and the others as the background on my personal
checks for years.)
The craze cuts across all lines. A couple of 12-year-old kids I know decided
not to go trick-or-treating, because they had a big poker tournament set for
Halloween. Leo Chu, owner of Hollywood
Park casino, told me a little old lady came in and said she wanted Ato learn how to play that game where you push all
your chips into the middle of the table.@
Even the states are getting into the act: The North Dakota House of Representatives
voted to allow the state to license and tax online poker operators.
A bill in Connecticut would make poker legal in
restaurants and bars. The Mohegans have
said that if that happens the tribe will withhold the state=s share of slot machine revenue.
After a bowling alley was raided in St. Cloud,
Minnesota, the local State Senator introduced a bill to make it clear Hold >Em tournaments are legal, if there=s no prize money.
The County Attorney did not file charges, deciding poker might not be
illegal even under present law.
Poker got its biggest push through the new mass media:
cable T.V. and the Internet. When the
World Poker Tour introduced the sophisticated use of lipstick cameras to let
home viewers see players= down cards, the show broke records at the Travel
Channel.
It also spawned imitators. There are now at least seven TV shows and
movies either on-air or being made.
As for the >Net B PartyPoker has 60,000 players online at any
time. There are no accurate figures on
the industry, but a conservative guess is that Internet poker sites will take
in more than $1 Billion this year.
So, every day I get at least one inquiry about
whether it is legal to operate poker games, perhaps as a membership club, or as
a game of skill, or with the operator not making any money off the games, etc.,
etc.
I have seen literally a thousand variations. The proposed locales range from homes and
clubs to bars.
Lots of bars.
It seems everyone with a liquor license wants to set up poker tables.
The Internet is also a hot alternative. Some want to set up kiosks or computer
terminals in bars, linked to online poker websites.
Everyone recognizes there are legal barriers. Entrepreneurs can be pretty inventive in
trying to get around the law. How about
turning a bar into a dues-paying private club run by a non-profit company
incorporated in Uzbekistan and licensed by Rwanda, where players pay nothing to
participate in poker tournaments, and the winners receive points redeemable
only on the Internet for merchandise shipped by monks from Belize?
If only it were that easy.
Enforcement actions are beginning against
bar-owners and others who have set up poker tables. For example, the Louisiana Office of Alcohol and Tobacco Control
is trying to close down the no-limit Texas Hold =Em tournaments that have become common in barrooms
throughout the state. Whether it
succeeds will depend upon subtle and complex questions of state law, such as, AIs a bar owner >profiting from gambling= if he takes no direct cut, but increases his
business by having poker tournaments?@
It is usually, but not always, easy to know what
is clearly permitted. Most casinos can
spread poker under state law.
California, the biggest poker jurisdiction, also has Alocal option,@ meaning clubs have to have licenses from their
local cities or counties. Some states,
like Florida, allow commercial poker but put severe limits on how much can be
bet.
The law for licensed operators and tribes can be
very complicated. For example,
California has a statute that allows a club to rake the pot only three
times. An operator who takes money out
of the pot four times is committing a misdemeanor. And so, unknowingly, are all the players at that table.
Tribes in states with legal poker can operate
their own games. But in a little-known
twist in the federal Indian Gaming Regulatory Act, poker is one of the very few
forms of gambling where the tribes must follow state law on stakes and hours of
operation. So, any high-stakes poker
game you see in a tribal casino in Florida is illegal. Florida tribes could run games with limits
higher than state law, but only if they first have compacts with the state.
Operators in a few states have found obscure
exemptions from the general prohibitions on operating poker games for
profit. In Kentucky, it is apparently
perfectly legal for a licensed charity to run poker games, as long as they are
limited to six-hour stretches. In New
Hampshire, entrepreneurs run up to ten poker tournaments a year for nonprofit
organizations.
Many states have express exemptions for social
games played in private homes. In California,
there is no state prohibition on a home poker game, where no one can make any
money other than what they win. Note,
this still could violate a city or county ordinance, although you have a better
chance of winning the World Series of Poker than of being arrested.
Poker could also be legal if it lacked one of the
elements of gambling: prize, chance or consideration.
Games where players pay, but can win nothing of
value, are usually legal as amusement games.
I believe it is possible to run poker tournaments as contests of
skill. And operators are taking the Ano purchase necessary@ approach and opening poker games which can cost
nothing to enter.
The only way to be sure your plan for a poker
tournament is legal is to have a lawyer apply your state=s laws to your idea. It is very difficult, but not impossible, to operate poker games
that won=t get you thrown in jail
But the next problem is figuring out how to be
both legal and still make money.
END
Professor I Nelson Rose is recognized as one of the world=s leading authorities on gambling law. His website is www.GamblingAndTheLaw.com