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- Barney Frank’s HR 6870 passes Committee vote
Barney Frank’s HR 6870 passes Committee vote
- By Gustav Jung
- Published 09/17/2008
- Gambling Law and Legislation , Gambling , Online Poker
- Unrated
Since the implementation of
the UIGEA in 2006, Congressman Barney Frank has done what ever
is possible to stop the progress of the enforcement bill and to clarify its
specific purpose by arguing that U.S government should not have the right
to determine how the American citizens invest their time and money.
Yesterday, Congressman Frank
introduced a proposed bill (HR 6870 or Payments
System Protection Act) in its effort to amend the problems and
confusion caused by the UIGEA and its and to give financial institutions a
detailed definition of what is and is not considered an illegal online gambling
activity.
When the bill was introduced
to the committee yesterday, Representative William Lacy Clay criticized the arguments
of several professional sports leagues, saying: “I’m alarmed that major league
sports would come forward to announce their opposition to the Bill. I’m puzzled
by their stance especially when you have legal sports books in
The
good news is that Frank’s bill has been approved today by the House Committee
on Financial Services and would push the Department of the Treasury and Federal
Reserve System, in consultation with the Attorney General and a special
Administrative Law Judge to classify and determine what really constitutes “unlawful
online gambling” and initiate an economic a deep research and study on the fulfillment
costs of the prohibition.
The
enactment of the bill would delay the execution of the UIGEA through a process calculated
to guarantee that the UIGEA regulations do not harm the operations of the
The Committee also voted an amendment to a bill in where federal regulators are obligated to issue regulations to financial institutions to block transfers and transactions related to online sportsbetting and other gambling activities including online poker and casinos, with the exception of horse racing, dog racing and jai-alai. According to the new amendment, unlawful gambling operators would be specified by the U.S. Treasury on a list that would be check and revised by financial institutions to execute the prohibition.
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