WA

[WA] Ferndale man fights state ban on online gambling – Ferndale Record (04/06/11)

By Poker Players Alliance
Thursday, April 7th, 2011

Pros and joes join in Poker Players Alliance rally at state capital

OLYMPIA — Matthew Smith has been a poker player for 20 years, long before he moved to Ferndale last July, but like many other Washingtonians he finds himself unable to play a hand of poker online without fear of being charged with a class C felony.

On March 17, Smith was present in Olympia with members of the Poker Players Alliance (PPA) and several professional poker players to tell state legislators how he felt about the law prohibiting online gambling, which was passed in 2006.

According to a PPA press release, Washington is the only state that considers online gambling a class C felony, punishable by a $10,000 fine and/or up to five years in prison.

“People should have the freedom to gamble online in their homes, where they feel comfortable, but instead they face the same charges that sex offenders do in Washington,” Smith said. “I am glad to represent Ferndale in these matters of personal freedom.”

Smith met with Representatives Jason Overstreet and Vincent Buys, and Senator Doug Ericksen of the 42nd Legislative District to express his hopes that the ban would be overturned. He said that all three were in favor of repealing the law.

“For me, it is a question of fairness and appropriate regulation on the part of the state,” Ericksen said.

After meeting with representatives, a poker game was held at a nearby restaurant where Smith and other Washington PPA members played a hand with the likes of former Washington Senator Luke Esser. Ericksen made an appearance, but did not join in the poker game. PPA members also had the opportunity to meet professional poker players Andy Bloch, Linda Johnson and Jan Fisher, who were in Olympia to support PPA’s cause.

John Pappas, executive director of the PPA, said he personally spoke to Washington state legislators who admitted they did not know the severity of the law when they signed the bill.

“It happens often,” Pappas said. “A legislator signs a bill because they trust the person who wrote it, but don’t personally examine the information. Lawmakers didn’t know they were making felons out of poker players who want to gamble with a dollar or two online.”

Washington Senator Margarita Prentice was the driving force behind the internet gambling ban in Washington. She stood behind it firmly in 2006, and recently made public comments about online gamblers that offended not only the online poker community, but other members of the Senate.

Despite protests, the Washington Supreme Court upheld the law in 2010, and online poker sites such as Poker Stars and Full Tilt Poker pulled access from Washington to avoid the controversy. However, people are still finding ways to play, and according to PPA member Charla Newman, the PPA just wants to see players have a safe, regulated environment to gamble in.

“Most of our members are upstanding citizens who just want to gamble with a few bucks,” Newman said.

A pole taken by the PPA in 2010 revealed that 80 percent of Washington residents do not support the law banning online gambling. The alternative proposed by the PPA is that the state of Washington license, tax and regulate online gambling to generate state revenues. The number could be in the tens of millions per year, said Pappas

The PPA has vowed to become more of a presence in Washington until the law is repealed, and with more than 20,000 members in Washington alone, no one anticipates the issue will fall away.

Stephanie Plumb
Ferndale Record

[Press Release] Poker Players Alliance Members Meet with Washington Lawmakers (03/17/11)

By Poker Players Alliance
Thursday, March 17th, 2011

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[Media Advisory] Thursday Poker Pros Join Washingtonians to Lobby Legislators: Washington State Only State Where Online Poker Players Are Criminals (03/15/11)

By Poker Players Alliance
Tuesday, March 15th, 2011

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[Media Advisory] Poker is Not a Crime: PPA to Hold Rally Outside Washington Supreme Court (05/11/10)

By Poker Players Alliance
Tuesday, May 11th, 2010

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[WA] HeraldNet: Local Briefly: Mill Creek bar owner pleads to illegal gambling (06/07/08)

By HeraldNet
Monday, June 9th, 2008

excerpt:

MILL CREEK — A Mill Creek bar owner took the safe bet and changed his mind Friday about taking on the Washington State Gambling Commission.

Stephen Dorn, owner of Jet Bar & Grill, pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor gambling charge. A judge suspended the one-year jail sentence and ordered Dorn to pay a $1,000 fine. He’s on probation for a year and also is prohibited from allowing any gambling at his business without a valid license.

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PocketFives – Lee Rousso Appears on the PocketFives.com Podcast (05/26/08)

By Dan Cypra
Friday, May 30th, 2008

excerpt:

The pulse of the online poker world has been centered in the Pacific Northwest in recent weeks. In the great state of Washington, former horse racing handicapper turned lawyer Lee Rousso has carried the banner for online poker, attempting to overturn a heinous state law that makes playing online poker a Class C felony, the equivalent of being convicted of child pornography. In a hearing on May 15th, a judge ultimately sided with the State; however, Rousso plans to appeal directly to the Washington State Supreme Court. Rousso joins the PocketFives.com Podcast this week to talk about the law in question and his vision of the future.

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[WA] South District Journal – Alleged gambling club raises concern with Hillman City residents (05/27/08)

By Peter Kearns
Friday, May 30th, 2008

excerpt:

“We are aware of it,” said South Precinct Lt. James Koutsky, when asked of the alleged illegal gambling taking place at the café. “And our community police team is following up on it.”

But there is a chance that what they’re doing is not illegal. According to Washington state gambling laws, it is not illegal to play poker unless the house, in this case Tong, is taking a portion of the winnings or charging a fee to play.
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[WA] Seattle Times – After 46 years, poker club folds its hand (05/26/08)

By Haley Edwards
Monday, May 26th, 2008

excerpt:
When Grant Erwin started his poker club in 1962, there was no such thing as a personal computer, an online accounting tool or an Excel worksheet. The eight or nine men who met monthly around kitchen tables in Seattle and Bellevue to play low-stakes poker kept track of their winnings with tokens in old baby-food jars, labeled with their names.
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[WA] PNWLocalNews – Poker players say legal deck stacked against them (05/21/08)

By Daniel Mooney
Thursday, May 22nd, 2008

Poker players say legal deck stacked against them – PNWLocalNews

excerpt:

Some call it luck. Players call it skill. Neither on May 15 could change the fact that it’s illegal to play the game of poker for money online in the state of Washington.

Washington poker players lost a hand at the Maleng Regional Justice Center in Kent when King County Superior Court Judge Mary Roberts ruled to uphold a 2006 law that made online gambling a Class C felony.

More than 50 members of the Poker Players Alliance, called the PPA, gathered alongside prominent poker pros Barry Greenstein and Andy Bloch outside of the Justice Center after the hearing Thursday. Wearing red “POKER IS NOT A CRIME” T-shirts and holding up signs with messages like “END POKER PROHIBITION,” they were there in support of Renton attorney Lee Rousso, the poker aficionado who started the legal battle against the constitutionality of the law.

[WA] Greenstein speaks out on Rousso hearing (PokerListings, 05/17/08)

By Jason Kirk, PokerListings
Saturday, May 17th, 2008

The Poker Players Alliance’s Washington state director, Lee Rousso, had his day in court Thursday challenging the state’s anti-online poker law. To liven things up, the PPA held a rally outside the hearing venue at the Maleng Regional Justice Center in Kent, Wash.
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