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Online Gambling Bill a Web of Industry Favors
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By Dan Morgan
Washington Post Staff Writer
Wednesday, May 31, 2000; Page A03

The Internet Gambling Prohibition bill was supposed to do just what its name
implied: curb the explosion of online gambling. But as the bill heads into
the final stretch in Congress, it has become a magnet for favors to gambling
interests.

First, there is the $14 billion a year parimutuel horse racing industry,
which would get a share of the proceeds from bets placed on a home computer.
Wielding influence through its nationwide network of tracks, breeders and
horse farms, the industry has won concessions that the Justice Department
says would "expand gambling opportunities."

That exception has set off a frenzy among other groups--from Indian tribes to
states with lotteries--clamoring for the same privileges. Before the Senate
passed the measure in November, the American Greyhound Track Operators won a
similar exception for dog tracks. Then in the House, Rep. Bill McCollum
(R-Fla.) went to bat for the state's jai alai industry--and jai alai was
added to the list.

As a result, several Christian right organizations have pulled their support.
And the anti-gambling bill--once a seemingly straightforward effort to clamp
down on a fast-growing phenomenon--has become bogged down in the war of
clashing interests, with groups from professional sports leagues to Internet
service providers to credit card companies angling to protect their interests.

The established casino industry has been a prime mover behind the bill
because it would curb the online upstarts the industry fears could cut into
its profits.

But after unanimously passing the Senate last year and winning approval in
the House Judiciary Committee in April, the legislation is "in trouble," one
aide to the House Republican leadership said. No date has been set for floor
action.

The biggest current dispute involves state lotteries, which do not sell
tickets online but want to be able to compete in cyberspace. In a bid to
retain support from Christian groups, the House Judiciary Committee put
severe restrictions on state lotteries before it approved the bill.

Lobbyists for the online companies that would handle this business have
mobilized the National Governors Association and individual governors to ask
House Speaker J. Dennis Hastert (R-Ill.) and other top House Republicans for
help. They have urged Congress to let states decide for themselves whether to
permit the use of the Internet for local lottery operations.

On the other side, convenience store chains that sell lottery tickets fear
the Internet could undercut the business and are opposing an exemption.

Many other interest groups have weighed in as well. Professional and college
athletic leagues believe Internet gambling poses ethical and economic perils
for sports, and are pressing for restrictions. America Online Inc. and other
Internet service providers are seeking to limit their liability for allowing
access to online casinos. Credit card companies want to ensure that they can
collect debts incurred in online wagering.

One lobbying firm, Janus-Merritt Strategies, has three separate sets of
clients interested in the bill. The Interactive Gaming Council, representing
gambling Web sites in the United States and abroad, wants to defeat the bill,
with a lobbying campaign that its Web site says will cost $1 million. The
group argues that "people want the government to stay out of their home
computers" and that it is impossible to create "an electronic wall around the
United States."

Another Janus-Merritt client, CDM Fantasy Sports, which operates fantasy
sports leagues, has lobbied successfully for a provision that would allow
fantasy sports online. Inland Entertainment, which advises Indian tribes on
gambling activities, wants to expand the ability of tribes to cash in on
Internet gambling; in the current version of the measure, only those who are
"physically located on Indian lands" may gamble online.

All this is a far cry from the situation a year ago, when Sen. Jon Kyl
(R-Ariz.), who chairs the Judiciary Committee's subcommittee on technology,
set out to meet the demands of the anti-gambling movement.

More than 250 online casinos, 64 lotteries, 20 bingo games and 139 sports
books were already providing gambling over the Internet, according to the
National Gambling Impact Study Commission. Most of the Web sites were beyond
the reach of U.S. regulators or tax collectors, and many were seemingly in
violation of long-standing federal law that already prohibits the use of
wires to facilitate or transmit betting across state lines.

The Senate bill was endorsed by numerous religious and conservative groups
opposed to gambling in all forms. But the bill also had the backing of
Washington's most pro-gambling group, the American Gaming Association,
representing casinos, riverboat gambling operators and casino equipment
manufacturers.

"If a little mud gets spotted at one end of this industry, everyone gets
covered with it," said association President Frank Fahrenkopf.

Senate Majority Leader Trent Lott (R-Miss.), whose home state's casinos and
riverboats have made Mississippi the country's third-highest recipient of
gambling revenue, signed on as an early cosponsor, and the bill sailed
through the Senate.

In the House, however, warfare among various gambling interests intensified,
and the exceptions for online parimutuel betting were preserved only after a
major grass-roots effort by the American Horse Council, representing tracks,
breeders, trainers, jockeys and horse farms.

Illustrative of the industry's grass-roots ties is Arlington Racetrack
northwest of Chicago, a subsidiary of Duchossois Industries. Members of the
Duchossois family have contributed $41,000 to the Illinois Republican Party
since 1996, and some employees live in Hastert's district. The track itself
is in the district of Judiciary Committee Chairman Henry J. Hyde (R).

Horse racing officials hotly disagree with the Justice Department that the
parimutuel provisions expand gambling. Under current law, they say, nine
states allow "account wagering" in which registered players can telephone
bets to a track or an off-track facility in their state.

"We believe the bills only maintain the status quo, grandfather us in and
protect our opportunity to do this type of wagering under state
requirements," said American Horse Council President Jay Hickey. Tracks could
receive an average of 3 cents on every dollar wagered interactively--similar
to the share in off-track betting.

Rep. Robert W. Goodlatte (R-Va.), chief House architect of the bill, called
the provision "a narrow exemption that reflects what's going on on the
Internet."

But Justice Department officials contend that expressly authorizing the use
of the Internet for horse racing would expand gambling opportunities by
allowing bettors from out of state to place wagers. Some of that has already
happened. One horse racing site, Youbet.com, settled a lawsuit brought by the
Los Angeles County district attorney by agreeing not to accept wagers from
California residents. Anti-gambling groups are now divided on the bill. "We
can show it will reduce the amount of gambling. Horse racing and jai alai are
not growing, so we're not as concerned about them as these other forms," said
Michael Bowman of the Family Research Council.

But in a May 11 letter to Hyde, Paul M. Weyrich, president of the Free
Congress Foundation, voiced his "strong opposition." The Christian Coalition,
which originally supported the bill, said in a letter to Hyde in March that
it could no longer do so because of the dog racing and jai alai provisions.
The Traditional Values Coalition has also changed its mind. "When it gave an
exemption to parimutuel betting, we said this is too much," said the group's
chairman, the Rev. Lou Sheldon. "It opens a giant Pandora's box."
Staff writer Juliet Eilperin contributed to this report.
� 2000 The Washington Post Company
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