Another Blow to Internet Gambling

1–2 minutes

·

·

Two founders of NETeller Pic, a payment processor for gambling sites, were arrested last week on U.S. charges that they transferred billions of dollars from American citizens to overseas companies. Stephen Lawrence was arrested in the U.S. Virgin Islands and John Lefebvre was arrested in Malibu. Both men are Canadian citizens. Andrew Beyer, writing in the Washington Post, says the Justice Department’s crackdown on Internet gambling is “another war that America didn’t need to wage.” Beyer chronicles how we got to this point and talks about the recent decision by Pinnacle Sports to get out of the U.S. market, noting that there will probably never be another Pinnacle. “Historically, bookmakers have required customers to lay $110 to win $100 on a sports bet. … Yet Pinnacle cut the normal margins in half — sports bettors had to lay odds of 105 to 100 — and immediately attracted the biggest players around the world. Cyberspace displaced Las Vegas as the hub of American sports betting.” Thanks to Tom Kirkendall.

Leave a comment

Feature is an online magazine made by culture lovers. We offer weekly reflections, reviews, and news on art, literature, and music.

Please subscribe to our newsletter to let us know whenever we publish new content. We send no spam, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

← Back

Thank you for your response. ✨

Designed with WordPress.