|
Poker is riding an unprecedented wave of popularity. Furthermore,
its scope is beyond the highly visible signs of television programs,
tournament attendance, and internet sites. It extends to college
dormitories and neighborhood tournaments. It extends even to people
who are not poker players at all, but have friends that are now
into the game. Poker is mainstream now!
Victor Hugo said, An invasion of armies can be resisted,
but not an idea whose time has come. We poker players have
received the wrong end of the stick for a long time, as far as the
law is concerned. If we play in a private game, we worry about getting
raided, robbed, or stiffed. Public cardrooms have multiplied, but
there still are not nearly enough to meet the demand. Internet poker
is treated the same way as internet casinos, despite the fact that
they are fundamentally different. Our national and state laws do
not reflect the feelings of most 21st century Americans. We need
to alter the law and make it reflect the will of the populace. Our
time has come.
I am writing a series of articles on what needs to be done and
how to accomplish it. In the present article, we will look at what
laws need to be changed Here is a wish list.
A private poker game should be legal in every
state. I am not talking about a raked game; that is running
a poker game as a business, which is illegal everywhere if
you do not have a license. I am talking only about a group of people
who get together and engage in what is known as social gambling.
In 1990 I presented a paper to an international conference on gambling
titled, A Comparative Study of State Laws on Social Gambling.
My study was reprinted as a chapter in the 1991 book of William
Eadington, put out by the University of Nevada Reno, titled Gambling
and Public Policy. It is worth looking at the way my study
shows many states to treat poker-playing as criminal behavior. At
that time, 27 of the 50 states considered the playing of poker anywhere
than a licensed establishment to be illegal even if it were done
in someones home. It is true that this type of law is seldom
enforced, but the time has come to get all of these laws off the
books.
The state of Oregon has a model law regarding social gambling,
defining it as, A game, other than a lottery, between players
in a private home, where no house player, house bank, or house odds
exist and there is no house income from the operation of the social
game. Such a game in Oregon would also be legal in a
private business, private club, or place of public accommodation.
Any person who is a player in an illegal poker
game should not be charged with a crime. The thing that
makes the game illegal is the sponsor of the game is running it
as a business. Is the player supposed to investigate whether the
amount the games host takes out for food and drink is exorbitant
enough to make a game illegal? I think not; this is unfair. That
means if the player is being overcharged, he is breaking the law!
A model law for the right attitude of a state toward a player is
this Kentucky law. Player means a person who engages
in any form of gambling solely as a bettor, without receiving or
becoming entitled to receive any profit there from other than personal
gambling winnings, and without rendering any material assistance
to the establishment, conduct, or operation of the particular gambling
activity. ...The status of a player shall be a defense
to any [gambling] prosecution.
A person who is arrested for running an illegal
poker game should receive a penalty in proportion to the crime.
The best way I can make my point is to simply quote the Oklahoma
state law on this subject. None of the other states of the union
are as draconian (though Saudi Arabia has an even harsher penalty).
Except as provided in the Oklahoma Charity Games Act, every
person who opens, or causes to be opened, or who conducts, whether
for hire or not, or carries on either poker, roulette, craps or
any banking or percentage, or any gambling game played with dice,
cards or any device, for money, checks, credits, or any representatives
of value, or who either as owner or employee, whether for hire or
not, deals for those engaged in any such game, shall be guilty of
a felony, and upon conviction thereof, shall be punished by a fine
of not less than Five Hundred Dollars ($500.00), nor more than Two
Thousand Dollars ($2,000.00), and by imprisonment in the State Penitentiary
for a term of not less than one (1) year nor more than ten (10)
years.
One to ten years in jail for dealing poker in a home game that
is raked? That is a pretty stiff sentence even if Martha Stewart
redoes the entire penal system. Yes, it is better than having a
hand chopped off...
Realize that my Oklahoma poker friends assure me there are no fewer
illegal private games in Oklahoma than elsewhere. Perhaps the unfairly
harsh penalty make law enforcement reluctant to enforce the law.
Any locality that wants to have a vote of the
people to make poker rooms legal in that area should be free to
do so. As things stand now, most states have a law against
cardrooms that cannot be superseded by a local vote. This is wrong.
To give the locals control over poker in their area, we need to
either get the legislature to change the law or have the people
change it by passing a proposition to that effect. In my opinion,
poker is now sufficiently accepted by Americans to pass such a proposition
in any state. If we organize sufficiently to gather enough signatures
to get such a proposition on the ballot, the fight is practically
won.
A business or group of businesses should be
allowed to hold poker tournaments if no entry fee is charged.
It is now becoming popular for certain businesses such as taverns
to hold poker tournaments where prizes are given away, but no entry
fee is required. According to the law everywhere, this is not gambling,
because no fee for playing has been charged. It is a giveaway promotion.
So if it is not gambling, why would it be illegal? In my home state
of Michigan, it is illegal because the Michigan Liquor Commission
does not allow poker in bars. During the seventies, I owned a backgammon
club in the Detroit area. At that time, dice were not allowed in
bars. I went to the Michigan Liquor Commission and asked them to
legalize backgammon in liquor establishments. They did. I would
not be surprised to see history repeating itself with poker. A number
of states already have bar poker tournaments. Does yours?
Why not?
As you can see, there is no shortage of work that needs to be
done in reforming archaic laws involving poker. The time is ripe
for making America a place where there is truly justice for alleven
us poker players!


|