USA 's article on on line gambling.My wife is reading the opening lines to Wier's article this morning while the 2 of us are having coffee.....sits at the laptop..wife in another room ......betting on virtually any sport............"hon,that desribes you,right?
"yea,sweetie..I'll still have some term papers owed North Texas...
Online sports betting spins out of control
By Tom Weir, USA TODAY
A college senior sits at his laptop. His wife is in another room, thinking her husband is writing a term paper. Instead he's on an Internet gambling Web site, where he's able to bet on virtually any professional or college sports event by charging the wagers to a credit card. His losses have reached $25,000. His tuition money is gone. And he can't stop.
Former Florida State player Adrian McPherson signs a no-contest plea to gambling charges.
By Craig Litten, pool photo for AP
That's how one Internet gambling addict described his predicament recently to Arnie Wexler, who runs a national hotline for problem gamblers.
Wexler, who promises confidentiality to callers, is among the counselors dealing with a rapid increase in gambling addictions in teenagers and college students. They blame the addictive behavior on the growing accessibility of gambling Web sites ? 25 in 1997, roughly 1,800 today.
"Internet gambling is probably the most dangerous thing we've got going at this time," Wexler says. "It's available 24 hours a day. You can do it in your pajamas or your birthday suit."
No one can be certain just how big the industry has become, but government officials and industry insiders estimate overall losses on Internet gambling among Americans will amount to more than $3 billion this year.
In Congress, where some members are concerned about the explosion of Internet gambling and the possibility that athletes might be betting on their own games, moves are under way to curb the industry. Some industry officials insist Internet gambling is so big it cannot be stopped.
Internet gambling is illegal in the USA but is permitted to operate in numerous other nations. Most of the Web sites operate out of the Caribbean or Latin America but are accessible anywhere in the world.
"You'd be shocked at how many kids are doing this," says Ed Looney, director of the New Jersey Council on Compulsive Gambling. "The No. 1 form of problem gambling for college students is Internet betting on sports."
At the Algamus Recovery Center in Anna Maria, Fla., director Rick Benson says that the treatment facility for gambling addicts has seen a 25% increase in Internet-related cases in the last two years. Benson says the majority are white, college-educated males, "with some high level of competitive sports participation in their background."
Some stars gamble, too
Internet gambling traps well-known individuals, too. In June, Washington Capitals hockey star Jaromir Jagr admitted he ran up a $500,000 debt betting on sports events five years ago with the Belize-based CaribSports Web site.
Former Florida State quarterback Adrian McPherson pleaded no-contest last month to misdemeanor charges of betting on college and professional sports, including his own games, on the Costa Rica-based site SBG Global. He was sentenced to community service but received no jail time and is hopeful the NCAA will let him play again. This week he enrolled at Tennessee State.
Such cases show how "Internet gambling is going to become an increasing problem with athletes," says U.S. Sen. Jon Kyl, R-Ariz., sponsor of legislation that would make it illegal for U.S. banks and all other financial institutions to transfer funds to gambling Web sites.
"I do think it represents a relatively new threat to the integrity of sport, because of the younger generation growing up with computers," Kyl says. "It's just a natural part of their life and (shows) the ease with which they're exposed to gambling on the Internet."
The Senate Banking Committee approved his bill unanimously July 31. In June the House passed a similar bill 319-104. Such legislation has been approved by both houses before but never in the same year. Kyl's bill goes to the full Senate for a vote.
Industry insiders say that instead of prohibiting Internet gambling, Congress could be generating millions in revenue for the USA if only the enterprise were taxed.
"The sad fact is that we have members of Congress who not only are in the dark about the realities of Internet gambling, they want to put their heads further in the sand," says Alan Feldman, spokesman for the MGM Mirage casino, which has shut down its offshore gambling Web site because of congressional opposition.
Easy to gamble online
The growing concern is online gambling may create more addicts.
It's very easy for a young person to take a parent's credit or debit card and open an account to bet online. The Federal Trade Commission last year reported an informal survey of 100 gambling Web sites found young people could gain easy access, that warnings on underage gambling generally were hard to find and that 20% of the Web sites had no warnings.
Internet gambling is "so new that even if there were a whole bunch of pathological (Internet) gamblers, we wouldn't know about them," says Christine Reilly of Harvard University's Institute for Research on Pathological Gambling and Related Disorders.
A 2001 study by the Harvard institute suggests young computer users have an increased risk of becoming problem gamblers. The study found that 5% to 6% of college-age and younger people are "pathological" in their betting ? gambling to recoup losses, spending money they don't have, unable to stop ? compared with 1% to 2% of the general population. Updated figures are expected this fall.
"There's not a lot of awareness of it," Reilly says. "If clinicians would just become aware and start screening, we could probably head off (many) problems. The focus has been on drugs and alcohol."
That same unknowing attitude is prevalent among young Internet gamblers, says Pat Fowler, executive director of the Florida Council on Compulsive Gambling.
"A lot don't even realize it's illegal to do it," Fowler says of the rarely prosecuted crime of sports betting, legal only in Nevada. "They go into it thinking that, because it's available on the Internet, it must be legal. It tends to be the primary source of wagering for college students, especially for sports wagers. (Online) they don't have the fear of placing bets with a bookie, which most know is illegal."
"yea,sweetie..I'll still have some term papers owed North Texas...
Online sports betting spins out of control
By Tom Weir, USA TODAY
A college senior sits at his laptop. His wife is in another room, thinking her husband is writing a term paper. Instead he's on an Internet gambling Web site, where he's able to bet on virtually any professional or college sports event by charging the wagers to a credit card. His losses have reached $25,000. His tuition money is gone. And he can't stop.
Former Florida State player Adrian McPherson signs a no-contest plea to gambling charges.
By Craig Litten, pool photo for AP
That's how one Internet gambling addict described his predicament recently to Arnie Wexler, who runs a national hotline for problem gamblers.
Wexler, who promises confidentiality to callers, is among the counselors dealing with a rapid increase in gambling addictions in teenagers and college students. They blame the addictive behavior on the growing accessibility of gambling Web sites ? 25 in 1997, roughly 1,800 today.
"Internet gambling is probably the most dangerous thing we've got going at this time," Wexler says. "It's available 24 hours a day. You can do it in your pajamas or your birthday suit."
No one can be certain just how big the industry has become, but government officials and industry insiders estimate overall losses on Internet gambling among Americans will amount to more than $3 billion this year.
In Congress, where some members are concerned about the explosion of Internet gambling and the possibility that athletes might be betting on their own games, moves are under way to curb the industry. Some industry officials insist Internet gambling is so big it cannot be stopped.
Internet gambling is illegal in the USA but is permitted to operate in numerous other nations. Most of the Web sites operate out of the Caribbean or Latin America but are accessible anywhere in the world.
"You'd be shocked at how many kids are doing this," says Ed Looney, director of the New Jersey Council on Compulsive Gambling. "The No. 1 form of problem gambling for college students is Internet betting on sports."
At the Algamus Recovery Center in Anna Maria, Fla., director Rick Benson says that the treatment facility for gambling addicts has seen a 25% increase in Internet-related cases in the last two years. Benson says the majority are white, college-educated males, "with some high level of competitive sports participation in their background."
Some stars gamble, too
Internet gambling traps well-known individuals, too. In June, Washington Capitals hockey star Jaromir Jagr admitted he ran up a $500,000 debt betting on sports events five years ago with the Belize-based CaribSports Web site.
Former Florida State quarterback Adrian McPherson pleaded no-contest last month to misdemeanor charges of betting on college and professional sports, including his own games, on the Costa Rica-based site SBG Global. He was sentenced to community service but received no jail time and is hopeful the NCAA will let him play again. This week he enrolled at Tennessee State.
Such cases show how "Internet gambling is going to become an increasing problem with athletes," says U.S. Sen. Jon Kyl, R-Ariz., sponsor of legislation that would make it illegal for U.S. banks and all other financial institutions to transfer funds to gambling Web sites.
"I do think it represents a relatively new threat to the integrity of sport, because of the younger generation growing up with computers," Kyl says. "It's just a natural part of their life and (shows) the ease with which they're exposed to gambling on the Internet."
The Senate Banking Committee approved his bill unanimously July 31. In June the House passed a similar bill 319-104. Such legislation has been approved by both houses before but never in the same year. Kyl's bill goes to the full Senate for a vote.
Industry insiders say that instead of prohibiting Internet gambling, Congress could be generating millions in revenue for the USA if only the enterprise were taxed.
"The sad fact is that we have members of Congress who not only are in the dark about the realities of Internet gambling, they want to put their heads further in the sand," says Alan Feldman, spokesman for the MGM Mirage casino, which has shut down its offshore gambling Web site because of congressional opposition.
Easy to gamble online
The growing concern is online gambling may create more addicts.
It's very easy for a young person to take a parent's credit or debit card and open an account to bet online. The Federal Trade Commission last year reported an informal survey of 100 gambling Web sites found young people could gain easy access, that warnings on underage gambling generally were hard to find and that 20% of the Web sites had no warnings.
Internet gambling is "so new that even if there were a whole bunch of pathological (Internet) gamblers, we wouldn't know about them," says Christine Reilly of Harvard University's Institute for Research on Pathological Gambling and Related Disorders.
A 2001 study by the Harvard institute suggests young computer users have an increased risk of becoming problem gamblers. The study found that 5% to 6% of college-age and younger people are "pathological" in their betting ? gambling to recoup losses, spending money they don't have, unable to stop ? compared with 1% to 2% of the general population. Updated figures are expected this fall.
"There's not a lot of awareness of it," Reilly says. "If clinicians would just become aware and start screening, we could probably head off (many) problems. The focus has been on drugs and alcohol."
That same unknowing attitude is prevalent among young Internet gamblers, says Pat Fowler, executive director of the Florida Council on Compulsive Gambling.
"A lot don't even realize it's illegal to do it," Fowler says of the rarely prosecuted crime of sports betting, legal only in Nevada. "They go into it thinking that, because it's available on the Internet, it must be legal. It tends to be the primary source of wagering for college students, especially for sports wagers. (Online) they don't have the fear of placing bets with a bookie, which most know is illegal."