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So Carib got noticed.
But a lot more than high visibility contributed to Carib?s being targeted for action by the feds. It appears the U.S. embarked on a sting-like strategy to ensnare Carib, along with other Antiguan gaming companies.
Upon being brought to light, this nefarious activity gives off the stench of a decaying fish, and is an embarrassment to the feds rather than a badge of investigative honor.
According to information we obtained, the U.S. Government is accused of falsely representing itself as wanting to be a partner to Antigua, using a cover story that alleged the U.S. would help Antigua regulate its burgeoning online gaming industry.
The rationale for offering such ?assistance? was phony U.S. concern over protecting players and an interest in helping the industry evolve. C?mon, when was the last time Big Brother exhibited even the slightest interest in providing bettors with recourse to being scammed?
So, it turns out that the dirty reality and the feds? true purpose was to infiltrate the industry to obtain information heretofore unavailable. That enabled them to prosecute U.S. citizens who were lawfully engaging in the very business the feds were helping ?regulate.?
Based on an examination of documents which reveal what transpired, it is clear the U.S. never intended to be helpful to Antigua, but instead used duplicity and double-talk to burrow its way into data is had no right to see.
By the time the plot was uncovered, the feds had begun prosecuting operators from Antigua, wreaking havoc on what had been a well established and regulated industry.
Essentially, the U.S. government?s motive in unleashing its legal tsunami against Antigua is to prevent millions of dollars in wagers from leaving the U.S.
Antigua retaliated by taking the U.S. to the grievance committee of the World Trade Organization. It charged the U.S. with unlawful restraint and interference with the jurisdiction?s profitable and fast-growing online gaming industry. According to Antiguan Prime Minister Lester Bird, 75 percent of the islands? gaming organizations left the jurisdiction.
The WTO has heard the case and deliberations are underway. A decision is expected in March. It is worth noting that testimony from other nations was instrumental in supporting Antigua?s complaint vs. the U.S.
Meanwhile, back at Carib, Jon Rogers continues his efforts to recover more than $1.6 million confiscated by the government which, incidentally, still has not charged him with anything, and simply says he is the target of an investigation. Presumably, they are awaiting a decision in the WTO case.
Earlier in the column we cited a personal interest in this story. Here it is. We were visited by two IRS agents and a postal department investigator who are involved in building the argument against Carib.
To their credit, they did not come off as Gestapo-like agents. They were cordial, pleasant and inquisitive. The focus of their inquiries was related to financial activity between our publications and Carib Sportsbook. Particularly advertising payments to Players Choice and Players Guide, the magazine we published from 1994 to 2001.
We answered all their questions to the best of our ability, noting that Carib generally paid by check. Moreover, although we don?t have check stubs, we don?t remember ever getting a check from Carib drawn on an American bank.
They wanted to know about when we visited Carib and whom we met with. All of our visits to Carib, both on Antigua and in Belize, are well documented in our Sportsbook Scene column coverage of same.
We provided the agents with old copies of Players Guide, and a few issues of Players Choice, the tabloid newspaper of which we suspended publication in September but have resumed as a weekly magazine.
The investigators asked us who owns Carib, and we responded that we didn?t know, since we have never been privy to any official documents which would reveal that info.
The impromptu visit did not upset us, or leave a bad taste in our mouth. We realize the folks who questioned us have a job to do. But we did offer the observation that going after Carib seems to be a waste and misuse of government resources.
Given an unfriendly world that views America as a blundering giant with a bull?s eye painted on the Stars and Stripes, we would rather see agents pursuing terrorists and their ilk. That would be more productive than harassing enterprising Americans who are trying to give our country at least a toehold in a burgeoning industry that promises to get even bigger, with or without U.S. participation.
To quantify the size of the offshore gaming market, revenue from online gaming last year exceeded $5 billion, according to published estimates by Bear, Stearns & Co. More than 70 percent of that money was wagered by Americans. The General Accounting Office estimates there are in excess of 1,500 gaming sites in cyberspace.
To suggest that our government?s bizarre agenda of obsessing over online gaming is utterly cuckoo, is a polite way of saying the inmates are running the asylum. Certainly there is no outcry by the citizenry that this ludicrous waste of time and effort should be in place.
When Iraq is safe for our GIs, and the anti-American actions of our adversaries are limited to rhetoric and demonstrations, rather than horrific violence, that might be a more appropriate time to devote resources to dealing with relatively lower priority issues.
Our government needs to make a more intelligent and realistic assessment of its enemies. There are forces in today?s world with the motivation and resources to destroy the U.S. And they ain?t bookmakers!