By Michael A. Hiltzik
Online gambling companies were grappling with a new
crisis Monday after the Senate quietly passed a bill forbidding American
banks and credit card companies from processing payments to them.
Shares of publicly traded Internet gaming operators
plummeted on the London Stock Exchange after the measure was attached
as a rider to a bill designed to enhance U.S. port security and passed
late Friday.
Online websites also would be prohibited from accepting
U.S. payments, but because most are based overseas, the ability of
U.S. authorities to prosecute them is uncertain.
Also unclear is what sort of gambling falls under the
prohibition. Although Internet sports betting is plainly outlawed
by the federal Wire Act, there is some doubt whether online poker
or other games fall under the same prohibition.
"That's a major weakness" of the new measure,
said I. Nelson Rose, an expert in gambling law at Whittier Law School.
"It left out expanding the reach of the Wire Act,
so poker sites can say, 'We're not covered by that.' "
The gambling provision's late-night passage took many
in the gaming world by surprise. Many thought the Senate bill was
dead in the current session, meaning that both houses of Congress
would have to start from scratch next year.
U.S. casinos were neutral on the bill. Although they
don't like the offshore competition, domestic gambling companies might
someday want to open their own online casinos.
Online gaming companies headquartered in Britain were
among those taking the biggest hit from the measure. Although most
have been trying in recent months to wean themselves from the U.S.
market as the threat of congressional regulation has risen, American
customers still account for the greatest share of their business.
"This development is a significant setback for
our company, our shareholders, our players and our industry,"
said Mitch Garber, chief executive of PartyGaming Ltd., the operator
of the PartyPoker website, in a statement.
Shares of PartyGaming, based in Gibraltar, lost 58%
in Monday's trading in London.
Shares of Neteller, a British payment processing company
based on the Isle of Man, fell more than 60%. Such companies have
sprung up in recent years after American payment processors, such
as the PayPal subsidiary of EBay Inc., voluntarily ceased accepting
payments to online gambling sites.
In a statement issued after the Senate vote, Neteller
said, "It is currently unclear how Neteller, a European company,
with no assets, presence or employees in the U.S., would be affected
by this bill." The company said it would have a "clearer
view" after U.S. authorities issued the regulations.
U.S. banks and credit card companies have generally
ceased transferring funds for internet gambling over concerns that
they could be charged with aiding and abetting illegal activities.
But they have opposed legislation that makes them criminally liable
for such transfers, arguing that in many cases they don't have the
ability to determine whether a recipient is a gambling website.
Representatives of industry groups said Monday that
they were satisfied that the new bill took that difficulty into account.
"We wanted to be sure that there was some protection
if we act in good faith," said Floyd Stoner, executive director
for congressional relations at the American Bankers Assn.
The Senate's action followed a string of other legal
attacks in the U.S. on the online gaming industry. In July, David
Carruthers, CEO of London-listed firm BetOnSports, was arrested while
making an international air connection in Dallas. Charges against
him include racketeering and mail fraud.
Last month Peter Dicks, then chairman of Sportingbet,
a British online company, was arrested at New York's Kennedy Airport
on a warrant alleging that he violated a Louisiana law barring online
gambling. Dicks was released and returned to Britain on Friday