Wednesday, November 11, 2015

Ya wanna bet?


Breibart News November 11, 2015 by Daniel J Flynn

The office of New York’s attorney general fired off cease-and-desist letters to FanDuel and DraftKings fantasy sports websites.

Tuesday’s letters conclude that FanDuel and DraftKings’ “operations constitute illegal gambling under New York law.” The nearly identical missives order the sites to cease accepting money from residents of the Empire State.
“FanDuel’s customers are clearly placing bets on events outside of their control or influence, specifically on the real-game performance of professional athletes,” the attorney general’s office holds. “Further, each FanDuel wager represents a wager on a ‘contest of chance’ where winning or losing depends on numerous elements of chance to a ‘material degree.'”

New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman launched an investigation into the sites in early October after the New York Times published a report alleging that a DraftKings employee may have received inside information before winning on the rival FanDuel site. An internal investigation by DraftKings denied the allegations by noting the employee made his picks prior to the availability of the information. A law firm employed by DraftKings to investigate the matter concluded that the employee “could not possibly have entered the winning lineup based upon his receipt of the Company’s nonpublic aggregate ownership percentage information, because he did not receive that information until 40 minutes after the lineup was locked.”
New York’s attorney general classifies the websites as threats to public health and holds that 99 percent of the contestants miss out on the riches claimed by the top one percent of players.  The “top one percent,” Kathleen McGee, the AG office’s internet bureau chief, points out, “receive the vast majority of the winnings.”
New York runs a state lottery and allows gambling on horse racing. The state houses numerous Indian gaming venues. In 2013, New York voters approved of casino gambling. But the letter from the AG’s office distinguishes FanDuel and DraftKings from other wagering: “Certain structural aspects of DFS make it especially dangerous, including the quick rate of play, the large jackpots, and the false perception that it is eminently winnable. Ultimately, it is these types of harms that our Constitution and gambling laws were intended to prevent in New York.”
While DraftKings operates out of a ritzy section of Boston near the Public Garden, FanDuel calls Union Square in Manhattan home.
“FanDuel DFS contests are neither harmless nor victimless,” the attorney general’s office maintains. “Daily Fantasy Sports are creating the same public health and economic concerns as other forms of gambling, including addiction. Finally, FanDuel’s advertisements seriously mislead New York citizens about their prospects of winning.”
(Rant: I never was a fan of fantasy sports. My fantasies involve Jeannie and Samantha teaming up with me in a bathtub. I always argued with my friends. If I am going to spend money I will just bet on the game. Or better yet go to the game. Not whack my bag over trading for a reserve outfielder or third string offensive tackle.
Don't get me wrong. I used to love to bet. Sports. The ponies. Cards. You name it. But gambling in the end is a mugs game. The more action you get the more money you lose. That is why they build a bigger casino every year. 
This is just a power grab by the government. When I was a kid the bookie on the corner would take a number or a bet on the horses. Then the government came in with OTB and Lotto and the corner bookie closed up. Of course the government screwed it up like it always does. OTB went bankrupt and some state lotteries can't even pay off if you win! The Mafia always paid off if you won. Of course you always paid them if you lost but that was another story.
FanDuel and Draft Kings are on every other commercial on WFAN the sports station. Even more than Viagra for crying out loud. It is in your face day and night. They are making money like Uber so the SJW and the Liberal tax grabbers want to destroy it.
Waddayagonnado?}

7 comments:

rhhardin said...

It seems like interstate commerce to me.

ndspinelli said...

I read Vito Lopez died. He would not close down these websites, he would squeeze them for kickbacks like any good NY politician. There are big companies involved in these enterprises. I read the sites are still taking bets from NYers. The interwebs are the new Wild West and the govt. is losing control of their rigged games.

chickelit said...

The Great American Sports Economy -- fantasy

Dear corrupt left, go F yourselves said...

or you can work for the EPA.

The ideal tax payer funded fantasy bureaucracy. Bill Clinton approves, I'm sure.

Trump fan said...

Trump loves fan duels !!!

bagoh20 said...

"...customers are clearly placing bets on events outside of their control or influence,... a wager on a ‘contest of chance’ where winning or losing depends on numerous elements of chance to a material degree.”

Have they heard of a thing called "Wall Street"?

Lem Vibe Bandit said...

Could it be that state lotteries are down and they're attributing it to these sites?