The Safe and Secure Internet Gambling Initiative (SSIGI) has announced its
support for new legislation that would prohibit the Department of the Treasury
and Federal Reserve System from proposing, prescribing or implementing any
regulations related to the current ban on internet gambling.
The bill, introduced by Barney Frank and Ron Paul, is the latest in a series
of attacks on the 2006 Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act (UIGEA).
"The Frank-Paul bill would stop the US government from taking any further
steps on regulations that would require all the country's financial institutions
to block internet gambling payments," said SSIGI spokesman Jeff Sandman.
"It's a bold move, but a necessary one in light of the warnings from the
Treasury and Federal Reserve that they did not know how to write regulations to
solve the problems created by UIGEA.
"Further, witnesses representing a broad spectrum of the financial services
community unanimously stated that the current ban on internet gambling is
dangerous to the payments system and ineffective in stopping people from using
the internet to play poker, make bets on horses or engage in other types of
wagering."
Some argue that the current
internet
gambling ban creates significant additional burdens for US financial
institutions, arguing that it is unfair to turn them into the "internet gambling
police".
Testimony before Congress earlier this month offered proof that financial
services institutions would face serious regulatory burdens in attempting to
enforce UIGEA and related regulations, which is unlikely to stop millions of
Americans from gambling online.
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