Archive for April, 2010

Tuesday, April 13th, 2010

Update: The hearing has been delayed.

Two bills that could affect online poker legislation in the United States are up for discussion in the House Committee on Financial Services this week. It was announced over the weekend that HR 2266 and HR 2267 are to be presented on Friday in the Rayburn House Office Building in Washington DC at 10 pm. Both bills would have a dramatic affect on US accepted online casinos and poker rooms found offshore.

The Congressional committee will essentially examine the two pro-poker regulation bills in question.

As a recap, the two bills introduced by Chairman Barney Frank, are as follows:

HR 2266: The Reasonable Prudence in Regulation Act will delay the implementation of the Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act (UIGEA) which is set to kick in on June 1, 2010.

HR 2267: The Internet Gambling Regulation, Consumer Protection and Enforcement Act of 2009 will call for the regulation and legalization of online gambling and poker, and will nullify the controversial UIGEA.

While everyone in the industry is hopeful that HR 2267 will be adopted, putting an end to the UIGEA once and for all, it would still be seen as a victory if HR 2266 temporarily delays the implementation of the act in June. At the beginning of the year, pressure by the online poker and gambling industry drove Congress to delay the act’s implementation for a six month period.

The Safe and Secure Internet Gambling Initiative welcomed the news that the two bills would be discussed by the House Committee on Financial Services this coming Friday. The group’s spokesperson, Michael Waxman said in a statement: “This hearing will provide further evidence that UIGEA is a poorly-crafted law that simply does not work. A more common sense approach to protect Americans is required. We expect this hearing to provide further impetus for the House Financial Services Committee and Congress to address this issue and move forward Chairman Frank’s regulatory bill.”

Tuesday, April 13th, 2010

Marcus Bebb-Jones, who was accused by the US authorities for killing his wife Sabrina in 1997, will be extradited to the United States, a UK High Court has ruled. The judge ruled that extraditing the former poker champion to the United States will not breach his human rights.

The British courts were due to decide on Bebb-Jones’ future last month, but the decision was held up after his lawyer, Ben Cooper, sought assurance from the US authorities that if he faced trial in the United States, he would not get the death penalty. He was told by the US authorities that they would not be seeking the maximum punishment.

“If the defendant is found guilty of murder in the first degree, which is the charge he faces, the maximum penalty would be a term of life imprisonment without the possibility of parole,” said the ruling judge Howard Riddle at the City of Westminster Magistrate’s Court in London. “The defense argues that a whole life sentence which, in real terms, is irreducible violates a prisoner’s rights.”

“I accept the possibility that some people would consider such a sentence to be grossly disproportionate,” he said. “However, it is not obviously or clearly grossly disproportionate. On these facts the prospect of a whole life term falls short of inhuman and degrading treatment.”

Marcus Bebb-Jones lived with his wife and infant son in Colorado in the 1990’s. He is believed to have murdered his wife and buried her body in a national park in Colorado. He then went on a weekend of frenzied gambling, drinking and sex using his wife’s credit cards in Vegas, before trying to commit suicide.

After that failed attempt, he fled with his son to England and took up professional poker. Bebb-Jones was well known on the live poker circuit and came in the money in several tournaments. He has since lost all his winnings and is living on benefits, according to the Kidderminster Shuttle.

Tuesday, April 6th, 2010

It must be nice to be able to retire at the ripe old age of 20, with $2.6 million in your back pocket. The Canadian poker pro, Mike McDonald, known better by his online poker handle, Timex, has announced that he wants to retire from poker as he feels “no ambition towards poker.”

Timex wrote on his blog that while he still loved poker and that he will never quit playing the game, he feels that at this point he is ready to retire from his hugely successful albeit very brief poker career.

“In poker, although I’ve met tons of people I really like and had tons of cool experiences, I just kind of feel like there is nowhere to go from here,” said McDonald on his blog. “I can’t really think of anyone who is more engrossed in the poker world than me who I aspire to be like and poker seems to be a lot more isolating than I initially realized.”

McDonald has some major plans that he is excited to begin already, and having so many millions in live tournament winnings in his bank account will certainly help him. Education is certainly top of his list of priorities and he noted that on his blog as well. “I think returning to school and trying out a wide variety of courses, learning new things, meeting new people, and just beginning to live a life that is more in touch with everyone else seems aligned with my interests,” he wrote. “I currently am trying to get in touch with the University of Waterloo about possibly taking some classes this summer and depending on how that goes, may return to Waterloo or another university in the fall.”

Timex was the youngest person to ever win a live European Poker Tour event in 2008, by winning the German Open prize of €933,000. His latest win has been the $1,500 No Limit Hold ‘em event at the 2010 PokerStars Caribbean Adventure tournament, where he bagged nearly $150,000.