Archive for June, 2010

Friday, June 4th, 2010

In a scene that we’ve become used to in the US poker industry, a high European court has ruled that the Netherlands is legally allowed to stop online gambling operators from entering the company’s market if the government’s aim was to “combat fraud and crime.”

While the majority of European countries are slowly seeing the reality and viability of opening up their markets to competition in a bid to introduce a regulated and legalized system, the Netherlands (surprising, considering this country’s liberal outlook on many other issues) has stood steadfast in its decision to block with brute force any other operator except its own lottery operator, De Lotto.

Ladbrokes and Betfair online betting sites both brought separate cases to the European Union Court of Justice, claiming that the Netherlands’ policy counters the free trade charters signed between member states. Ladbrokes said that Holland’s policy was “hard to reconcile with its expansive gambling policy, which is characterized by the introduction and active advertising, marketing and promotion of new gaming products.”

Betfair called on the European Commission to take a lead on the issue of online poker and gambling on the continent “so that we can separate fact from fiction and settle the online gambling debate once and for all.”

The group also scoffed at the idea that online gambling was more detrimental than other forms of gambling, as claimed by the Dutch in their case, and said that these claims were simply “without foundation.”

The Secretary General of EGBA, Sigrid Ligne said that the internet raises new questions and challenges that are not possible to resolve through the judicial process.

She called on the Netherlands to examine its gambling policy once more and to introduce reforms that we have come to see in more enlightened countries such as France, Italy and Denmark.

Friday, June 4th, 2010

The young Dutch poker professional, 22 year old Joran van der Sloot, was arrested yesterday in Chile and held for his involvement in at least one murder involving a Peruvian woman last week. Van der Sloot slipped across the border after he allegedly killed Stephany Flores Ramirez in a hotel room in Lima. Her body was found the following day and the police immediately issued a warrant for van der Sloot after the room was found to be registered in his name and hotel staff confirmed that they were last seen together.

Van der Sloot’s name may be familiar to many due to him being a suspect in the murder of Natalee Holloway in 2005 – exactly five years to the day of the new murder case. At the time, camera footage shows Holloway leaving a bar with van der Sloot in Aruba. However, although the teen never showed up to rejoin her group the following day, her body was never found and van der Sloot managed to be released after being arrested and questioned twice, simply through lack of evidence.

In 2008, van der Sloot was caught by an undercover investigator selling Thai women into sex slavery after duping them into believing that they were going to become exotic dancers in the Netherlands. He made $13,000 per woman yet somehow avoided arrest on these counts as well.

Van der Sloot is well known on the live poker circuit and was in Chile to attend the PokerStars Latin American Poker Tour (LAPT). He is known to be a sharp and talented young player.

Yesterday, van der Sloot’s lawyer tried to portray his client as a victim of the media and said: “He’s a popular suspect, he’s someone who people believe – people have very strong opinions about this – that he got away with murder, literally, in Aruba which, the evidence says otherwise, the judges have said otherwise. But he’s someone who is easy to point the finger at, he wears a bulls-eye on his back.”