The US House Committee on Financial Services is to vote on 24 June on whether
to dissolve the controversial Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act of
2006.
The Committee has marked up legislation
(H.R.
5767) 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.
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"Congress has studied this issue and heard from the financial services
community and federal regulators that the current ban on internet gambling is
burdensome and doomed to fail," said Jeffrey Sandman, a spokesman for the Safe
and Secure Internet Gambling Initiative.
"Now it is time for Congress to change course and find a way to protect the
millions of Americans that are continuing to gamble online."
H.R. 5767 was introduced by Barney Frank and Ron Paul in April after they
claimed that "it was clear at the hearing that the regulations are unworkable
for the financial services industry, and this bill would therefore prohibit
their implementation".
Last year, Frank introduced the Internet Gambling Regulation and Enforcement
Act
(H.R.
2046) that would regulate web gambling.
The current ban on internet gambling is burdensome and doomed to fail
Jeffrey Sandman Safe and Secure Internet Gambling Initiative
The bill requires internet gambling operators licensed by the US Financial
Crimes Enforcement Network to put in place safeguards to protect against
underage and compulsive gambling.
It is also designed to ensure the integrity of financial transactions, while
at the same time reinforcing the rights of states to control what, if any, level
of internet gambling is permissible within their borders.
A tax revenue analysis prepared by PricewaterhouseCoopers suggests that
taxation of regulated internet gambling is expected to generate between $8.7bn
and $42.8bn in federal revenues during its first 10 years.
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