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The National Law Forum - Page 681 of 753 - Legal Updates. Legislative Analysis. Litigation News.

Dept of Energy Liable for $150 Million Because It Has Not Built a Nuclear Waste Facility

GT Law

On May 18, in Yankee Atomic Elec Co. v. United States, the Federal Circuit affirmed a damages judgment of $142.6 million, and added $17.0 million to the judgment by granting a cross-appeal, in a breach of contract action against the government arising from the Department of Energy’s failure to remove spent nuclear fuel from three reactor sites in New England.  The decision came in three consolidated cases from among the 55 that have been filed in the Court of Federal Claims as a result of DOE’s breach of contracts it has with all nuclear utility companies under which the agency was required to begin removing spent fuel from reactor sites in 1998.  Due to chronic delays with the DOE program, including controversy over the proposed Yucca Mountain, Nevada, repository DOE has never commenced any performance.  The utilities have therefore been required to license and construct on-site storage facilities for the nuclear waste, the substantial cost of which constitutes the bulk of the damages claimed in the breach of contract actions.

Beginning in 2004 the government began settling some of these contract cases, and in recent years the pace of settlements has increased following utility victories on most contested issues.  Settlements to date are estimated to exceed $2 billion, and only about 20 of the contract cases remain pending.  However, separate litigation has arisen in the D.C. Circuit over DOE’s proposal to formally cancel work on the Yucca Mountain repository, and also seeking to relieve the utilities of the obligation to pay ongoing fees to DOE under the spent fuel contracts, fees that collectively cost the industry about $750 million per year.

Yankee Atomic was the first of these spent fuel damages cases filed, in 1998, and GT lawyers have represented Yankee Atomic as well as the other two companies involved in the May 18 decision, Connecticut Yankee Atomic Power Company and Maine Yankee Atomic Power Company, throughout the litigation, which has involved two trials and three appeals.

For the Legal Times of Washington’s take on this opinion, click here.

©2012 Greenberg Traurig, LLP

5th Product and Pipeline Enhancement for Generics Conference, July 17-19, 2012

The National Law Review is pleased to bring you information about an upcoming conference:

5th Product and Pipeline Enhancement for Generics Conference, July 17-19, 2012 in Washington, DC

The marcus evans 5th Product and Pipeline Enhancement for Generics Conference will host industry leaders within the Generic Pharmaceutical, Branded Pharmaceutical and API industries operating globally as they share best practices, strategies and tools on portfolio management and business strategy, as well as legal, intellectual property and patent issues.

Featuring case studies from leading generics experts, including:

  • Richard Dicicco, Chairman at Harvest Moon Pharmaceutical
  • Dr. Vijay Soni, Executive Vice President, IP, BD and Product Portfolio at Glenmark Pharmceuticals
  • Candis Edwards, Senior Vice President, Regulatory Affairs & Compliance at Amneal Pharmaceuticals
  • Gregory Fernengel, Senior Intellectual Property Counsel at Ben Venue Laboratories, Inc.
  • Markus H. Meier, Assistant Director, Health Care Division, Bureau of Compensation at Federal Trade Commission
  • Vishal K. Gupta, Chief Scientific Officer, Vice President, Research & Development at CorePharmaLLC
  • Sherri Leonard, VP, Business Development and Portfolio Management at OrchidPharma, Inc.

Attendees will leave this conference with a better understanding of:
1. Current and upcoming FDA proposals and regulations to ensure compliance
2. Innovation in the drug pipeline
3. Portfolio management and business development
4. How to protect the company’s patents’ and intellectual property
5. Expanding the commercial reach through biosimilars
6. Market changes and future industry developments

Testimonials:

“Great in-depth coverage of hot topics in an intimate setting that lent itself to excellent discussions.” – Novartis

”Terrific chance to connect with other industry traders to exchange ideas and explore solutions to the challenges we all face.” – OrchidPharma

When the Sky’s the Limit, Don’t Forget the Basics: Social Media, the Internet and Your Business

The National Law Review recently published an article by Charles H. Gardner of Much Shelist, P.C. regarding Social Media and Businesses:

In today’s diverse marketplace, social media sites, as opposed to a company’s own branded website, are poised to become a primary and potentially first point of contact with current and future generations of consumers. Techrevel.com recently reported that 56% of consumers who use Facebook, as an example, say that they are more likely to recommend a brand after becoming a “fan.” With the number of Facebook users approaching one billion, a strong social media presence has become a de facto mandate for businesses.

In response, start up and established businesses are growing more reliant on the Internet, and social media in particular, for marketing and sales. According to a recent Forrester Research study cited on Statistica.com, social media marketing expenditure is expected to grow to $5 billion in 2016, up from approximately $1.6 billion in 2011.

In this context, you may be exploring the possibility of making your company website more interactive. From a business perspective, creating a user experience on your branded website that is simpatico with social media reanimates the end user’s experience and revitalizes your brand. From a legal perspective, however, you may wonder how to enter (or expand your presence in) this pioneer media. How do you balance the advantages of interactivity with the added burdens of creating, maintaining and updating essential privacy, data security and other policies?

You can start by asking―and answering―the following questions:

Does your website have a privacy policy that is compliant with all federal, state and territorial laws?

Federal law (and several state laws) mandates that companies inform their users about the personally identifiable information (PII) they collect, how the company uses it, with whom the company may share it, and how users may “opt-out” of having their PII collected and shared. PII includes information such as name, social security number, biometric records, etc., that alone or when combined with other information such as date and place of birth, mother’s maiden name, etc., can be used to trace an individual’s identity. Because many states have regulations that are more restrictive than federal regulations, you should seek to comply with the laws of the most restrictive states. These laws may apply not only to information that you collect from your own company website, but also from your company social media pages.

Every company with a presence on the internet should have a privacy policy that is compliant, proactive and forward thinking. If you have a strong international presence, it should address issues of global compliance as well.

If your company website is interactive or likely to become interactive, are you following proper procedures to shield the company from liability?

Consumers are likely to continue their use of third-party social media sites, including Facebook, as an interactive first point of contact with a company. However, as branded company sites begin to mirror the functionality of traditional social media sites, company sites are including interactive features from blogs and community chat rooms to video sharing  and personalized profile pages that allow the posting of user-generated content (UGC). If your website includes these or similar features, then you are, in fact, also an interactive website.

There are two important legal protections for operators of interactive computer services. The Communications Decency Act (CDA) provides safe harbor (immunity from liability) for Internet Service Providers (ISPs). This shields an ISP from liability arising out of civil causes of action such as defamation, invasion of privacy, trade libel, etc. As a very general rule, as long as the provider is not a publisher of the content (importantly, they merely provide a place to post the content; they do NOT contribute to or edit it), they will not be held liable for the original posting of the offending UGC. While the term ISP is traditionally applied to services such as Yahoo!, Google, and AOL, recent case law suggests that if you operate an interactive computer service, you should, for the practical purpose of maintaining safe harbor protection, consider yourself a sort of ISP.

The Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) also contains important safe harbor provisions. Under the DMCA, “an operator of interactive computer services” is immune from liability for intellectual property (primarily copyright) infringement by a third party using the service provided that the provider follows certain registration, compliance and procedural guidelines.

Do you post and require users to agree to your company website’s terms of use?

One of the most valuable policies for a website owner is a terms of use policy (sometimes called “house rules” or a “user agreement”). Your terms of use tell your users what they can reasonably expect when using your site. For example, you may prohibit certain activities, such as hate speech, personal attacks, posting materials to which the user does not have the requisite legal rights, etc. By setting the ground rules of what you will allow on your site, you can monitor UGC for violations of the policy and remove or refuse to post such material objectively based upon your site’s posted terms and preserve your safe harbor protection. Remember, if an ISP edits or modifies content, it is treated as a publisher of content and can lose safe harbor protection. However, if an ISP removes content in its entirety for violating a documented policy, the ISP is not considered a publisher and is protected under the CDA for example.

A well-crafted terms of use policy, if correctly written and agreed to, also forms a “contract” between the end user and the website operator. For example, arbitration clauses can minimize the likelihood of class action lawsuits and the potentially negative publicity of high-profile trials. A transparent policy can also set reasonable expectations, engender goodwill and protect the company website owner.

Do you have internal procedures and policies in place to address data security, data breaches and personnel practices?

As soon as reasonably possible, before or after your site goes live, you should discuss data security with your attorney and a qualified information technology (IT) representative. Like privacy policies, data security policies should comply with federal law and regulations, as well as the laws of the most restrictive U.S. state or territory. It is wise to have written procedures for data protection and breaches, which should be provided to any personnel who will be dealing with the company’s electronically stored information (ESI), particularly to the extent that the ESI contains end users’ PII.

You should also have a separate personnel policy that educates your employees and contractors about the use of company technology, social media and the Internet, and that protects your company without unreasonably or illegally restricting your employees’ activities.

As a practical matter, social media is no longer merely an optional business tool. It is a primary source of communication, information and advertising. Developing sound social media and technology policies as early as possible can reduce your liability and exposure and allow your company room to grow in this new online world.

© 2012 Much Shelist, P.C.

Retail Law Conference 2012

The National Law Review is pleased to bring you information about the upcoming Retail Law Conference:

at the Westin Galleria in Dallas, Texas

November 7-9, 2012

This event is the perfect opportunity to discuss the latest issues affecting the retail industry while obtaining important continuing legal education (CLE) credits.

Open to retail and consumer product general counsel, senior legal executives and in-house attorneys and their teams, the exceptional dialogue presented at this conference will help your organization navigate the current legal landscape of the industry.

Unpaid Internships: Free Today . . . Costly Tomorrow

An article by Rachel D. Gebaide and Melody B. Lynch of Lowndes, Drosdick, Doster, Kantor & Reed, P.A. was published recently in The National Law Review:

With the summer season approaching, college and high school students will be looking for opportunities to improve their resumes and gain valuable experience. The prospect of hiring a talented student – or someone transitioning between careers – who is willing to work for free is enticing to many employers.

In many cases, however, the unpaid aspect of the internship violates the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA). Lawsuits by unpaid interns to recover wages, including liquidated damages and attorney’s fees, although still uncommon, are on the rise.

Unpaid internship programs can be an appropriate method of providing training if they are designed properly and are primarily for the benefit of the intern and not the employer. However, to paraphrase this week’s Time magazine article titled “Hard Labor: Inside the Mounting Backlash Against Unpaid Internships,” employers are not entitled to free labor just because they slap the title “intern” on the position.

The U.S. Department of Labor uses the six criteria below to determine whether an unpaid internship falls outside the employment context covered by the FLSA.

  • The internship, even though it includes actual operation of the facilities of the employer, is similar to training which would be given in an educational environment;
  • The internship experience is for the benefit of the intern;
  • The intern does not displace regular employees, but works under close supervision of existing staff;
  • The employer that provides the training derives no immediate advantage from the activities of the intern; and on occasion its operations may actually be impeded;
  • The intern is not necessarily entitled to a job at the conclusion of the internship; and
  • The employer and the intern understand that the intern is not entitled to wages for the time spent in the internship.

We recommend that you evaluate your internship programs against these six criteria prior to extending offers of unpaid employment to prospective interns. Interns are unlikely to be exempt employees under the FLSA. As a result, if your internship program does not meet all six criteria, you should plan to pay interns at least minimum wage, currently $7.67 in Florida, and, when necessary, the applicable overtime rate for hours worked over 40 in a work week.

© Lowndes, Drosdick, Doster, Kantor & Reed, PA

8th Annual FCPA & Anti-Corruption Compliance Conference

The National Law Review is pleased to bring you information about the upcoming 8th FCPA & Anti-Corruption Compliance Conference:

8th FCPA and Anti-Corruption Compliance Conference
Identifying Changes to the Global Anti-Corruption Compliance Landscape to Maintain and Upgrade Your Existing Compliance Program

Event Date: 12-14 Jun 2012
Location: Washington, DC, USA

Beyond dealing with the FCPA and UK Bribery Act, there are upcoming changes to global Anti-Compliance initiatives being enacted by other major countries. It is imperative that organizations are made aware of these new rules and regulations to be able to meld them all into their organization’s anti-corruption compliance program. Maintaining a robust global compliance program along with performing proper and detailed 3rd party due diligence is of the upmost importance.

Marcus Evans invites you to attend our 8th Annual Anti-Corruption & FCPA Conference. Hear from leading executives within various industries on how to identify new areas of concern when dealing with bribery or working within a company to update an anti-corruption compliance program.

Attending this event will allow you to learn how to mitigate the effects of any possible instances of corruption and bribery both at home and abroad. Discuss solutions and best practices that companies have found when dealing with their anti-corruption compliance programs. This conference will not only review the newest enforcement cases, but also highlight practical solutions to problems dealing with FCPA and global anti-corruption measures.

Attending this conference will allow you to:

-Overcome the issues in dealing and conducting an internal investigation with Dell
-Identify anti-corruption liability concerns for US companies when engaging in Joint Ventures and Mergers and Acquisitions with Crane Co.
-Perform anti-corruption audits to better identify gaps in the compliance program with SojitzCorporation of America
-Promote 
a culture of ethics within an organization to combat non-compliance with Morgan Stanley
-Assess
 the continued challenges in conducting a 3rd party due diligence program with Parker Drilling

The marcus evans 8th Annual Anti-Corruption & FCPA Conference is a highly intensive, content-driven event that includes, workshops, presentations and panel discussions, over three days. This conference aims to bring together heads, VP’s, directors, chief compliance officers, and in-house counsel in order to provide an intimate atmosphere for both delegates and speakers.

This is not a trade show; our 8th Annual Anti-Corruption & FCPA Conference is targeted at a focused group of senior level executives to maintain an intimate atmosphere for the delegates and speakers. Since we are not a vendor driven conference, the higher level focus allows delegates to network with their industry peers.

DOJ Reverses Course and Announces Favorable Internet Gambling Policy

Sills Cummis & Gross P.C. attorney, Jason K. Gross recently had an article, DOJ Reverses Course and Announces Favorable Internet Gambling Policy published in The National Law Review:

On December 23, 2011, the Office of Legal Counsel (“OLC”) of the U.S. Department of Justice (“DOJ”) revealed that the DOJ had wholly rejected its long-held interpretation of the 1961 Federal Wire Act, 18 U.S.C. § 1084 (“Wire Act”) by concluding that the Wire Act prohibits only sports betting.Until then, the DOJ had consistently declared that the Wire Act barred both casino games and sports betting. The DOJ’s significant policy shift increases the likelihood of legal Internet casino gambling in the U.S., although the DOJ policy does not actually legalize such Internet gambling.

The scope of the Wire Act has been subject to varying interpretations over the past dozen years. The uncertain legal status of Internet gambling in the U.S. has frustrated many U.S. casino gaming companies, which have not participated in the Internet gambling boom for fear of violating applicable law and losing their valuable casino regulatory licenses. These companies have watched as U.S. citizens spend an estimated $4 billion annually gambling online at Internet casinos located outside the U.S. The U.S. gaming industry has recently acknowledged what the casual player has been saying for years – namely, that regulation and not prohibition is needed.

The prior DOJ position has also frustrated U.S. online gamblers, who play online poker and other games at Internet casinos run by offshore casino operators. First and foremost, some online gamblers are concerned that they may not be able to cash out their wagering accounts and will have less than ideal enforcement remedies in the event of any such difficulty. Similarly, some online gambling sites may not be subject to the stringent internal controls and regulatory rules that are prevalent in Las Vegas, Atlantic City and other U.S. jurisdictions that permit commercial casino gaming. Online gamblers have begrudgingly accepted such uncertainty and risk in exchange for the convenience and excitement of gambling online.

In the U.S., lawful brick-and-mortar casinos and sports betting operations are regulated by individual states through casino regulatory agencies, which enact laws to permit such activities. The new DOJ policy does not constitute federal regulation of Internet gambling, but it removes significant obstacles that have prevented state governments from implementing laws, rules and regulations to regulate Internet gambling and issue licenses to Internet gambling operators and their technology providers. The DOJ’s policy shift will likely encourage individual state governments and/or the U.S. Congress to enact the necessary legislation to permit lawful Internet gambling in the U.S.

The DOJ Letters

The DOJ policy is summarized in letters sent by Assistant Attorney General Ronald Weich of the OLC to U.S. Senators Harry Reid and Jon Kyl on December 23, 2011 (“DOJ Letters”). The DOJ Letters are based on an OLC memorandum dated September 20, 2011, authored by Assistant Attorney General Virginia A. Seitz (the “OLC Memorandum”), which the DOJ did not publicly disclose until December 23, 2011. The DOJ Letters confirmed that the DOJ had historically interpreted the Wire Act to ban all forms of Internet gambling, including sports betting and traditional casino-type games like poker. The DOJ noted, however, that there appeared to be a conflict between the Wire Act and a different law relating to Internet gambling, the Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act of 2006 (“UIGEA”). As more fully described below, the “unlawful Internet gaming” of the UIGEA does not include intra-state transactions that, among other things, are routed across state lines.

The DOJ Letters provide that, according to the OLC, “the Wire Act only applies to the transmission of bets or information assisting in the placing of bets or wagers relating to sporting events or contests.” See DOJ Letter to Senator Harry Reid dated December 23, 2011, at 1. The OLC Memorandum, which is discussed below, explains the DOJ’s reasoning and specifically addresses why and how the OLC rejected the prior DOJ interpretation of the Wire Act.

The Wire Act

The Internet did not exist when the 1961 Federal Wire Act was enacted, but the Internet has led to increasing debate over its applicability to certain forms of gambling. If the Wire Act is read broadly to apply to all forms of gambling, then all Internet gambling is illegal in the U.S. However, if the Wire Act is interpreted narrowly to apply only to sports betting, then some forms of Internet gambling could be legal (subject, of course, to other U.S. laws). The Wire Act provides that

[w]hoever being engaged in the business of betting or wagering knowingly uses a wire communication facility for the transmission in interstate or foreign commerce of bets or wagers or information assisting in the placing of bets or wagers on any sporting event or contest, or for the transmission of a wire communication which entitles the recipient to receive money or credit as a result of bets or wagers, or for information assisting in the placing of bets or wagers, shall be fined under this title or imprisoned not more than two years, or both. 18 U.S.C. § 1084(a).

The DOJ Office Of Legal Counsel Memorandum

The OLC Memorandum specifically considered the issue of whether proposals by the states of New York and Illinois to use the Internet and out-of-state transaction processors to sell lottery tickets to in-state adults violate the Wire Act. In connection with its analysis, the DOJ also addressed the particular concerns raised by Senators Reid and Kyl related to the Wire Act, i.e., whether it prohibits all gambling or just sports betting.

The OLC Memorandum discussed the following factual scenarios: New York’s lottery proposal contemplated the printing of some virtual tickets that would be electronically delivered over the Internet to computers or mobile phones located inside the state of New York, as well as the routing of all transaction data from the customer’s location in New York to the lottery’s data centers in New York and Texas through networks controlled in Maryland and Nevada. Illinois’ proposal involved the sale of lottery tickets to adults over the Internet, which could have included the routing of data across state lines over the Internet.

In analyzing the relevant issues, the OLC sought to distinguish its own analysis and conclusions from that of the DOJ’s Criminal Division. As part of its research, the OLC sought the Criminal Division’s interpretation of the Wire Act. The Criminal Division advised the OLC that

“[t]he Department has uniformly taken the position that the Wire Act is not limited to sports wagering and can be applied to other forms of interstate gambling.” The [Criminal] Division also explains that “the Department has consistently argued under the Wire Act that, even if the wire communication originates and terminates in the same state, the law’s interstate commerce requirement is nevertheless satisfied if the wire crossed state lines at any point in the process.” Taken together, these interpretations of the Wire Act, “lead[] to the conclusion that the [Act] prohibits” states from “utiliz[ing] the Internet to transact bets or wagers,” even if those bets or wagers originate and terminate within the state. OLC Memorandum, at 2 (quoting Memorandum for David Barron, Acting Assistant Attorney General, Office of Legal Counsel, DOJ, from Lanny A. Brewer, Assistant Attorney General, Criminal Division, DOJ (July 12, 2010) (internal citations omitted).

The Criminal Division acknowledged to the OLC, however, that it had doubts about its long-held position. The Criminal Division noted that its own interpretation of the Wire Act seemed to conflict with another gambling law, the UIGEA, 31 U.S.C. §§ 5361-5367 (2006) (prohibiting any person engaged in the business of betting/wagering from accepting any credit or funds from another person in connection with the latter person’s engaging in “unlawful Internet gambling”), which appears to allow intermediate out-of-state routing of electronic data related to lawful lottery transactions that otherwise occur in-state. OLC Memorandum, at 2. The OLC added that, under the UIGEA, “‘unlawful Internet gambling’ does not include bets ‘initiated and received or otherwise made exclusively within a single State.’” Id. (quoting 31 U.S.C. § 5362(10)(B)).

The OLC’s analysis was based, in large part, on its interpretation of the actual language of the Wire Act, which differed from that of the Criminal Division. Of particular interest, the OLC determined that Subsection 1084(a) contained two (2) broad clauses (as opposed to the Criminal Division, which had interpreted the same provision to have three (3) separate clauses), as follows:

  • Clause 1 prohibits anyone engaged in the business of betting or wagering from knowingly using a wire communication facility “for the transmission in interstate or foreign commerce of bets or wagers or information assisting in the placing of bets or wagers on any sporting event or contest.” See OLC Memorandum, at 4 (quoting 18 U.S.C. § 1084(a)).
  • Clause 2 prohibits any such person from knowingly using a wire communication facility to transmit communications that entitle the recipient to “receive money or credit” either “as a result of bets or wagers” or “for information assisting in the placing of bets or wagers.” Id.

Regarding Clause 1, the OLC concluded that “sporting event or contest” modifies both instances of the phrase “bets or wagers,” even though the contrary interpretation is plausible. Id. at 5. In reaching this conclusion, the OLC reasoned, in part, that the contrary interpretation would make absolutely no sense, stating that, “it is difficult to discern why Congress, having forbidden the transmission of all kinds of bets or wagers, would have wanted to prohibit only the transmission of information assisting in bets or wagers concerning sports, thereby effectively permitting covered persons to transmit information assisting in the placing of a large class of bets or wagers whose transmission was expressly forbidden by the clause’s first part.” Id. (citations omitted) (emphasis in original). Therefore, the OLC concluded that the Wire Act was intended to prohibit the use of wire communication facilities to transmit (a) bets or wagers on sporting events or contests, and (b) betting or wagering information on sporting events or contests.

Regarding Clause 2, the OLC stated that the references to “bets or wagers” refer to “bets or wagers on any sporting event or contest,” as it concluded in regard to Clause 1. Id. at 7. While recognizing that the language could certainly have been more clearly stated, the OLC found comfort in “the fact that the phrase ‘in interstate and foreign commerce’ is likewise omitted from the second clause, even though, in the OLC’s opinion Congress likely intended all the prohibitions in the Wire Act, including those in the second clause, to be limited to interstate or foreign (as opposed to intrastate) wire communications.” Id. (citations omitted) (emphasis in original).

The OLC determined that limiting the Wire Act to sports-related betting is the better interpretation. Moreover, the OLC asserted that it is counter-intuitive for subsection 1084(a) to contain some prohibitions that apply solely to sports-related gambling and others to all gambling. To emphasize its argument, the OLC stated:

We think it is unlikely that Congress would have intended to permit wire transmissions of non-sports bets and wagers, but prohibit wire transmissions through which the recipients of those communications could receive money or credit as a result of those bets. We think it similarly unlikely that Congress would have intended to allow the transmission of information assisting in the placing of bets or wagers on non-sporting events, but then prohibit transmissions entitling the recipient to receive money or credit for the provision of information assisting in the placing of those lawfully-transmitted bets. Id. at 8.

The OLC also engaged in a lengthy analysis of the legislative history of Section 1084(a) and concluded that Congress’s overriding goal in the Wire Act was to stop the use of wire communications for sports-related betting. In addition, the OLC found support in the fact that Congress enacted a separate gambling statute, the Interstate Transportation of Wagering Paraphernalia Act, 18 U.S.C. §1953 (“Paraphernalia Act”) on the same day as Congress enacted the Wire Act. OLC relied on the fact that the Paraphernalia Act expressly regulated lottery-style games in addition to sports-related gambling in that statute, but not in the contemporaneous Wire Act, to support its conclusion that Congress did not intend to reach non-sports wagering in the Wire Act. Id. at 11.

The OLC determined that it did not need to specifically answer the narrow question relating to lotteries – whether the federal gambling laws prohibit state lotteries from using the Internet to sell tickets to in-state adults where the transmission crosses state lines or is routed to an out-of-state transaction processor –  because the OLC determined that, “the Wire Act only applies to sports-related gambling activities in interstate and foreign commerce” Id. at 12. Having determined that the state lotteries conducted by New York and Illinois do not relate to sporting events, the operation of such lotteries on the Internet would not violate the Wire Act.

Next Steps

A. State Legislation

For several years, certain U.S. states have sought to enact legislation to license operators of intrastate-only Internet gambling, despite the confusion over the legality of such activity.  Many of these state bills have been specifically limited to online poker, due to a general perception that legislators and the public would be more receptive to online poker than a full roster of online casino-type games.

In fact, the state of Nevada on December 22, 2011 — one day before the DOJ publicly announced its policy change — approved its own comprehensive regulatory framework for conducting online poker solely within Nevada.  Several other states have introduced, or are seeking to introduce, intra-state online gambling legislation, including the states of California, Florida, Iowa and New Jersey, as well as Washington DC.  It is also conceivable that U.S. states could agree with each other to allow inter-state Internet gambling, much like states have done with horse racing and lotteries, such as Mega Millions and Lotto.

B. Federal Legislation

Federal regulation would provide a single, comprehensive mechanism for consistent licensing, operation and enforcement of U.S. Internet gambling laws.  The American Gaming Association, which represents the U.S. commercial casino industry by addressing federal legislative and regulatory matters, supports federal legislation that would regulate online gambling. Such legislation could (1) assist law enforcement to shut down illegal Internet gambling operators; (2) prevent fraud and money laundering; (3) address problem gambling and underage gambling; (4) ensure players aren’t cheated; and (5) provide consistency in laws applicable to all U.S. citizens who wish to gamble on the Internet. However, passage of such a federal body of laws, at least in the short term, seems unlikely because Congress has not in the past sought to expressly regulate brick-and-mortar casino gambling, and it would seem difficult to enact federal Internet gambling legislation in an election year.  Therefore, the more likely scenario is that certain states, such as Nevada, will step up to regulate intra-state Internet gambling.

C.  The Courts

U.S. courts have considered the Wire Act’s applicability to non-sports Internet gambling and have reached differing results.  In 2002, the Fifth Circuit affirmed a lower court finding that the Wire Act only prohibits gambling on sporting events. In re MasterCard Int’l Inc., 313 F.3d 257 (5th Cir. 2002). The Fifth Circuit’s decision is consistent with the new DOJ policy. In that case, the plaintiffs were gamblers who used their credit cards to open online gambling accounts with an Internet casino and proceeded to lose thousands of dollars playing Internet casino-type games. Plaintiffs commenced a class action lawsuit against their credit card companies and issuing banks, alleging that such banks had violated the Wire Act by processing the transactions, among other claims.  The district court had held that the Wire Act applies only to gambling on sporting events or contests (and not on non-sports games) and that the plaintiffs had failed to allege that they engaged in Internet sports betting. The district court relied on the following three (3) factors:

  • the plain language of the Wire Act only prohibits gambling on a sporting event or contest;
  • the legislative history of the Wire Act demonstrates that the intent was to address “wagers or bets and layoffs on horse racing and other sporting events;” and
  • prior and then-ongoing legislation seeking to amend the Wire Act to expressly prohibit all forms of Internet gambling, which the district court reasoned supported its conclusion that the Wire Act was not so broad as to include casino-type gambling. In re MasterCard Int’l Inc., 132 F.Supp.2d 468 (E.D.La. 2001).

In 2007, the district court of Utah disagreed, holding that the Wire Act prohibited all types of Internet games, not just those relating to sporting events or contests.U.S. v. Lombardo, 639 F.Supp.2d 1271, 1275 (D.Utah 2007). The court interpreted Section 1084(a) as having three (3) distinct prohibitory clauses, as follows:

The statute proscribes using a wire communication facility (1) “for the transmission . . . of bets or wagers or information assisting in the placing of bets or wagers of any sporting event or contest”; or (2) “for the transmission of a wire communication which entitles the recipient to receive money or credit as a result of bets or wagers”; or (3) “for information assisting in the placing of bets or wagers.” Id. at 1281.

The court concluded that the limiting phrase, “sporting event or contest,” only applied to the first portion of the statute since that limiting language did not appear in the second or third prohibitory clauses. The court also reasoned that, “[s]ince both the first and the third prohibitions use the phrase “information assisting in the placing of bets or wagers,” the third prohibition would be unnecessary unless it had a wider scope than the first prohibition’s “sporting event or contest.” In addition, the court determined that a reference in the Wire Act’s legislative history to “like offenses” could be interpreted to refer to more than just sports betting. Id. at 1280-81.

Summary

The DOJ has completely changed its long-standing policy on Internet gambling. As a consequence, the prohibitions in the 1961 Federal Wire Act that the federal government previously determined to apply to companies engaged in the businesses of casino betting and sports betting will no longer apply to casino betting. This policy decision seems likely to incentivize U.S. states to enact legislation to regulate Internet gambling and license companies to provide online poker within state borders as a first step into legalized U.S. Internet gambling.

This article appeared in the March 2012 issue of The Metropolitan Corporate Counsel. 

The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect those of Sills Cummis & Gross P.C.  

Copyright © 2012 Sills Cummis & Gross P.C.

Upcoming Spring 2012 CLE National Institutes

The National Law Review is pleased to bring you information about the ABA’s Upcoming Spring 2012 CLE National Institutes:

Learn and network at these in-person,full-day or multi-day seminars held live in various locations across the country that draw lawyers from across the nation.

Some Indiana Local Government Entities May Qualify for Loans Due to Past Misapplied Maximum Fund Rate Calculations

The National Law Review recently published an article by Randal J. Kaltenmark and Jeffery J. Qualkinbush of Barnes & Thornburg LLP titled, Some Indiana Local Government Entities May Qualify for Loans Due to Past Misapplied Maximum Fund Rate Calculations:

Qualified Indiana local government entities – school corporations, cities, towns, counties and library districts – may wish to review their 2012 or prior year budgets due to misapplication of the maximum capital projects fund rate calculation under Indiana statute (Indiana Code 6-1.1-18-12).

Of immediate note is that changes made to this law during the 2012 Session of the Indiana General Assembly allow Indiana local governmental entities to obtain an interest free loan from the State of Indiana for what such entity should have received in 2012 in such rate-capped funds after applying the corrected calculation. The window on obtaining this money this year will be closing in less than 30 days.

The issue originally came to light after Barnes & Thornburg LLP’s representation of two school districts, DeKalb County Eastern Consolidated School District and, most recently, the Metropolitan School District of Pike Township in appeals before theIndiana Tax Court. The misapplications, which were calculated by the Indiana Department of Local Government Finance (DLGF) cost these governmental units more than $1 million per year, collectively.

In both of these cases, the Indiana Tax Court agreed with the firm’s conclusions that the DLGF’s interpretation of the statute was incorrect and ordered those miscalculations to be corrected in the future budget years. On May 4, 2012, the Indiana Supreme Court denied the DLGF’s request to review these Tax Court decisions.

Attorneys involved believe many of the qualified Indiana local governmental entities have been the victim of one or more of these same miscalculations in connection with their 2012 or prior budgets.

© 2012 BARNES & THORNBURG LLP

ICC Institute Masterclass for Arbitrators

The National Law Review is pleased to bring you information about the upcoming ICC Conference  Masterclass Arbitrators:

Join us for an intensive 2 1/2 day training for professionals interested in working as international arbitrators!

June 4-6, 2012 at ICC Headquarters in Paris.