ICSS Debates Bringing Sports Betting "Out of the Shadows"
Featuring Congressman Frank Pallone Jr. and moderated by James Carville, a panel of experts addressed critical concerns, policy solutions around sports gambling in the United States
NEW YORK, Sept. 23, 2015 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- On Monday, Sept. 21, the ICSS – the International Centre for Sport Security – hosted a roundtable discussion on the legalization of sports betting in the United States, bringing together leaders in sport, gaming, media and policy to discuss the matter as well as policy solutions to protect the public interest and integrity of sport at all levels.
Congressman Frank Pallone Jr. (NJ-06) headlined the event in a one-on-one interview just days after he made public calls for a Congressional hearing to examine the National Football League's fantasy football program. His interview was followed by an expert panel "refereed" by American political commentator James Carville and included Chris Eaton, ICSS Executive Director for Integrity; David Purdum, ESPN gambling reporter; and Les Bernal, national director for the advocacy group Stop Predatory Gambling.
"Gambling, like drinking during Prohibition, is something people will always find a way to do," said Chris Eaton, ICSS Executive Director for Integrity. "By pretending it isn't happening, the government opens the door to corruption. The key is to regulate, monitor and bring sports betting out of the shadows."
Eaton noted that some experts estimate that the U.S. wagers $500 billion on sports each year, with 80 percent of those bets made illegally. "That's a lot of money ending up in the hands of organized criminals who have a never-ending source of financing their illegal, often violent operations. We need federal policies that address this problem of corruption – and can regulate it instead into a positive opportunity."
Rep. Pallone of New Jersey, who addressed some of those policy ideas, including introduction of federal legislation earlier this summer that would legalize sports betting in his home state, reiterated his recent calls for a congressional hearing on fantasy football. "The reason sports leagues like fantasy sports is because they have invested in it," he said.
Pallone's calls and actions also come in the wake of last month's 3rd Circuit Court of Appeals motion to strike down a New Jersey state law that would legalize the practice – a move Pallone condemned. "History tells us that whether its booze or gambling, people will still find a way to engage. We don't want organized crime to profit from that tendency, which is exactly why we need to bring sports betting out from the shadows and regulate it."
Not all took the position that sports betting should be brought out into the light and regulated, however, including Les Bernal, National Director for Stop Predatory Gambling, who stressed that "solutions" to regulate can be just as worrisome – or worse.
Bernal said, "In a time when leaders from both parties are highlighting how our system is rigged against everyday people, state-sponsored casinos and lotteries are the prime example. If you can't stop illegal operators, how can you stop those that are licensed to abuse the rules?"
Bernal noted that owners know that "there's no debate that this public policy is contributing to rising unfairness and inequality in American life. Allowing government to add sports gambling to its arsenal will enrich a privileged few at the expense of everyone else, including the two-thirds of Americans who never gamble."
The issue of illegal sports betting is just one of many issues the ICSS – an organization that works to safeguard the integrity of international sport at all levels – has been working on. Building on this discussion, ICSS will host its annual "Securing Sport" stakeholder conference in New York City on Nov. 3-4 to discuss critical aspects of security, transparency and legacy of sport.
About the International Centre for Sport Security (ICSS)
The ICSS is a globally renowned and respected leader in sport safety, security and integrity. As an independent and nonprofit organization, the ICSS is at the forefront of efforts to safeguard sport and is an integral player in addressing critical issues in sport such as major event safety and venue security, match-fixing and betting fraud. For more details about the ICSS and its work, please visit www.theicss.org or follow us on Twitter at @the_ICSS.
Contact: Jaclyn Houser, 517-420-4372 or [email protected]
SOURCE The International Centre for Sport Security
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