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iMEGA Files Appeal Challenging Dismissal of UIGEA Online Poker Online Gambling Ban CaseWed, Apr 2nd, 2008 @ 12:00am On April 1, the Interactive Media Entertainment & Gaming Association (iMEGA) filed notice that it will challenge the dismissal of the lawsuit it brought to stop enforcement of the Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act of 2006 (UIGEA) which attempts to block online poker and Internet gambling. The notice is the preliminary step for iMEGA prior to filing a full brief regarding its appeal. In its original suit, iMEGA outlined how the UIGEA infringes upon basic constitutional rights and sets a dangerous precedent for I-commerce by criminalizing the transmission of money if the end result is illegal in some unspecified place. The suit was originally filed under iMEGA v. Gonzales, et al., and is now filed under iMEGA v. Keisler (Acting USAG), et al. INTERESTING LEGAL POINTS MADE IN THE EARLIER CASE THAT WAS DISMISSED Earlier this month, though Judge Mary L. Cooper of the U.S. District Court for the District of New Jersey dismissed the overall case, she countered a major government challenge to iMEGA's suit by ruling that iMEGA did indeed have "legal standing" to pursue challenging UIGEA further, which was a strategic victory (click here for related article). Commenting on important elements within the ruling, Eric M. Bernstein, Esq., attorney for iMEGA noted that "Judge Cooper's ruling holds that, even with the passage of UIGEA, online gambling is only illegal in states where a statute specifically says it is." Joe Brennan Jr., the chairman of iMEGA noted another significant aspect of the ruling, saying, "Judge Cooper found that banks, credit card companies and other payment system instruments are exempt from criminal sanctions under UIGEA, significantly undercutting UIGEA's enforcement mechanism. Her ruling echoes the growing consensus of opinion that UIGEA is a fundamentally flawed statute." iMEGA is testifying today at the Congressional Hearing on UIGEA. OPEN LETTER DISCUSSING JUDGE COOPER'S RULINGS iMEGA published the following "open letter to the online gambling industry" regarding the dismissal of their case and its rulings. It notes that Judge Cooper failed to rule on the core of the matter relating to the fundamental rights of privacy, speech, expression, and conduct that concerned iMEGA about the UIGEA. But significantly, as a result of her ruling, in addition to giving the group legal legitimacy, "the Court is in essence standing aside and reserving these issues to be decided by a "higher authority," the United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit and, potentially, the United States Supreme Court." iMEGA On UIGEA: Open Letter to i-Gaming Industry On March 6, 2008, the United States District Court for the District of New Jersey handed down its opinion in the lawsuit brought by our Association - iMEGA v. Gonzales, et al. The ruling by the Honorable Mary L. Cooper contains a great deal of good and yet some bad aspects for iMEGA - and for the rights, the people and the medium we are defending. First and foremost, the Court established, with crystal clarity, the standing (and associational standing) of iMEGA to challenge this law in court. This is no small thing. Judge Cooper herself spent 15 pages of her 29-page decision establishing iMEGA's standing, in the process knocking down the US government's primary challenge to our suit. iMEGA flat-out beat the government on that point. Many legal commentators- both supporters and naysayers- from the beginning viewed the question of iMEGA's standing as an insurmountable barrier to moving forward. Well, we've crossed over that barrier, and now the government has to contend with iMEGA as fully and unquestionably empowered by the Court to assert our rights in the courts of the United States. The fact that the Federal courts have now recognized iMEGA as the champion of Internet Gambling industry cannot be overstated. However, at the same time, Judge Cooper essentially failed to rule on the groundbreaking questions we presented, namely, that those fundamental rights we all enjoy- of privacy, speech, expression, and conduct- should not be lessened in any way when we are using the Internet. With her dismissal, Judge Cooper simply affirmed that Congress had the right to pass the law in a constitutional manner - a point iMEGA never challenged. As a result, the Court is in essence standing aside and reserving these issues to be decided by a "higher authority," the United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit and, potentially, the United States Supreme Court. However, Judge Cooper's opinion not only acknowledged the failings of the Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act (UIGEA) but, in Footnote 12 on Page 27 of her decision, stated categorically that the "criminal penalties" provided for under the UIGEA do not apply to "financial businesses," such as "financial transaction providers" (i.e. banks, credit card companies an payment processors)- which are subject only to "regulatory enforcement." Given that UIGEA's authors and supporters made it perfectly clear from the start that their driving purpose was to "starve" internet gambling by criminally punishing the financial institutions that provide services to it, the Court's decision will have a monumental impact across the board, in the courts and in various legislative branches. The next step for iMEGA is to take this battle to the Third Circuit Court of Appeals in Philadelphia, an appellate court that has been traditionally protective of the fundamental rights of speech and expression. One need only look to that Court's striking down (multiple times) of the Child Online Protection Act (COPA) - another well intentioned but over-reaching Federal law - for an example of how favorable that Court can be to iMEGA's challenge. A positive result for iMEGA in the Third Circuit, affirming our "digital civil rights", would represent a truly landmark victory with historic consequences. In light of political pressures, we expect the Justice Department to bring all of its vast resources to this fight. Indeed, it may be the government that first files an appeal with the Third Circuit, to overturn the standing granted to iMEGA and to put UIGEA's criminal penalties for financial institutions back in place. There are other fights iMEGA has been a part of, most notably its opposition to the proposed UIGEA regulations. With the possible exception of the American Banking Association, no one has more precisely and effectively portrayed how faulty the proposed UIGEA regulations are, in the hope of preventing them from being promulgated or weakened to such an extent that they become meaningless. While we were disappointed that Judge Cooper dismissed our lawsuit, this case is far from over. We always knew that this would be the first round in a serious fight, as most important legal battles are. Many legal challenges that lost their first round make up many of the rights Americans now take for granted: Brown v. Board of Education ("Separate but Equal" school systems) - Originally lost in U.S. District Court for the District of Kansas Miranda v. Arizona (Illegal Interrogations) - Originally lost in the Arizona Supreme Court Gideon v. Wainwright (Right to Counsel) - Originally lost in the Florida Supreme Court and Fourteenth Judicial Circuit of Florida Tinker v. Des Moines (Freedom of Speech) - Originally lost in U.S. District Court and the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals We can't imagine how our rights would have been preserved had those challenges quit in the first round. At issue here are fundamental questions that, ultimately, have to be decided by the higher courts, and iMEGA has been recognized by the Court as the champion to fight this battle. We value your support as we move forward. - Close of Letter- The above open letter can also be found on the iMEGA website at imega.org/category/news. Read Related Articles:
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