Foreign Operators Don't Have To Pay
A
federal magistrate has ruled that foreign internet gambling companies are not
required to pay U.S. excise taxes on wagers, if the companies have been set up
correctly. The decision is by no means
final. But if upheld, it will eventually
save internet operators billions of dollars, for bets taken from Americans.
Not
that any of those companies are actually sending checks to the IRS. But their
executives who made the mistake, say, of changing planes in
The
ruling was for one of the many pre-trial motions filed by Gary Kaplan, arrested
in the
On
The
Internal Revenue Code imposes an excise tax, much like a sales tax, on many
wagers. Illegal bookies have to pay two
percent of all bets they take. Many
illegal bookies have contacted me for legal advice over the years. All of them tell me they pay this tax.
The
modern casino sports book in
Kaplan
admits that the sports bets he took were not authorized by state law. There seems little dispute that the
BetonSports group booked $3.5 billion in bets from 2001-2004. So, the Department of Justice says Kaplan
owes $70 million, before penalties and interest. And willfully evading this tax would mean
years in prison.
But
Kaplan has very good lawyers. And the
first thing a good lawyer does is see what the law actually says.
It
turns out this American excise tax does not cover bets made with foreign
operators:
"The tax
... shall apply only to wagers
(1) accepted in the
(2) placed by a person who is in the
(A) with a person who is a citizen or resident
of the
(B) in a wagering pool or lottery conducted by
a person who is a citizen of the
This
is what is known as a jurisdictional limitation. Congress does not have the power to tax all
wagers everywhere in the world. It felt,
correctly, that it could only tax bets made from the
Clearly
bets accepted in the
There
may have been no internet when this law was passed in the 1950s, but there were
telephones. Congress expressly limited
the 2% tax on cross-border wagers to overseas bookies who are American.
The
DOJ argued that Kaplan, an American, owned BetonSports. But the magistrate held this was a real
foreign corporation, not a mere sham.
This
does not mean that Kaplan is out of trouble.
But
it does mean that internet operators may have one less law to worry about, if
they get good legal advice.
END
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Law® is a registered trademark of Professor I Nelson Rose. His latest books, Internet Gaming Law and Gaming
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