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Founder of sports betting site indicted

By Grant Gross , IDG News Service , 07/18/2006
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The founder of Betonsports.com is one of 11 people, along with four corporations, indicted on charges of racketeering, conspiracy and fraud in a crackdown on online gambling, the U.S. Department of Justice said Monday.

The indictment, returned June 1 and unsealed Monday, included charges against Betonsports PLC, a publicly traded holding company that owns Internet sports books and casinos. A federal grand jury in the Eastern District of Missouri returned the indictments.

The founder of BetonSports.com, Gary Stephen Kaplan, 47, was charged with 20 felony violations of federal laws, including the Wire Act, Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act, interstate transportation of gambling paraphernalia, interference with the administration of Internal Revenue Service laws and tax evasion, the Justice Department said.

Other defendants in the racketeering conspiracy include Kaplan's siblings, Neil Scott Kaplan and Lori Kaplan Multz; David Carruthers, CEO of BetonSports.com; and Peter Wilson, media director for BetonSports.com. The three other charged companies, all based in Florida, are Direct Mail Expertise, DME Global Marketing and Fulfillment and Mobile Promotions.

BetonSports.com didn't immediately return an e-mail seeking comment on the charges.

After Gary Kaplan was arrested on New York state gambling charges in May 1993, he moved his betting operation to Florida and eventually to Costa Rica, the indictment says. BetonSports.com, the most visible outgrowth of Kaplan's sports bookmaking business, misleadingly advertised itself as the "world's largest legal and licensed sportsbook," the Justice Department said.

Kaplan failed to pay federal wagering excise taxes on more than $3.3 billion in wagers taken from the United States, and the Justice Department is seeking to recover $4.5 billion and property from Kaplan and his co-defendants.

The indictment alleges that Gary Kaplan and partner Norman Steinberg, as the owners and operators of Millennium Sportsbook, Gibraltar Sportsbook and North American Sports Association, took or caused their employees to take bets from undercover federal agents in St. Louis who used undercover identities to open wagering accounts.

The indictment also alleges that Kaplan and Mobile Promotions illegally transported equipment used to place bets and transmit wagering information across state lines and that DME Global Marketing and Fulfillment shipped equipment to Costa Rica from Florida for BetonSports.com.

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Founder of sports betting site indictedBy Anonymous on February 3, 2007, 9:55 pmThe "Wire Act of 1961" allows any American to bet on what he wants and how much he wants too, that exemption was put into the law so it would be passed. That means...

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