LegalNewsLine Logo  
Thursday, November 20 2008     Subscribe in NewsGator Online
News | Contact LegalNewsline | About Us | Advertise | RSS
Enter search keyword
 
NEWSLETTER
Receive our FREE weekly newsletter
click here
LNL MOST POPULAR ARTICLES
+ Kansas AG sues 17 more drug companies over pricing
+ Felon lawyers must make case in Miss. court
+ U.S. Supreme Court rejects appeal by 'vexatious litigant'
+ Foreclosure relief effort loses ally in Aguirre
+ California activist touts foreclosure relief in D.C.
LNL HOT TOPICS
+ Asbestos
+ Big Pharma
+ Class Action
+ Dickie Scruggs
+ Financial Crisis
+ Gasoline Prices
+ Global Warming
+ Hurricane Katrina
+ Lead Paint
+ Personal Injury
+ Sub-Prime Mortgages
+ Tobacco
U.S. District Court 
 
Judge blocks seizure of e-bingo machines
Brown
SACRAMENTO, Calif.(Legal Newsline)--A federal judge has blocked the California Bureau of Gambling Control from seizing electronic bingo machines, saying doing so would cause irreparable harm to the charities that use the devices for a significant portion of their funding.

The Bureau, part of the Department of Justice and following an interpretation of the law by Attorney General Jerry Brown, told charities to stop using the popular machines because they did not use paper cards. The deadline is June 6.

The state allows charities to run bingo halls for fund raising, and in recent years those groups have incorporated flashier forms of the classic game in hopes of drawing bigger and younger crowds. But the machines also look a lot like slot machines.

Indian casinos have complained about them, saying the charities are cutting in on profits, and Brown's office also warned that card rooms were beginning to eye the machines.

Two charities and two disabled individuals, with the backing of game-maker Video Game Technologies, sued the Bureau earlier this week, asking for a temporary restraining order to prevent state agents from taking their equipment.

U.S. District Judge John A. Mendez wrote in his decision that the "plaintiffs have a strong likelihood of success." The e-bingo machines in question, he said, comply with state law because "they provide provide paper bingo cards from which a winning pattern can be determined and they do not operate as slot machines."

Charities and their attorneys asserted that the machines, while displaying animated spinning wheels and other outward trappings of slots, still follow the underlying game of bingo.

Mendez also said the Bureau's interpretation of "card" as something that can only be made of paper "discriminates against disabled individuals in violation of federal Americans with Disabilities Act," something charities also argued in their suit.

"We're extremely pleased by Judge Mendez's decision. This ruling maintains the status quo rather and allows the charities to continue with their critically important fundraising functions to benefit their individual causes," Ravi Mehta, executive director of the California Charity Bingo Association (CCBA) and a lawyer for the charities, said in a statement.

Mendez further agreed with charities that holding off on the planned seizure would do no harm to the state, while taking the machines would severely damage the groups those machines fund.

Reporter Chris Amico can be reached at eyeseast@gmail.com

Filed Under: U.S. District Court


COMMENTS ON THIS ARTICLE:

No comments have been posted in the last 15 days!

SEND US YOUR COMMENTS ON THIS ARTICLE:


* - Required fields

Subject: *
Message: *
Contact Name: *
Contact URL:
Contact Email: *
This Is CAPTCHA Image
Write the characters in the image above: 

E-mail this article to a friend | Printer friendly format

MORE NEWS HEADLINES:
+ Senator Stevens guilty of all seven corruption counts - 10/27  
+ Lawsuit could delay Exxon Valdez payments - 10/21  
+ Cochran lawyers challenge Texas legal advertising rules - 10/7  
+ Challenger to W.Va. campaign laws not getting good news - 10/3  
+ 9th U.S. Circuit backs San Francisco's universal health care fee - 10/1  
+ Langston, Balducci still want federal judge deciding fate of fort... - 9/18  
+ Union pickets allowed in Calif. shopping malls - 8/26  
+ Judge sets hearing for challenge to McCain's candidacy - 8/23  
+ John McCain sued by singer Jackson Browne - 8/16  
+ Fen-Phen lawyer wants out of jail - 7/23  


IN THE SPOTLIGHT:
Tuesday, November 18, 2008
NEW YORK (Legal Newsline) - The argument over $14 million in attorneys fees from a $100 million state settlement will be settled in a Mississippi court, and state Auditor Stacey Pickering thinks the decision may come quickly.
Read more...


+ Tobacco agreement harming market, suit says - 11/12
+ Ala. AG will fight feds over Medicaid money recovered in pharmaceutical suits - 11/6
+ Tort reformers wary of Obama presidency - 11/4
+ Coal official calls Obama comments 'unbelievable' - 11/3
+ McGraw, Obama in trouble in W.Va., poll shows - 11/1
BROWSE BY STATE:
 
BROWSE BY AG:
 
BROWSE BY DATE:
 
LATEST LNL BLOG ENTRIES:
+ Abbott's signs of a scam
+ AG McCollum on convicts in the mortgage industry
+ Synagro's response to Pa. AG candidate's remarks about sludge

NEWS | CONTACT LEGALNEWSLINE | ABOUT US | ADVERTISE | RSS © 2008 LegalNewsLine.com. All Rights Reserved.