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  • 17
    Apr
    2013
    6:35am, EDT

    NYC art dealer, suspected Russian mobster indicted over celebrity gambling rings

    Alimzhan Tokhtakhounov, seen here in 2002, is accused of running a sports-betting ring that catered to Russian oligarchs in the former Soviet Union, and laundered proceeds through Cyprus banks to the United States.

    By Chris Francescani, Reuters

    NEW YORK - Federal authorities have charged a prominent New York art dealer and one of Russia's top reputed mobsters with operating high-stakes gambling rings in New York and Los Angeles that catered to billionaires, bank executives, movie stars and professional athletes.

    Among 34 people indicted are suspected Russian organized crime figure Alimzhan Tokhtakhounov, who was charged in 2002 with plotting to rig sports events at the Salt Lake City Winter Olympics. Tokhtakhounov remains outside of the United States, and that case has not gone to trial.

    Also charged was Hillel "Helly" Nahmad, a leading international art dealer and the owner of an exclusive art gallery that bears his name inside Midtown Manhattan's posh Carlyle Hotel.

    The gallery was raided on Tuesday as part of the investigation, authorities said.

    According to an 83-page indictment unsealed on Tuesday, Tokhtakhounov ran a sports-betting ring that catered to Russian oligarchs in the former Soviet Union, and laundered proceeds through Cyprus banks to the United States.

    A second, related operation in New York and Los Angeles allegedly served wealthy U.S. clients including Hollywood celebrities, Wall Street executives and professional athletes, authorities said.

    That operation was allegedly run by Nahmad, who was expected to surrender on Tuesday in Los Angeles, a spokeswoman for Manhattan U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara said.

    Tokhtakhounov, according to court documents, used his reputation as a mobster to "resolve disputes with clients of high-stakes illegal gambling operation with implicit and sometimes explicit threats of violence and economic harm."

    Tokhtakhounov was indicted by federal authorities in New York in 2002 on charges that he plotted to rig the Salt Lake City Winter Olympics pairs figure skating and ice dancing competitions.

    He was arrested that year in Italy, whose highest appeals court ruled in 2003 against extraditing him to the United States. He was released by the Italian court.

    According to court papers, Tokhtakhounov earned $10 million in 2011 alone as head of the gambling ring.

    He is known in Russia as a "vory v zakone," or a "vor," a Russian term that translates to "Thief-in-Law" and refers to the highest echelon of Russian organized crime figures, according to prosecutors.

    A number of defendants in the case, of whom 30 were in custody, were expected to appear in federal court in Manhattan later on Tuesday.

    Michael Fineman, an attorney for defendant Vadim Trincher, 52, declined to comment after court.

    Dana Cole, an attorney for Molly Bloom, who was arrested in Los Angeles and faces bookmaking charges only, said a judge released his client on Tuesday afternoon into the custody of her mother. She is scheduled to appear again in a New York federal courtroom on Friday.

    Cole said that while he did not want to "minimize the seriousness" of the charges, "this is not the crime of the century."

    Tokhtakhounov and three other indicted suspects - Abraham Mosseri, Donald McCalmont, and William Edler - remain at large and are wanted by federal officials, said Kelly Langmesser, a spokesman for the New York field office of the FBI.

    None of the rich and famous clients of the alleged ring were charged or named by authorities on Tuesday. A person who answered the phone at the Nahmad Gallery in New York declined to comment on the indictments. 

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    89 comments

    and why weren't the rich and famous charged with illeagal gambling??? oh yea...because they are rich and famous...what a country the USA is...money talks...and thank you Italy for letting the Russian go...how much did you take to make that ruling???

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  • 26
    Feb
    2013
    9:51pm, EST

    All in: New Jersey gets online gambling

    New Jersey Governor Chris Christie

    By Tiziana Barghini and Hilary Russ, Reuters

    New Jersey Governor Chris Christie on Tuesday approved online gambling within the state's border, a move that he hopes can help boost state revenues and revive Atlantic City casinos.

    The measure, announced the same day that Christie unveiled his new budget plan for fiscal 2014, will legalize Internet gaming to New Jersey's 9 million residents and also create opportunities for European companies with expertise in running online gaming operations.


    New Jersey, the 11th most populous state, will become the largest so far and the third in the United States to allow online gambling after Delaware and Nevada, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures.

    Nevada, home to international gambling Mecca Las Vegas, last week became the first U.S. state to allow interstate online poker.


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    "We are offering a responsible yet exciting option that will make Atlantic City more competitive, while also bringing financial benefits to New Jersey as a whole," Christie said in a statement.

    The Republican governor signed the legislation after Democratic lawmakers agreed to make several changes, including a provision to review the program after 10 years to gauge its impact on problem gambling.

    By legalizing internet gaming, New Jersey could see a huge jump in state casino revenue, to an estimated $436 million in fiscal 2014 from $235 million this fiscal year, which ends June 30, according to budget documents.

    Earlier this month, the prospect of a quick approval of online gambling in New Jersey spurred gains among gaming companies on both side of the Atlantic amid hopes it could unlock a market worth up to $1 billion.

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    14 comments

    More states need to pass this asap. I miss Party Poker and Pokerstars.

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  • 21
    Feb
    2013
    10:29am, EST

    Hail of bullets from black Range Rover leads to three deaths on Vegas Strip

    KSNV

    Several cars were wrecked as a result of a shooting on the Las Vegas Strip near the famed Bally's casino.

    By Matthew DeLuca, Staff Writer, NBC News

    Las Vegas police are looking for a black Range Rover after a sudden burst of gunshots and a car fire led to the deaths of three people on the famed Strip, shutting down the gambling boulevard in several directions.

    A Range Rover Sport with black rims and tinted windows pulled up to a Maserati at a stoplight at the intersection of Las Vegas and Flamingo Boulevards around 4:20 a.m. Thursday, Sgt. John Sheahan of the Las Vegas Police Department said.

    The occupants of the SUV opened fire on the Maserati as both cars went through the intersection. The driver and passenger were hit by bullets, killing the driver, according to Sheahan, and the Maserati flew out of control, striking three other vehicles and a taxi cab.

    The cab burst into a fireball, killing the driver and a passenger, as the Range Rover fled the scene. It doesn’t appear the occupants of the Maserati ever fired back, Sheahan told The Associated Press, contradicting initial reports from the scene.

    The shooting occurred in an area of the Strip occupied by some of the city’s most famous casinos, including Caesars Palace, Bally’s and the Bellagio.

    Right near the Las Vegas strip, one car opened fire on another eventually resulting in a fiery car crash killed three people. NBC's Brian Williams reports.

    Four people were taken to the University Medical Center in downtown Las Vegas with moderate injuries, hospital spokeswoman Danita Cohen told NBC News. Three of those patients were treated and released, Cohen said, while a fourth remains at the hospital. Cohen did not disclose the status of the remaining victim. 

    All four injured persons were adult males, according to Cohen. The identities of the individuals have not been released.

    Police are warning people to be careful if they spot the black SUV that fled the scene. Police said the car has paper plates from a car dealer, though it’s not clear what state the plates were from.

    “We want to remind everyone that they are armed and dangerous,” said Officer Jose Hernandez of the Las Vegas Police Department.

    The manager of the Desert Cab company said the taxi involved belonged to his company, but declined to say anything else to the AP.

    758 comments

    bet universal background checks and assault rifle ban would have prevented these killings, sarcasm...

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  • 14
    Feb
    2013
    5:57pm, EST

    Former San Diego mayor acknowledges using charity for gambling, losing $1 billion

    NBCSanDiego.com

    O'Connor walked into the federal courthouse with her attorney by her side Thursday.

    By Andrew Rafferty, Staff Writer, NBC News

     

    Former San Diego Mayor Maureen O’Connor acknowledged in federal court Thursday that she took $2 million from her late husband's charitable foundation to pay for her addiction to video poker — and lost $1 billion wagering over the course of a decade.



    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    O’Connor, the mayor of California’s second largest city from 1986 to 1992, pleaded not guilty to money laundering as part of a deal with prosecutors that will defer the charges for two years as she attempts to repay the debt.

    An attorney for O’Connor, Eugene Iredale, told reporters outside the courthouse that his client had severe health problems, including a brain tumor,  that led to her gambling addition, according to NBC San Diego.

    Iredale said his client won more than $1 billion from 2000 to 2009 playing video poker in Las Vegas, Atlantic City and San Diego, but lost most of it.

    After dipping into the red, she wound up compiling $13 million in debt, according her attorney.

    Prosecutors allege that between September 2008 and March 2009, the 66-year-old took more than $2,088,000 from the foundation started by her late husband, Jack-in-the-Box founder Robert O. Peterson.

    O’Connor was elected the first female mayor of San Diego after serving eight years on city council.  She was married to Peterson from 1977 until his death in 1994, and her estate was at one time worth $40 to $50 million.

    Former San Diego Mayor Maureen O'Connor acknowledged in federal court Thursday that she took $2 million from her late husband's charitable foundation to pay for her addiction to video poker. NBC's Mike Taibbi reports.

    The Associate Press contributed to this report

    604 comments

    "...prosecutors that will defer the charges for two years as she attempts to repay the debt." PUT IT ALL ON RED!

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  • 11
    Feb
    2013
    5:27pm, EST

    Betting from bed: NJ casino first to have TV gambling

    Wayne Parry / AP

    John Forelli, a vice president at the Borgata Hotel Casino & Spa in Atlantic City, N.J., demonstrates a new in-room gambling system on Monday. The system will be available to guests starting Feb. 18.

    By Wayne Parry, The Associated Press

    Guests at one New Jersey casino won't even have to get out of bed in order to place a bet.

    The Borgata Hotel Casino & Spa in Atlantic City said it will become the first casino in the United States to let guests gamble over hotel room TV sets, starting Feb. 18.

    Its E-Casino program will let guests with player's cards set up electronic accounts and risk up to $2,500 a day. Slots and four kinds of video poker will be the first games offered.

    The casino says the technology can be expanded to include gambling over hand-held devices anywhere on casino property, which New Jersey recently authorized, and full Internet gambling, if the state approves it.

    "This puts us in a position to leverage the technology into true mobile gaming and Internet betting later on," said Tom Balance, the Borgata's president and chief operating officer. "We're moving forward with the future of gaming, and this is that first step."


    John Forelli, the casino's vice president of information technology, said it is designed not only as an added amenity, but to get them familiar and comfortable with the concept of electronic gambling accounts for the day when Internet wagering comes to New Jersey. Gov. Chris Christie last week vetoed an Internet gambling bill, but said he would sign one with some moderate changes.

    The casino does not expect in-room gambling to supplant a significant portion of its action on the casino floor. Rather, it views it as an added attraction for customers trying to decide which of many East Coast casino destinations to visit.

    Susan Marzetti, a casino patron from Staten Island, N.Y., said she would not take advantage of it.

    "I like the ambiance of being down here on the casino floor," she said. "I like the noise of the machines. In my room, I'd find it depressing, to be honest."

    But William Frawley said he'd definitely take advantage of it during down time.

    "I think it would be a great added feature," he said. "I'd be willing to invest $100 and run it through there. Video poker, I'd definitely play."

    Borgata officials said they had no estimates of how much they expect to take in through the system, which is subject to a 90-day trial period by the New Jersey Division of Gaming Enforcement.

    The system is built by Allin Interactive, a Fort Lauderdale, Fla., company that specializes in interactive television applications.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    There are several controls to prevent the system from being used by minors or people excluded from gambling. A customer would have to have a Borgata player's club card, which would screen them to ensure they are of legal gambling age and are not banned from any casino premises.

    The PIN number used for the players' club card would have to be combined with a temporary password provided by the casino's front desk. Patrons would then go to the casino cashier cage and open an electronic account by providing up to $2,500 in cash, the maximum the state allows to be transferred into the system each day.

    The system works using the TV remote control. Players can toggle back and forth among a slots game called Rum Runner's Riches and four kinds of video poker. The casino eventually plans to add more games if the test period if successful.

    Players who want to cash out just click a button on the screen and the proceeds of their gambling go into an e-wallet that can be stored for future visits, or paid out at the casino cashier cage, just like winnings accrued on the casino floor.

    The technology is currently used on large cruise ships. It will be available in all 2,000 of the Borgata's rooms.

    Las Vegas allows sports betting on hand-held devices.

    6 comments

    Next thing you know you'll be able to order hookers from your phone!

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  • 6
    Nov
    2012
    2:53pm, EST

    Nun with reported gambling problem accused of stealing $128,000

    By NBC News staff and wire services

    A nun in western New York faces a criminal charge of grand larceny for allegedly stealing $128,000 from two rural parishes where she worked.

    Sister Mary Anne Rapp pleaded not guilty in court Monday night to a second-degree grand larceny charge, according to NBC affiliate WHEC in Rochester, N.Y. Rapp, 67, is a nun with the Sisters of St. Francis and has been working at St. Mark's and St. Mary's Catholic Church in Holley, N.Y., WHEC reported. Holley is west of Rochester.



    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    "She's been a nun for a very long time, been a very good person, never in any trouble before," said Rapp's attorney, James Harrington, according to The Associated Press. "She did great work wherever she was assigned."

    Officials believe Rapp spent the money at casinos, and she reportedly had previously sought treatment for a gambling addiction.

    "She spent 9 1/2 months in an in-patient treatment program and has maintained her recovery in the year since," said Sister Edith Wyss, provincial minister for the Sisters of St. Francis, according to the AP.

    Watch US News videos on NBCNews.com

    Orleans County District Attorney Joseph Cardone in western New York said the embezzled money amounts to $128,000, WHEC reported.

    A routine audit had found "some irregularities" and Rapp is accused of taking the money between 2006 and 2010, said a spokesman for the Roman Catholic Diocese of Buffalo, according to the AP.

    The spokesman, Kevin Keenan, could not say how the alleged thefts had affected the day-to-day parish operations.

    "These are smaller parishes in a rural part of the diocese," Keenan said, according to the AP. "Regardless of the size, this would be a significant amount of money for any parish."

    The Associated Press contributed to this story.

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    51 comments

    Wait a minute.

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  • 21
    Aug
    2012
    6:09pm, EDT

    Poker is game of skill, not chance, New York judge rules, upping Internet ante

    By NBC's Pete Williams

    Poker is mainly a game of skill, not chance, a federal judge ruled Tuesday, tossing out the conviction of a New York man who ran a poker club advertised by word of mouth and text messages.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    The ruling is a legal victory for Lawrence Dicristina, a businessman who sold electric bicycles and operated a poker club in the back room of his Staten Island warehouse.

    But legal experts say it also undercuts one of three federal laws used in the past to shut down online poker in the U.S. The Justice Department concluded earlier this year that another of the laws should not apply to online poker.


    Dicristina was charged with violating the Illegal Gambling Business Act, a 1970s-era federal law intended to crack down on organized crime. Its definition of gambling lists several forms -- including slot machines, lotteries, and bookmaking -- that his lawyers argued were games of chance.

    Watch the Top Videos on NBCNews.com

    Director Douglas Tirola of the documentary, "All In … The Poker Movie," and 2003 World Series Poker Champion Chris Moneymaker talk about the evolution of the game and the increasing interest in it.

    Poker, they argued, is primarily a game of skill and therefore isn't covered by the federal law. On Tuesday, Federal District Court Judge Jack Weinstein agreed.

    "In poker," he wrote, "increased proficiency boosts a player's chance of winning and affects the outcome of individual hands as well as a series of hands.  Expert poker players draw on an array of talents, including facility with numbers, knowledge of human psychology, and powers of observation and deception."

    His 120-page opinion included charts and graphs showing how players more accomplished at such skills as bluffing consistently tend to beat inexperienced players.

    What's more, Dicristina's lawyers argued, forms of gambling typically covered by federal law involve betting against casinos running the games, which manipulate the odds of winning.  A poker player, by contrast, bets solely against other players, not the house.

    They also contended that most poker hands are won by inducing opponents to fold, with the cards never revealed or compared.  By bluffing, they told the judge, a player minimizes the importance of the luck of the draw.

    “We have patiently waited for the right opportunity to raise the issue in federal court,” said John Pappas, executive director of the Poker Players Alliance, which aided in Dicristina’s defense and helped formulate the winning legal arguments. “Today’s federal court ruling is a major victory for the game of poker and the millions of Americans who enjoy playing it.”

    Weinstein noted that poker has a long history in the United States, "embraced by many of our political leaders and other public figures," including former Supreme Court Justices William O. Douglas, "a regular at President Franklin Roosevelt's poker parties," and Fred Vinson, who played the game with President Harry S. Truman.

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    Legal experts said Tuesday's ruling could undercut the ability to restrict online poker and could encourage Congress to pass pending legislation that would permit the game to be played online under federal regulation.

    In Tuesday's ruling, Weinstein said federal prosecutors can still use racketeering laws to go after games run by organized crime figures. And he said states can prohibit poker under their own laws.

    Pete Williams is NBC News' justice correspondent.

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    233 comments

    Jersy Girl 1 Precisely what the judge is saying. If it were pure chance, the " quite a few people" you know would not lose all the time.

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  • 15
    Aug
    2012
    3:34pm, EDT

    Winning $337 million Powerball ticket sold at Mich. gas station

    WDIV's Sean Ley reports from Lapeer, Mich., where the only winning lottery ticket was purchased in the $320 million Powerball jackpot.

    By NBC News staff and wire reports

    Updated at 7:12 a.m. ET: A single ticket sold at a gas station in Michigan matched all five numbers and the red Powerball to win the $337 million jackpot, the 3rd largest Powerball prize in U.S. history, lottery officials said Thursday. 


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    Sales surged beyond expectations for the prize, which comes with an immediate cash option of $241 million, said lottery operator Multi-State Lottery Association, comprised of lotteries in 32 states and the District of Columbia.


    The winning numbers drawn on Wednesday were 6, 27, 46, 51, 56 and the red Powerball, 21. The odds of having a winning ticket were one in 175 million, according to the lottery. 

    The $337 million ticket was sold in Lapeer, about 45 miles north of Detroit. There wasn't immediate word about the buyer's identity, the Michigan Lottery said early Thursday.

    A person who answered the phone Thursday morning at the Sunoco station told The Associated Press that he was too busy to talk.

    Eight tickets matched five of the winning numbers to win $1 million. Two of those tickets were sold in Indiana. The others were sold in Kansas, Kentucky, New Jersey, New Mexico, Pennsylvania and Virginia.

    There was also a ticket sold in Nebraska that added the Power Play to win $2 million.

    The jackpot has rolled 14 times since June 27. The last win was on June 23, when a Connecticut couple took home a $60 million prize.

    Watch US News videos on NBCNews.com 

    "I can't even really think of what I wouldn't do," 7-Eleven customer Shelley Taylor told NBC station WBAL of Baltimore, about dreams of winning the jackpot.

    "Absolutely nothing but travel; I would travel; quit my job and travel," customer Maresa Gold said.

    The largest Powerball jackpot of $365 million was won in 2006 by eight workers from a meat-packing plant in Nebraska.

    Tickets, which start at $2, are on sale until about one hour (times vary by state) before the 10:59 p.m. ET drawing. Five white numbered balls are drawn from a drum with 59 balls and one red Powerball from a drum with 35 numbered red balls.

    Stay informed with the latest headlines; sign up for our newsletter

    The top prize is won by matching all five white balls in any order and the red Powerball.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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    156 comments

    I would open water wells in ALL 3rd world countries. & have an open bar for myself 24/7. Then buy me a new liver.

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  • 31
    May
    2012
    11:00am, EDT

    Father accused of leaving 8-month-old in car to gamble for 7 hours

    By Bob Connors, NBCConnecticut.com

    Connecticut State Police have charged a father with leaving his infant son in a car for seven hours while he gambled inside the Mohegan Sun Casino in Uncasville.


    Follow @msnbc_us

    Kyuyoun Lee was arrested Wednesday at 10 a.m. inside one of the casino's parking garages. Police said Lee had been gambling inside the casino since 3 a.m. Lee's 8-month-old son was left alone in a car in the parking garage for the entire time, according to police.


    Read the original report at NBCConnecticut.com

    Lee, 32, of Waterbury, was charged with leaving a child unsupervised, and risk of injury to a child. He was released on $5,000 bond and will be in court June 14.

    The baby is now in the custody of The Department of Children and Families, according to police.

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    260 comments

    His wife should beat the snot out of him with a flatiron.

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  • 3
    Jan
    2012
    6:29pm, EST

    Powerball prices double; jackpot and odds of winning it increase

    By Msnbc.com staff and wire services

    When the price of Powerball lottery tickets increases from $1 to $2 on Jan. 15, Chris Taranto says, he will still buy them.

    So will a lot of other lottery players, he told phillyburbs.com. And their chances of winning will improve.

    "People like to dream in this country," the Delran, N.J., resident said as he purchased tickets for the Powerball and Mega Millions lotteries at the Hartford Deli on Tuesday. "The only true dream left is the lottery."

    With the price increase, the Powerball jackpot will grow from a minimum of $20 million to $40 million, and that could grow to the hundreds of millions if it takes several weeks to get a winner.

    The current game is designed for an average jackpot of $141 million, says the West Des Moines-based Multistate Lottery Association, which runs Powerball. The game jackpot average will grow to $255 million, the association claims. 

    "When the jackpots begin climbing into the triple-digit millions, the excitement is going to be palpable," said Carole Hedinger, executive director of the New Jersey Lottery.

    The "enriched Powerball game" will still have participants choosing their first five numbers from a pool of 59, but the numbers available for the Powerball itself will drop to 35 from 39. That will raise the odds of winning to 1 in 175 million from 1 in 192 million.

    The second-prize winner will receive $1 million in cash, up from $200,000 now offered.

    Half of ticket sales are returned to the states where Powerball is played to help fund government programs. Powerball ticket sales in fiscal year 2011, the last complete year of record, were $3.1 billion.  

    Lottery officials believe increasing the price of the game will make it more attractive to players, said Terry Rich, association spokesman.

    "People like variety," Rich said. "We're repackaging and freshening up the product and enriching the product."

    The move will differentiate the game from Mega Millions, the other big money, multi-state lottery game that is sold in 42 states for $1 a ticket. Each game has drawings twice a week but on different nights.

    The larger jackpots should attract more players, even at the higher price, said Clyde Barrow, a gambling expert at the University of Massachusetts-Dartmouth.

    "As prizes escalate more people tend to enter the game," he said. "The big draw will be the size of the jackpot. The idea is that at $12 million people don't get too excited but when it crosses $140 million, more people will play and by increasing the price level of tickets you will reach that prize level much faster."

    Don Bigley, president of the Ott's Group, which includes Ott's Tavern in Delran, didn't think the price increase for Powerball tickets would deter sales.

    "The people who bet, bet," Bigley said. "The bigger the (jackpot) is, the more motivated people get."

    Not so fast, said one Iowa gambler.

    "With the price of everything else going up, there's not much you can get for a dollar anymore," 28-year-old Ryan Raker of Des Moines told The Associated Press. Raker said he buys a ticket once a month. He said he'll probably play less frequently now.

    This article includes reporting from msnbc.com staff and The Associated Press.

    175 comments

    Until the Powerball is above $200 million..I'll play Mega for a $1 and let others build up the Powerball to $200 million!

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  • 26
    Aug
    2011
    3:02pm, EDT

    Atlantic City cancels gaming

    Hurricane Irene has busted legal gaming in Atlantic City, N.J. Here's the statement suspending operations beginning noon ET Saturday:

    Trenton, NJ - Governor Chris Christie today announced that, in coordination with the Governor's Office, the Division of Gaming Enforcement (DGE) and Casino Association of New Jersey, all gaming activity in Atlantic City will be suspended as of noon Saturday. Security, surveillance and maintenance operations and personnel have been ramped up and coordinated to ensure that the necessary resources to protect and secure the casino properties and assets are substantial and in place.


    Guests of the Atlantic City casino properties who find themselves stranded due to travel logistics problems will be permitted to stay in the hotels. Meanwhile, evacuation of all others able to leave will proceed via local evacuation plans. To ease the traffic flow into southern New Jersey and specifically traffic into Atlantic City, southbound lanes of the Garden State Parkway will be closed at Wall Township (Exit 98) beginning today at 8:00 p.m. Ahead of that, all eastbound traffic into Atlantic City will be diverted beginning at 6:00 p.m. 

    Casino executives, officials of the DGE, state and local Office of Emergency Management officials, and the New Jersey State Police Atlantic City district commander will be meeting again this afternoon to further coordinate storm-related issues ahead of Hurricane Irene. For further information about safety precautions, evacuation routes and best practices please go to ready.nj.gov.

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