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Full text of supposed 'Kyl Letter'
Posted by: yorktown (Moderator)
Date: March 27, 2007 06:26AM

Below is the full text of the mysterious letter, presumed to be from Sen John Kyl to the White House and circulated among US Congress last week.

There is no signature. Industry pundits claim the letter is from Sen John Kyl (R-Az). This can not be confirmed.

-------------------------

Quote:

March 15, 2007
President George W. Bush
1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW
Washington, DC 20500

Dear Mr. President,

On behalf of the millions of families represented by our organizations, we thank you for signing the Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act of 2006 into law. The immediate impact of this legislation on offshore operators was overwhelming: online gambling businesses listed on the London stock exchange lost over $7 billion in market capitalization in one day after the bill was passed by Congress. However, the law delegated critical implementation details to the Executive branch, so we once again respectfully request your continued leadership on this very important issue affecting countless families across the nation.

Any progress made over the last several months may evaporate if immediate action is not taken to ensure strong and effective implementing regulations. The House Financial Services Committee Report explained, “The legislation contemplates a mechanism whereby banks and other financial service providers will be provided with the identity of specific Internet gambling bank accounts to which payments are to be prohibited.” In other words, the Federal government needs to provide banks with lists of unlawful Internet gambling businesses.

As we noted in our letter dated October 30 of last year, the best blocking procedures vary by the type of payment system. For instance, credit cards code their merchant accounts by type of business, so they can block certain codes. Internet gambling businesses may be self-identified to the credit card companies, or identified by customers or law enforcement. Other payment systems such as debits from checking accounts do not code transaction types, so they would rely almost exclusively on a government-provided list of prohibited recipients.

We renew our request that you ensure that law enforcement and regulatory personnel commit the resources needed to identify illegal Internet gambling businesses and give the new law the teeth that Congress intended it to have. This does not require a large commitment: Internet gambling companies are very public about their activities (including their funding mechanisms) because they seek a large customer base. A small commitment of government resources can shut down or interrupt the vast majority of illegal Internet gambling in this nation.

Your continued leadership on this important issue is greatly needed at this time, and time is of the essence. Proposed regulations may be released in the next few weeks, and weak regulations will embolden the Internet gambling industry to come roaring back onto U.S. shores. Only through strong regulations can the intent of the law be enforced. Thank you for your consideration of this issue and your continued defense of the rule of law.


Sincerely,




Edited 3 times. Last edit at 03/27/07 06:29AM by yorktown.

Re: Full text of supposed 'Kyl Letter'
Posted by: Brian (---.ipslin.dsl-w.verizon.net)
Date: March 27, 2007 08:17AM

Sure seems to be taking a lot of joy in the losses he has helped create for companies legally traded on the LSE. Course destroy and rebuild has always, in one form or another, been standard operating procedure for the US government.

Hey Dubya how about you become a member of the world community and listen to the likes of WTO instead of sending our Nation back 100 years in time!

Re: Full text of supposed 'Kyl Letter'
Posted by: JerryG (124.106.191.---)
Date: March 27, 2007 09:25AM

Seems doubtful that this is some form of official correspondence.

Global Gaming News

Re: Full text of supposed 'Kyl Letter'
Posted by: Mcluhan (---.ppp.ucc-net.ca)
Date: April 1, 2007 02:49AM

Is not official unless signed. Ergo, non-official

Nicely framed letter though. Someone's doing their job, on the LV payroll.

Prohibition ran in the states from 1920 to 1933. Things were slower back then. Since a year on the Internet is four months, i give this law another three years before it tumbles.



Edited 1 times. Last edit at 04/01/07 02:50AM by Mcluhan.



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