U.S. Congressman Wexler Seeks Skill Game Exemption from UIGEA (which includes chess)
June 08, 2007
Martin Harris

On Thursday, Rep. Robert Wexler (D-FL) introduced a House bill designed to exempt so-called ‘skill’ games such as poker and mahjong from the reach of the Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act. The Skill Game Protection Act (H.R. 2610) seeks to amend the 1961 Federal Wire Act in a way that would distinguish such skill-based games from the kinds of sports betting covered in that law, as well as from “game[s] based on chance” as outlined in the UIGEA.

The Skill Game Protection Act is the third House bill introduced in the last five weeks that responds in some fashion to the UIGEA. In late April, Rep. Barney Frank (D-MA) introduced the Internet Gambling Regulation Enforcement Act (H.R. 2046), a bill designed to license qualified businesses to operate online gambling sites within carefully-considered guidelines. In early May, Rep. Shelley Berkley (D-NV) introduced H.R. 2140 to provide for a study of internet gambling by the National Academy of Sciences.

Whereas the UIGEA speaks in broad terms regarding any “game based on chance,” Wexler’s bill draws a distinction between “[g]ames where success is predominantly determined by the skill of the players involved” and such “games of chance.” The Skill Game Protection Act specifically proposes to clarify the 1961 Wire Act’s references to “bets or wagers” so as “not [to] include operating, or participation in, poker, chess, bridge, mahjong or any other game where success is predominantly determined by a player’s skill.”

Source: PokerNews

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