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Final Table Set at 2014 World Series of Poker Main Event

“November Nine” Features Players from Six Nations Including First-Timer Brazil
Players Return November 10th & 11th to Battle over $28 Million in Prize Money & to Crown Poker’s World Champion Who Will Win $10 Million

LAS VEGAS (July 15, 2014) – The 45th annual World Series of Poker (WSOP) $10,000 No-Limit Hold’em Championship – commonly referred to as the Main Event – is down to its final nine players. The “November Nine” – a diverse and international group – is all that remains of the massive field of 6,683 players from 87 different nations who entered the iconic tournament seeking poker’s most coveted title and a top prize of $10 million.

The final nine players represent six countries – Brazil, Netherlands, Norway, Spain, Sweden and the United States. The players will return to the Rio All-Suite Hotel and Casino on Monday, November 10 to vie for poker’s ultimate trophy – a WSOP gold bracelet – and the lion’s share of the Main Event’s $62,820,200 total prize pool. The winner will receive a guaranteed first-place prize of $10,000,000, with the other eight players sharing another $18,480,121.

The November Nine and their respective seat assignments and chip counts are as follows:
http://www.wsop.com/2014/

Tomy Winata Gandeng MGM Las Vegas Bangun Gedung Tertinggi di RI

Suhendra – detikFinance

Jakarta – Pengusaha Tomy Winata melalui Artha Graha Network menggandeng salah satu pengelola hotel terbesar di dunia MGM Hospitality di Las Vegas, Amerika Serikat (AS).

Kerjasama ini bagian dari realisasi pembangunan gedung yang akan menjadi tertinggi di Indonesia The Signature Tower 638 meter, 111 lantai di kawasan SCBD, Jakarta.

“Setelah lebih dari satu tahun melalui proses penjajakan yang sangat terbuka dan professional, maka pada tanggal 21 Mei 2012 yang lalu, Artha Graha Network melalui anak perusahaan PT Danayasa Arthatama Tbk, telah menandatangani perjanjian kerjasama dengan MGM Hospitality di Las Vegas, Amerika Serikat,” jelas PT Danayasa Arthatama Tbk dalam keterangan tertulisnya, Rabu (23/5/2012)

Acara penandatanganan yang berlokasi di Hotel Bellagio, Las Vegas Amerika Serikat. Dalam penandatanganan kerjasama tersebut, dari Artha Graha Network diwakili Tomy Winata, Chairman Artha Graha Network dan Santoso Gunara, Presiden Komisaris PT Danayasa Arthatama Tbk. Sedangkan MGM Hospitality diwakili oleh Gamal Aziz, Presiden MGM Hospitality dan Michael Sagild, Managing Director Asia Pacific Development MGM Hospitality.

“The Signature Tower Complex-SCBD: Bellagio Hotel akan berada di 20 lantai teratas dari The Signature Tower terkoneksi dengan MGM Grand Hotel & Service Apartement di Southern Tower melalui podium 9 lantai untuk World Class Retail & MGM Grand Convention Center,” jelas rilis PT Danayasa Arthatama Tbk

Seperti diketahui MGM Hospitality, sebagai pemilik, pengelola dan operator kelas atas atau high-end hotels dan convention centers yang ternama di dunia. MGM akan mengelola dan mengoperasikan hotel-hotel dan convention center yang ada di dalam Kompleks Signature Tower di SCBD, Sudirman, Jakarta.

(hen/wep)

Saingi Las Vegas, Kasino Macau Raup Rp 301 Triliun Setahun

Jakarta – Macau menjadi surga penikmat kasino dunia. Bahkan wilayah bekas jajahan Portugal ini menghasilkan pendapatan Rp 301,23 triliun atau setara US$ 33,47 miliar (kurs US$ 1 = Rp 9.000) dari bisnis perjudian.

Industri kasino Macau kini jauh lebih maju dibandingkan pusat judi dunia Las Vegas di Amerika Serikat. Berdasarkan laporan Wynn Resorts seperti dilansir AFP, omzet sebesar itu merupakan hasil kerja keras Macau sepanjang 2011.

Dengan gambaran seperti ini, akhirnya banyak perusahaan besar AS melirik Macau. Mereka berlomba-lomba membangun kawasan resort serta kasino teritegrasi.

Sebelumnya diketahui, industri kasino tercatat bertumbuh dalam 10 tahun terakhir di Asia. Tak tanggung-tanggung, pendapatan industri kasino di Macau lima kali lebih besar dari Las Vegas.

Sepanjang tiga hari ini bahkan pimpinan kasino dunia akan menggelar pertemuan di Macau. Bertajuk Global Gaming Expo Asia, mereka siap merayakan hari judi selama tiga hari. Venetian, hotel termewah Macau menjadi tempat pertemuan ini.
(wep/dnl)

sumber : detik.com

The Man Who Broke Atlantic City


Don Johnson won nearly $6 million playing blackjack in one night, single-handedly decimating the monthly revenue of Atlantic City’s Tropicana casino. Not long before that, he’d taken the Borgata for $5 million and Caesars for $4 million. Here’s how he did it.
By Mark Bowden

Don Johnson finds it hard to remember the exact cards. Who could? At the height of his 12-hour blitz of the Tropicana casino in Atlantic City, New Jersey, last April, he was playing a hand of blackjack nearly every minute.

Dozens of spectators pressed against the glass of the high-roller pit. Inside, playing at a green-felt table opposite a black-vested dealer, a burly middle-aged man in a red cap and black Oregon State hoodie was wagering $100,000 a hand. Word spreads when the betting is that big. Johnson was on an amazing streak. The towers of chips stacked in front of him formed a colorful miniature skyline. His winning run had been picked up by the casino’s watchful overhead cameras and drawn the close scrutiny of the pit bosses. In just one hand, he remembers, he won $800,000. In a three-hand sequence, he took $1.2 million.

The basics of blackjack are simple. Almost everyone knows them. You play against the house. Two cards are placed faceup before the player, and two more cards, one down, one up, before the dealer. A card’s suit doesn’t matter, only its numerical value—each face card is worth 10, and an ace can be either a one or an 11. The goal is to get to 21, or as close to it as possible without going over. Scanning the cards on the table before him, the player can either stand or keep taking cards in an effort to approach 21. Since the house’s hand has one card facedown, the player can’t know exactly what the hand is, which is what makes this a game.

As Johnson remembers it, the $800,000 hand started with him betting $100,000 and being dealt two eights. If a player is dealt two of a kind, he can choose to “split” the hand, which means he can play each of the cards as a separate hand and ask for two more cards, in effect doubling his bet. That’s what Johnson did. His next two cards, surprisingly, were also both eights, so he split each again. Getting four cards of the same number in a row doesn’t happen often, but it does happen. Johnson says he was once dealt six consecutive aces at the Mohegan Sun casino in Connecticut. He was now playing four hands, each consisting of a single eight-card, with $400,000 in the balance.

He was neither nervous nor excited. Johnson plays a long game, so the ups and downs of individual hands, even big swings like this one, don’t matter that much to him. He is a veteran player. Little interferes with his concentration. He doesn’t get rattled. With him, it’s all about the math, and he knows it cold. Whenever the racily clad cocktail waitress wandered in with a fresh whiskey and Diet Coke, he took it from the tray.

The house’s hand showed an upturned five. Arrayed on the table before him were the four eights. He was allowed to double down—to double his bet—on any hand, so when he was dealt a three on the first of his hands, he doubled his bet on that one, to $200,000. When his second hand was dealt a two, he doubled down on that, too. When he was dealt a three and a two on the next two hands, he says, he doubled down on those, for a total wager of $800,000.

It was the dealer’s turn. He drew a 10, so the two cards he was showing totaled 15. Johnson called the game—in essence, betting that the dealer’s down card was a seven or higher, which would push his hand over 21. This was a good bet: since all face cards are worth 10, the deck holds more high cards than low. When the dealer turned over the house’s down card, it was a 10, busting him. Johnson won all four hands.

Johnson didn’t celebrate. He didn’t even pause. As another skyscraper of chips was pushed into his skyline, he signaled for the next hand. He was just getting started.

The headline in The Press of Atlantic City was enough to gladden the heart of anyone who has ever made a wager or rooted for the underdog:

BLACKJACK PLAYER TAKES TROPICANA
FOR NEARLY $6 MILLION,
SINGLE-HANDEDLY RUINS CASINO’S MONTH

But the story was even bigger than that. Johnson’s assault on the Tropicana was merely the latest in a series of blitzes he’d made on Atlantic City’s gambling establishments. In the four previous months, he’d taken $5 million from the Borgata casino and another $4 million from Caesars. Caesars had cut him off, he says, and then effectively banned him from its casinos worldwide.

Fifteen million dollars in winnings from three different casinos? Nobody gets that lucky. How did he do it?

The first and most obvious suspicion was card counting. Card counters seek to gain a strong advantage by keeping a mental tally of every card dealt, and then adjusting the wager according to the value of the cards that remain in the deck. (The tactic requires both great memory and superior math skills.) Made famous in books and movies, card counting is considered cheating, at least by casinos. In most states (but not New Jersey), known practitioners are banned. The wagering of card counters assumes a clearly recognizable pattern over time, and Johnson was being watched very carefully. The verdict: card counting was not Don Johnson’s game. He had beaten the casinos fair and square.

It hurt. Largely as a result of Johnson’s streak, the Trop’s table-game revenues for April 2011 were the second-lowest among the 11 casinos in Atlantic City. Mark Giannantonio, the president and CEO of the Trop, who had authorized the $100,000-a-hand limit for Johnson, was given the boot weeks later. Johnson’s winnings had administered a similar jolt to the Borgata and to Caesars. All of these gambling houses were already hurting, what with the spread of legalized gambling in surrounding states. By April, combined monthly gaming revenue had been declining on a year-over-year basis for 32 months.

For most people, though, the newspaper headline told a happy story. An ordinary guy in a red cap and black hoodie had struck it rich, had beaten the casinos black-and-blue. It seemed a fantasy come true, the very dream that draws suckers to the gaming tables.

But that’s not the whole story either.

Despite his pedestrian attire, Don Johnson is no average Joe. For one thing, he is an extraordinarily skilled blackjack player. Tony Rodio, who succeeded Giannantonio as the Trop’s CEO, says, “He plays perfect cards.” In every blackjack scenario, Johnson knows the right decision to make. But that’s true of plenty of good players. What gives Johnson his edge is his knowledge of the gaming industry. As good as he is at playing cards, he turns out to be even better at playing the casinos.

Hard times do not favor the house. The signs of a five-year slump are evident all over Atlantic City, in rundown façades, empty parking lots, and the faded glitz of its casinos’ garish interiors. Pennsylvania is likely to supplant New Jersey this year as the second-largest gaming state in the nation. The new Parx racetrack and casino in Bensalem, Pennsylvania, a gigantic gambling complex, is less than 80 miles away from the Atlantic City boardwalk. Revenue from Atlantic City’s 11 casinos fell from a high of $5.2 billion in 2006 to just $3.3 billion last year. The local gaming industry hopes the opening of a 12th casino, Revel, this spring may finally reverse that downward trend, but that’s unlikely.

“It doesn’t matter how many casinos there are,” Israel Posner, a gaming-industry expert at nearby Stockton College, told me. When you add gaming tables or slots at a fancy new venue like Revel, or like the Borgata, which opened in 2003, the novelty may initially draw crowds, but adding gaming supply without enlarging the number of customers ultimately hurts everyone.

When revenues slump, casinos must rely more heavily on their most prized customers, the high rollers who wager huge amounts—tens of thousands or even hundreds of thousands of dollars a hand. Hooking and reeling in these “whales,” as they are known in the industry, can become essential. High rollers are lured with free meals and drinks, free luxury suites, free rides on private jets, and … more. (There’s a reason most casino ads feature beautiful, scantily clad young women.) The marketers present casinos as glamorous playgrounds where workaday worries and things like morality, sobriety, and prudence are on holiday. When you’re rich, normal rules don’t apply! The idea, like the oldest of pickpocket tricks, is to distract the mark with such frolic that he doesn’t notice he’s losing far more than his free amenities actually cost. For what doth it profit a man to gain a $20,000 ride on a private jet if he drops $200,000 playing poker? The right “elite player” can lose enough in a weekend to balance a casino’s books for a month.

Of course, high rollers “are not all created equally,” says Rodio, the Tropicana’s CEO. (He was the only Atlantic City casino executive who agreed to talk to me about Johnson.) “When someone makes all the right decisions, the house advantage is relatively small; maybe we will win, on average, one or two hands more than him for every hundred decisions. There are other blackjack players, or craps players, who don’t use perfect strategy, and with them there is a big swing in the house advantage. So there is more competition among casinos for players who aren’t as skilled.”

For the casino, the art is in telling the skilled whales from the unskilled ones, then discouraging the former and seducing the latter. The industry pays close attention to high-level players; once a player earns a reputation for winning, the courtship ends. The last thing a skilled player wants is a big reputation. Some wear disguises when they play.

But even though he has been around the gambling industry for all of his 49 years, Johnson snuck up on Atlantic City. To look at him, over six feet tall and thickly built, you would never guess that he was once a jockey. He grew up tending his uncle’s racehorses in Salem, Oregon, and began riding them competitively at age 15. In his best years as a professional jockey, he was practically skeletal. He stood 6 foot 1 and weighed only 108 pounds. He worked with a physician to keep weight off, fighting his natural growth rate with thyroid medication that amped up his metabolism and subsisting on vitamin supplements. The regimen was so demanding that he eventually had to give it up. His body quickly assumed more normal proportions, and he went to work helping manage racetracks, a career that brought him to Philadelphia when he was about 30. He was hired to manage Philadelphia Park, the track that evolved into the Parx casino, in Bensalem, where he lives today. Johnson was in charge of day-to-day operations, including the betting operation. He started to learn a lot about gambling.

It was a growth industry. Today, according to the American Gaming Association, commercial casino gambling—not including Native American casinos or the hundreds of racetracks and government-sponsored lotteries—is a $34 billion business in America, with commercial casinos in 22 states, employing about 340,000 people. Pari-mutuel betting (on horse racing, dog racing, and jai alai) is now legal in 43 states, and online gaming netted more than $4 billion from U.S. bettors in 2010. Over the past 20 years, Johnson’s career has moved from managing racetracks to helping regulate this burgeoning industry. He has served as a state regulator in Oregon, Idaho, Texas, and Wyoming. About a decade ago, he founded a business that does computer-assisted wagering on horses. The software his company employs analyzes more data than an ordinary handicapper will see in a thousand lifetimes, and defines risk to a degree that was impossible just five years ago.

Johnson is not, as he puts it, “naive in math.”

He began playing cards seriously about 10 years ago, calculating his odds versus the house’s.

Compared with horse racing, the odds in blackjack are fairly straightforward to calculate. Many casinos sell laminated charts in their guest shops that reveal the optimal strategy for any situation the game presents. But these odds are calculated by simulating millions of hands, and as Johnson says, “I will never see 400 million hands.”

More useful, for his purposes, is running a smaller number of hands and paying attention to variation. The way averages work, the larger the sample, the narrower the range of variation. A session of, say, 600 hands will display wider swings, with steeper winning and losing streaks, than the standard casino charts. That insight becomes important when the betting terms and special ground rules for the game are set—and Don Johnson’s skill at establishing these terms is what sets him apart from your average casino visitor.

Johnson is very good at gambling, mainly because he’s less willing to gamble than most. He does not just walk into a casino and start playing, which is what roughly 99 percent of customers do. This is, in his words, tantamount to “blindly throwing away money.” The rules of the game are set to give the house a significant advantage. That doesn’t mean you can’t win playing by the standard house rules; people do win on occasion. But the vast majority of players lose, and the longer they play, the more they lose.

Sophisticated gamblers won’t play by the standard rules. They negotiate. Because the casino values high rollers more than the average customer, it is willing to lessen its edge for them. It does this primarily by offering discounts, or “loss rebates.” When a casino offers a discount of, say, 10 percent, that means if the player loses $100,000 at the blackjack table, he has to pay only $90,000. Beyond the usual high-roller perks, the casino might also sweeten the deal by staking the player a significant amount up front, offering thousands of dollars in free chips, just to get the ball rolling. But even in that scenario, Johnson won’t play. By his reckoning, a few thousand in free chips plus a standard 10 percent discount just means that the casino is going to end up with slightly less of the player’s money after a few hours of play. The player still loses.

But two years ago, Johnson says, the casinos started getting desperate. With their table-game revenues tanking and the number of whales diminishing, casino marketers began to compete more aggressively for the big spenders. After all, one high roller who has a bad night can determine whether a casino’s table games finish a month in the red or in the black. Inside the casinos, this heightened the natural tension between the marketers, who are always pushing to sweeten the discounts, and the gaming managers, who want to maximize the house’s statistical edge. But month after month of declining revenues strengthened the marketers’ position. By late 2010, the discounts at some of the strapped Atlantic City casinos began creeping upward, as high as 20 percent.

“The casinos started accepting more risk, looking for a possible larger return,” says Posner, the gaming-industry expert. “They tended to start swinging for the fences.”

Johnson noticed.

“They began offering deals that nobody’s ever seen in New Jersey history,” he told me. “I’d never heard of anything like it in the world, not even for a player like [the late Australian media tycoon] Kerry Packer, who came in with a $20 million bank and was worth billions and billions.”

When casinos started getting desperate, Johnson was perfectly poised to take advantage of them. He had the money to wager big, he had the skill to win, and he did not have enough of a reputation for the casinos to be wary of him. He was also, as the Trop’s Tony Rodio puts it, “a cheap date.” He wasn’t interested in the high-end perks; he was interested in maximizing his odds of winning. For Johnson, the game began before he ever set foot in the casino.

Atlantic City did know who Johnson was. The casinos’ own research told them he was a skilled player capable of betting large amounts. But he was not considered good enough to discourage or avoid.

In fact, in late 2010, he says, they called him.

Johnson had not played a game at the Borgata in more than a year. He had been trying to figure out its blackjack game for years but had never been able to win big. At one point, he accepted a “lifetime discount,” but when he had a winning trip he effectively lost the benefit of the discount. The way any discount works, you have to lose a certain amount to capitalize on it. If you had a lifetime discount of, say, 20 percent on $500,000, you would have to lose whatever money you’d made on previous trips plus another $500,000 before the discount kicked in. When this happened to Johnson, he knew the ground rules had skewed against him. So it was no longer worth his while to play there.

He explained this when the Borgata tried to entice him back.

“Well, what if we change that?” he recalls a casino executive saying. “What if we put you on a trip-to-trip discount basis?”

Johnson started negotiating.

Once the Borgata closed the deal, he says, Caesars and the Trop, competing for Johnson’s business, offered similar terms. That’s what enabled him to systematically beat them, one by one.

In theory, this shouldn’t happen. The casinos use computer models that calculate the odds down to the last penny so they can craft terms to entice high rollers without forfeiting the house advantage. “We have a very elaborate model,” Rodio says. “Once a customer comes in, regardless of the game they may play, we plug them into the model so that we know what the house advantage is, based upon the game that they are playing and the way they play the game. And then from that, we can make a determination of what is the appropriate [discount] we can make for the person, based on their skill level. I can’t speak for how other properties do it, but that is how we do it.”

So how did all these casinos end up giving Johnson what he himself describes as a “huge edge”? “I just think somebody missed the math when they did the numbers on it,” he told an interviewer.

Johnson did not miss the math. For example, at the Trop, he was willing to play with a 20 percent discount after his losses hit $500,000, but only if the casino structured the rules of the game to shave away some of the house advantage. Johnson could calculate exactly how much of an advantage he would gain with each small adjustment in the rules of play. He won’t say what all the adjustments were in the final e-mailed agreement with the Trop, but they included playing with a hand-shuffled six-deck shoe; the right to split and double down on up to four hands at once; and a “soft 17” (the player can draw another card on a hand totaling six plus an ace, counting the ace as either a one or an 11, while the dealer must stand, counting the ace as an 11). When Johnson and the Trop finally agreed, he had whittled the house edge down to one-fourth of 1 percent, by his figuring. In effect, he was playing a 50-50 game against the house, and with the discount, he was risking only 80 cents of every dollar he played. He had to pony up $1 million of his own money to start, but, as he would say later: “You’d never lose the million. If you got to [$500,000 in losses], you would stop and take your 20 percent discount. You’d owe them only $400,000.”

In a 50-50 game, you’re taking basically the same risk as the house, but if you get lucky and start out winning, you have little incentive to stop.

So when Johnson got far enough ahead in his winning sprees, he reasoned that he might as well keep playing. “I was already ahead of the property,” he says. “So my philosophy at that point was that I can afford to take an additional risk here, because I’m battling with their money, using their discount against them.”

According to Johnson, the Trop pulled the deal after he won a total of $5.8 million, the Borgata cut him off at $5 million, and the dealer at Caesars refused to fill the chip tray once his earnings topped $4 million.

“I was ready to play on,” Johnson said. “And I looked around, and I said, ‘Are you going to do a fill?’ I’ve got every chip in the tray. I think I even had the $100 chips. ‘Are you guys going to do a fill?’ And they just said, ‘No, we’re out.’”

He says he learned later that someone at the casino had called the manager, who was in London, and told him that Don Johnson was ahead of them “by four.”

“Four hundred thousand?” the manager asked.

“No, 4 million.”

So Caesars, too, pulled the plug. When Johnson insisted that he wanted to keep playing, he says, the pit boss pointed out of the high-roller pit to the general betting floor, where the game was governed by normal house rules.

“You can go out there and play,” he said.

Johnson went upstairs and fell asleep.

These winning streaks have made Johnson one of the best-known gamblers in the world. He was shocked when his story made the front page of The Press of Atlantic City. Donald Wittkowski, a reporter at the newspaper, landed the story when the casinos filed their monthly revenue reports.

“I guess for the first time in 30 years, a group of casinos actually had a huge setback on account of one player,” Johnson told me. “Somebody connected all the dots and said it must be one guy.”

The Trop has embraced Johnson, inviting him back to host a tournament—but its management isn’t about to offer him the same terms again. (Even so—playing by the same rules he had negotiated earlier, according to Johnson, but without a discount—he managed to win another $2 million from the Tropicana in October.)

“Most properties in Atlantic City at this point won’t even deal to him,” Rodio says. “The Tropicana will continue to deal to him, we will continue to give aggressive limits, take care of his rooms and his accounts when he is here. But because he is so far in front of us, we have modified his discounts.”

Johnson says his life hasn’t really changed all that much. He hasn’t bought himself anything big, and still lives in the same house in Bensalem. But in the past year, he has hung out with Jon Bon Jovi and Charlie Sheen, sprayed the world’s most expensive bottle of champagne on a crowd of clubgoers in London, and hosted a Las Vegas birthday bash for Pamela Anderson. He is enjoying his fame in gambling circles, and has gotten used to flying around the world on comped jets. Everybody wants to play against the most famous blackjack player in the world.

But from now on, the casinos will make sure the odds remain comfortably stacked against him.

source : http://www.theatlantic.com

Cheating at Poker

Cheating at Poker
http://www.playwinningpoker.com/poker/cheat/

World Series of Poker Winners

World Series of Poker Winners
All Events 1970 – 2011
http://www.playwinningpoker.com/wsop/2001-2010/

Razia Poker Online, Pemerintah AS Bekuk 11 Tersangka

New York – Pemerintah Amerika Serikat (AS) melalui Federal Bureau Investigation (FBI) dan kejaksaan wilayah Southern District of New York merazia pengelola website judi poker. Sebanyak 11 tersangka ditangkap dengan tuduhan penipuan bank, pencucian uang dan perjudian ilegal.

Para tersangka termasuk para pendiri 3 perusahaan poker internet terbesar di AS, yaitu Absolute Poker, Full Tilt Poker dan PokerStats. Pemerintah juga menyita 5 domain internet yang berhubungan dengan perusahaan bersangkutan.

Dilansir InformationWeek dan dikutip detikINET, Sabtu (16/4/2011), pemerintah AS menilai para tersangka terlibat dalam skema penipuan dan penyuapan bank untuk memproses profit bisnis judi mereka. Ini adalah tindak pelanggaran hukum di negeri Paman Sam itu.

“Para tersangka membohongi bank mengenai bisnis mereka. Kemudian, beberapa tersangka mengetahui bahwa beberapa bank mau mengabaikan hukum jika dibayar,” tukas Janice Fedarcyk, asisten direktur di FBI.

Perjudian internet dinyatakan ilegal di AS sejak tahun 2006. Namun judi poker online tetaplah industri bernilai miliaran dollar, di mana para perusahaan melakukan berbagai cara untuk mengakali hukum. Misalnya dengan beroperasi dari luar negeri.

Para perusahaan itu mengatur sehingga uang yang mereka terima dari penjudi di AS disamarkan sebagai pembayaran untuk website yang tidak eksis. Beberapa pengelola bank yang terlibat dalam konspirasi ini juga dibekuk, seperti John Campos, pemilik SunFirst Bank.

Tersangka berasal dari berbagai negara, termasuk Kanada dan Israel. Kebanyakan juga tinggal di luar AS, sehingga proses hukum akan juga melibatkan otoritas negara lain. Jika terbukti bersalah, mereka terancam hukuman 5 tahun untuk judi internet ilegal, 20 tahun untuk pencucian uang dan 30 tahun untuk penipuan bank.

( fyk / fyk )

Sumber : http://www.detikinet.com

Melongok Kasino di Singapura

Penulis: Ni Luh Made Pertiwi F | Editor: I Made Asdhiana

KOMPAS.com – Saat kaki melangkah masuk ke Casino di Resorts World Sentosa, Singapura, langsung terbersit di ingatan adegan-adegan dari film “God of Gambler”. Film “God of Gambler” produksi Hongkong tersebut menceritakan sepak terjang penjudi andal Ko Chun yang diperankan Chow Yun-fat. Film ini sering sekali ditayangkan di saluran televisi Indonesia. Pasti Anda pernah menontonnya walau hanya sekali.

Sayang, di area kasino tidak boleh mengambil foto. Nuansa interior yang berwarna merah memberi efek semangat untuk bermain bagi para maniak judi. Jika Anda sedang berkunjung ke Resorts World Sentosa, tak ada salahnya mampir ke Casino. Walaupun Anda tidak berniat untuk main, melihat-lihat kasino bisa menambah pengalaman perjalanan Anda. Jangan heran saat melihat para penjudi. Karena meja judi bukan hanya monopoli para kalangan muda. Saat Kompas.com mampir ke Casino, tampak rombongan usia lanjut asyik berjudi. Bahkan, di salah satu meja poker, seorang nenek yang duduk kursi roda terlihat serius dengan kartunya.

Casino yang buka 24 jam tersebut selalu dipadati penjudi. Baik itu di pagi, siang, malam, bahkan di tengah pagi buta. Kopi dan teh gratisan setiap saat dituangkan untuk menemani para penjudi yang begadang semalam suntuk mencoba peruntungan. Sesekali suara riuh perayaan kemenangan membahana. Tak jarang, bunyi gebrakan meja tanda frustasi karena kalah pun terdengar. Tetapi secara umum hanya ada suara-suara kartu bergesekan, kepingan poker yang beradu, dan mesin-mesin slot yang berputar.

“Casino ini buka pada Februari 2011 dan kasino pertama di Singapura. Di sini yang paling laku adalah Roulette dan mesin Slot,” kata Senior Manager Communications Resorts World Sentosa, Lee Sin Yee.

Mesin slot adalah mesin judi yang umum terdapat di kasino. Ada tiga atau lebih gambar pada mesin tersebut terdiri yang berputar saat tombol ditekan atau tuas dijalankan. Jika jackpot atau gambar yang keluar sama, maka dialah pemenangnya.

Memang, mesin slot merajai di tempat ini. Ada banyak rupa dan gambar mesin slot. Konon, orang yang pertama mendapatkan jackpot di mesin slot di kasino ini adalah orang Indonesia. Selain paling mudah untuk dimainkan juga cocok bagi pemula. Permainan ini memang benar-benar mengandalkan peruntungan belaka. Apalagi untuk bermain di mesin slot cukup menggunakan 10 dollar Singapura dengan taruhan minimal 1 dollar Singapura. Hati-hati jika Anda berani mencoba mesin slot, bisa-bisa Anda tak berhenti bermain.

Di kawasan kasino juga terdapat restoran-restoran yang menyajikan makanan dengan harga bervariatif. Anda bisa saja masuk ke kasino hanya untuk melihat-lihat dan diakhiri dengan makan di salah satu restoran yang ada. Beberapa bahkan menyediakan menu dengan harga di bawah 10 dollar Singapura.

Casino di Resots World Sentosa juga mengampanyekan bermain judi yang bertanggung jawab. Salah satu programnya adalah dengan menyediakan fasilitas “Loss Limit”. Para pemain bisa menetapkan seberapa banyak uang yang akan ia mainkan. Hal ini untuk mencegah kekalahan dalam jumlah di luar batas kemampuan.

Wisatawan asing tidak perlu membayar untuk bisa masuk ke kasino. Cukup dengan menunjukkan paspor, otomatis mereka bisa masuk. Sementara untuk pengunjung dengan kewarganegaraan Singapura harus membayar 100 dollar Singapura. Cara ini semata-mata untuk mencegah penduduk lokal agar tidak kecanduan berjudi.

What Went Wrong in the Fight to Legalize and Regulate Online Poker

The end of 2010 spelled doom for online poker’s legalization and regulation in the United States, at least in the foreseeable future. Months ago, the poker industry appeared to hold pocket aces in a much-anticipated political showdown that would have reversed the devastating aftereffects of the Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act (UIGEA), back-roomed into law back in 2006. However, with the start of a new Congressional session sworn in last month, jumpstarting online poker’s legalization at the Federal level will be a nearly impossible task [1].

So, what went wrong? Immediately following the 2008 election, things looked promising. A bona-fide poker-playing president was elected to the White House. Many conservatives, primarily those originally responsible for the restrictions implemented against online poker, were ousted from power [2]. Most important, the party viewed as more responsive to pro-gambling interests won a landslide election and enjoyed a huge public mandate.

Unfortunately, the fight for legalized online poker has been badly mismanaged from the start. Although the Poker Players Alliance (PPA) made unprecedented strides in mobilizing the poker community for the first time, fact is the poker community remains very much divided on this issue. Division is particularly fierce among those in positions of power. Furthermore, leadership within the online poker movement made several miscalculations ultimately leading to failure. These poor strategic decisions derailed any potential for victory.

Several guilty parties share the blame. Some were part of orchestrated efforts to kill initiatives that would expand gambling of any kind. Others opposed online gambling and poker for no other reason than seeking to protect their own business interests. But it was the vast majority of political and poker industry leaders alike who inadvertently derailed online poker’s fight for legality – through neglect, ignorance, and indifference.

Surprisingly, the usual cast of culprits who always seem to come out against gambling (and poker by association) didn’t do much to influence the outcome. The “Religious Right,” a permanent thorn in the side of gamblers and poker players, barely let out a whisper when various bills were being debated on Capitol Hill. Advocacy groups, including Focus on the Family, sent representatives to testify before a Congressional sub-committee. But their clichéd arguments and questionable “facts” were so absurd that no one on Capitol Hill took them seriously [3].

The sports leagues were equally hushed. When legislators reached a compromise and removed any possibility of legalized sports betting as part of a new poker bill, the most powerful of all major sports leagues, the NFL, withdrew its opposition. Even the NCAA, notoriously anti-gambling, was barely audible during the legislative process and public debate about online poker.

Instead, what mortally wounded the online poker momentum was a motley alliance of diversified interests that rarely agree on any issue. This movement included several powerful elected officials from both parties. It included businesses determined to barricade themselves against potential competition. It also included various state and local officials around the country intent on protecting the biggest sucker game of all – state lotteries.

Indeed, the most flabbergasting incidence was strong opposition from powerful individuals and companies within the gambling industry, including many people who prosper by serving the needs and desires of average poker players. Protecting one’s turf might be justifiable in a debate about public policy. But the deeds of some within the gambling industry were an atrocious exhibition of hypocrisy [4].

Here’s my list of guilty parties responsible for killing online poker’s legalization and regulation:

Democrats – After the 2008 election, the Democratic Party controlled the White House and both houses of Congress. Top Democrats could have propelled just about any poker bill straight to the President’s desk for signage. But powerful Democrats – most notably House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) – resisted calls for a House vote on the issue and ultimately killed the bill’s momentum.

Rep. Barney Frank’s (D-MA) resolution to legalize and regulate online poker passed with a majority vote by the Financial Services Committee. But the poker bill never made it to the House floor for a vote.

Over in the Senate, things moved even more slowly. No poker bill ever got out of committee. Early on, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-NV) was on record as being against online poker and gambling. Then, he straddled the fence for nearly two years before finally succumbing to pressure from the casino industry to back the proposal. By then, it was too late. The clock ran out on the chance for passage when Republicans won big in the 2010 midterm elections. The bottom line is that most Democrats did very little to make legalized online poker happen.

Republicans – While Democrats did little to win over the hearts of poker players, almost all of the outspoken opponents against online poker’s legalization are Republicans. Sen. Jon Kyl (R-AZ) and Rep. Bob Goodlatte (R-VA) have made this issue into a personal crusade for years. Both have lobbied government agencies and elected officials connected to the issue to oppose changes in the current legislation.

Some Republicans want even more restrictive laws. Indeed, things are likely to get worse for poker players with Republicans running the House. Poker’s biggest ally, Rep. Frank, lost his powerful position as committee Chairman. His replacement is Rep. Spencer Bachus (R-AL), one of online gambling and poker’s most outspoken antagonists [5]. This likely means no bill similar to the one proposed by Rep. Frank last year will make it anywhere near the House floor. Pro-poker initiatives in the Senate are equally as dead.

The Tea Party Movement – No doubt, the Tea Party movement was a major factor in the 2010 midterm elections. Voter anger at incumbents and a widespread feeling that Washington is out of touch with mainstream concerns fueled a pitchfork-wielding phenomenon that rippled across America, creating a major impact on the election. Unfortunately, this same movement brandishing clichés about “reducing the size of government” and wanting to “keep Washington out of our lives” has failed to embrace the same freedom to play online poker.

One would think a movement intent on protecting individual rights would support online poker initiatives. Even Libertarians, who make up a sizable contingent of the Tea Party movement and were largely responsible for the upset win of Rand Paul in Kentucky’s 2010 Senate race, have been silent on the issue of online poker. Don’t expect the Tea Party movement to do much to support online poker in the future.

The Casino Industry – Much of the casino industry’s behavior has been reprehensible. Until recently, the American Gaming Association (AGA), the industry’s biggest voice in Washington, was outspokenly opposed to online gambling. Only after big companies including Harrah’s (now Caesars Entertainment) and MGM Mirage saw their land-based revenues decline and began to understand the enormous upside of developing online markets did the industry partially reverse itself. But this change of heart came way too late.

Big casino companies have essentially abdicated the market to offshore entities and are now in a poor position to offer leadership on such an important issue, having arrived so late to the discussion. Even worse, some casino executives, most notably Sheldon Adelson, Chairman and CEO of Sands Corp. (Venetian), remains steadfastly against online poker.

It’s despicable that these business leaders who argue so strongly for free enterprise, open markets, competition, and encourage gaming at their own casinos would take such a hypocritical position.

Others against online poker include many of smaller casino owners, particularly those based in Northern Nevada. They fear being left out of the economic bonanza should online poker and gambling get legalized. Most incredibly, the opposition even includes some powerful individuals within the poker industry. One hopelessly out of touch business owner is Haig Papaian, part owner of the Commerce Casino in Los Angeles. He has been one of the most outspoken critics against online poker for years. Yet most poker players ignore these truths and play at places like the Venetian and the Commerce anyway.

State Lotteries – My view is that state lotteries should be shut down immediately. The payouts are a joke. Their advertising is deceptive. They prey on society’s most vulnerable citizens. Worst of all, lotteries are run by state governments, which presumably bear responsibility for protecting interests of the less fortunate members of society.

But the sad fact is, lotteries are here to stay. State budgets have come to rely on the ceaseless cash pipeline they provide. Yet incredibly, some lottery officials have completely overstepped their jurisdiction and have actively undermined online poker’s legalization. Rather than keep to themselves and run their own dubious scheme, some lottery officials worked to kill last year’s online poker bill.

Consider a baffling letter sent to several members of Congress last December from Ed Trees, Executive Director of the Pennsylvania State Lottery. In his letter, Trees urged lawmakers to oppose online poker’s legalization. His explanation was citizens would have less “discretionary income” to spend on lottery tickets. What a stunning stupid comment. No word yet on if Trees is currently working to shut down movie theatres, sporting events, and other businesses that he perceives to be a threat to his state-sponsored rip off of citizens.

Major Online Poker Sites – It’s hard to imagine a more badly managed public relations campaign and misguided lobbying effort than what has taken place in Washington over the past four years. The effort has been so poorly run that one must seriously ask – is the movement to legalize online poker just a sham? Do the major websites actually prefer to remain in a gray area so they can continue to prosper within the legal void?

Allegedly, the online poker industry had key people working “behind the scenes” [6]. The stealth strategy was to work cautiously with lawmakers and stay out of the public eye. Well, such a strategy has failed miserably. It’s now back to square one again.

One would think that if the industry were serious about legalizing and regulating online poker, a well-orchestrated public relations campaign would have started a long time ago. Make appearances on news shows. Take out ads in major newspapers. Run advocacy commercials. Write guest columns at major websites. Attend town hall meetings. Write Letters to the Editor. Get people thinking about this issue. Public advocacy often works.

Instead, the online poker industry has done an appalling job at PR despite the best intentions of some good people at the PPA. The time has come for a full-scale lobbying and public relations campaign similar to those carried out by most major business sectors and institutions.

Poker Players – Sadly, we poker players also bear responsibility. You think online poker games have gotten tougher the last few years? You’re right. Why? Here’s one reason: The market is not producing enough new fish fast enough, which fuels the so-called poker pond. While there are a lot of very fine people out there who have been politically active, the vast majority of poker players remain totally apathetic and uninvolved in major decisions that impact their lives.

One must wonder if just a few more people may have voiced their opinions, made phone calls to members of Congress, contributed to key campaigns, and joined the effort to fight for our rights how much more progress might have been made. The PPA has more than one million members. But how many poker players did anything the past few years to advance the cause? The percentage is embarrassing. What this really means is only a few poker players care enough to get involved and do something. Until our mindset changes, nothing else will.

___________________________

FOOTNOTES:

[1] According to current Federal laws, playing poker online is not specifically illegal. When referring to online poker’s “legalization” throughout this article, I mean the possibility of poker sites operating within the United States as well as licensed and regulated by a gaming commission.

[2] The political leader most responsible for implementing what became the UIGEA was former Sen. Bill Frist (R-TN) who did not seek re-election in 2006.

[3] The highlight of Congressional hearings occurred last year when a member of Congress asked a spokesman for Focus on the Family this point-blank question: “Are you against people having any kind of fun?”

[4] The worst example of this was the Commerce Casino’s ownership coming out strongly against legalized online poker. Tom Malkasian’s testimony before the House Financial Services Committee last year reads like a textbook case of hypocrisy. Here are the cliff notes of his testimony: “Keep the competition out. Deny poker players their rights. Protect my business so I can continue making a fortune.”

[5] When asked to explain his opposition further, Rep. Bachus has repeatedly parroted the old cliché that “online gambling is the crack cocaine of gambling” with little supporting evidence to back up his claims.

[6] Pro-online poker forces have hired top Washington lobbying firms and spent millions of dollars. However, passage of an online poker bill is no closer now than it was when UIGEA was passed more than four years ago. Some personnel and strategic changes are long overdue.

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Poker play: WSOP Champions

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