With an expanding statewide law enforcement crackdown into racketeering at strip center gaming parlors and Florida out a lieutenant governor, the House took the first step on Friday to shutter the adult arcade industry by further prohibiting the electronic machines and devices they use.
The House Select Committee on Gaming voted to proceed with a measure (HB 155) that clarifies the definition of slot machines and other gaming machines used at Internet cafés, and adult arcades that backers of the bill note are actually already illegal under state law.
The new law would end a gray area in state statutes used by operators of Internet cafes that the games are contests of skill and that the contests are similar to regulated sweepstakes offerings by places like McDonalds, Coca Cola, Chucky Cheese and churches. The legislation also would overrule any county and municipal laws that have been enacted in recent years attempting to regulate the businesses.
“These machines have always been illegal,” said Rep. Carlos Trujillo, R-Miami. “They’re considered games of chance. They’re illegal.”
Rep. Jim Waldman, D-Coconut Creek, cast the lone vote against the bill. He said the Legislature might be moving too fast and casting too broad a net in reacting to the arrests earlier this week of people connected to gaming centers run by Allied Veterans of the World.
The organization and the industry as a whole came under intense scrutiny this week as the subject of a large multi-state investigation into illegal gaming, that has already led to 57 arrests. Allied Veterans of the World also paid former Lt. Gov. Jennifer Carroll for consulting work – and after she was interviewed by law enforcement, she resigned on Tuesday.
The bill appears on an extremely fast track to legislative passage. Leaders in the both the House and Senate support the idea and said this week that a measure could be brought up on the House floor as early as next week.
Waldman said that because of the speed with which lawmakers are moving, there may be unintended consequences, and noted that some industries affected by the bill – which was only made public Thursday evening – may not even realize it. No representatives for the industry were in attendance at the committee meeting.
“Many of the people who would be impacted by this bill weren’t even aware that they were in this this morning because I’ve made some calls to find out what the effect would be on these establishments,” Waldman said. “While well-intentioned, this seems like nothing but what we consistently seem to do around the House and that is a knee jerk reaction to something that took place.”
The House bill’s next stop is the Rules Committee and without a set fiscal impact could quickly land on the House floor.
The Senate companion (SB 1030) is set to go before the Senate Gaming Committee on Monday.
The centers have been able to proliferate because they have claimed to be charities and businesses that only offer “sweepstake” prizes, despite numerous critics who contend they are gambling halls that prey on the elderly and poor and have been able to skirt the state’s regulations and the 35 percent tax rate that licensed pari-mutuels are charged by Florida.
Critics for ranging from Florida Chamber of Commerce and Dave & Buster’s Restaurant to Hollywood’s Mardi Gras Gaming and the Florida Baptist Convention contend customers are drawn to the arcades by the promise of payouts in cash, merchandise and alcohol and not regulated.
Before the arrests, lawmakers had already been contemplating a moratorium that would have prohibited new Internet cafes as they continued on a two-year review of gaming in Florida.
But that changed this past week as the statewide crackdown was announced that led to the arrests of 57 people and the closing of at least 49 Internet cafes, amid allegations of crimes such as racketeering and money laundering.
Trujillo said moratorium would have simply allowed the estimated more than 1,000 gaming centers to continue to operate without changes.
The House backed similar legislation last year to ban the electronic machines but the proposal failed to reach the Senate floor.
Agriculture Commissioner Adam Putnam backed the latest proposal.
“Internet casinos are a front for gambling and a breeding ground for other illegal activity,” Putnam said in a release. “We must close the loophole in the law that has enabled them to invade our communities. The House Committee’s vote today brings us one step closer to shutting down Internet casinos and improving the safety of Florida’s communities.”
–Jim Saunders, News Service of Florida
Blue6 says
How can you close me up? On what grounds?
I’m shocked, shocked to find that gambling is going on in here!
Your winnings, sir. Oh, thank you very much.
* You must remember this….*
-B- says
All I can say is that it is about damn time that these GAMBLING CASINOS are shut down! I say pass the bill, get our Governor to finally do something for a change and sign the bill into law, and haul out every single machine in these halls across the state! If anyone has ever been to one of these “SWEEPSTAKES” parlors, you would have to be a complete idiot to not realize what is actually going on in there! If for one moment you did not know “GAMBLING” was taking place, you may want to consider a visit to the eye doctor! You walk in, pay cash for so-called “credits”, play the game using these “credits”, and when you finish playing……you bring the card or coupon with your total number of credits to the front counter…..and you are paid CASH for your credits. Depending on the games, these credits can range from .01 to .05 per credit. This is nothing short of illegal gambling, only they use “credits” instead of the “chips” used in legitimate casinos.
The sooner these places are totally shut down across the state, and across the country……the sooner we can restore our communities and rid ourselves of these greedy thieves who pray on our most vulnerable residents!