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Online Casino News for Tuesday - January 27, 2004

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• Mike possesses $400M luck in Albany
• Police oppose measure for non-Indian slot machines
• Riverboats present proposal to evade cruise requirements
• Chippewa Band to disclose older casino audits
• Casinos Keep Including Fresh Entertainment
• Plan forges ahead to cease tribal slot machine monopoly
• California slots proposal forges on
• Charges filed in credit card scheme
• Minnesotans support casino to assist state budget
• Going downhill from this point forward
• Measure X campaign rejoices over office launch
• Board to pick gaming member
• New plan would allow panel to cooperate with Reno council
• Poll shows R.I, Bay State locals spend big bucks at Conn. casinos
• Could costs of expanding casino gambling in Minnesota be valuable?
• Initiative may provoke yet more California gaming
• The casino business — without the nation's many...
• Casino free from $5.6M in taxes following settled lawsuit
• Casino wants to feature additional games
• MGM Mirage to Acquire Wembley for $489 Million
• Rendell looking at 12 potential sites for slots
• Johnson Contested Vote over Wynn Slots Plan
• Mob's 'Mini-Casinos' Becoming Popular
• Hey, who knows...
• Mgm on Schedule for Casino Development
• Cardroom Proprietor Concerned Over Tribal Casino Plan
Online Casino News
Mike possesses $400M luck in Albany - 2004-01-27
Mayor Bloomberg criticized Gov. Pataki's plan to open gambling parlors to finance cash-starved city schools yesterday, calling it a "highly volatile, unpredictable revenue source."

"I'm not a big gambler myself. I go to a casino, take my $20 bill and that's it, get it over with," the billionaire mayor explained during a legislative hearing.
Read the full story at New York Daily News
 
Police oppose measure for non-Indian slot machines - 2004-01-27
Adcocates trying to end Indian tribes' monopoly on slot machines took one step closer to getting their measure on the ballot Monday, but police chiefs promised to put up a fight against the plan that would expand gambling across the state.

The police chiefs previously contested initiatives authorizing tribal gambling because of the "serious link between large-scale casino gambling and crime."
Read the full story at San Francisco Chronicle
 







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