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Online Casino News for Tuesday - February 10, 2004

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• A Question of Character
• Wives at wits end, vow to stop casino
• Casino Opponents Want Law Against Petitioning For Tribal Acknowledgement
• Coushattas debate who is in control
• Rhode Island AG Seeks Commission To Direct Authorized Casino Industry
• Internal Reports Indicate Problems With West Warwick Casino Project
• Lynch offers a fresh face to gaming control board
• Less money brought into the community
• Obsessive gambling consultant to speak Friday
• Boyd Gaming buys Coast Casinos Inc.
• Is Belle Vue the new Las Vegas?
• Racetrack slots concept a worry at casinos
• Key Legislator: Don't bet on gambling at Polk
• Experts dispute impact of local casino
• US firms sets a new casino target
• California gaming will inevitably see an expansion
• Tribe and Plymouth Fight Over New Casino Project
• Coast Casinos Partners With Boyd Gaming
• Former gaming official declares ruling unfair
• It's the tribes against Vegas in Bangor
• States Targeting Tribes
• Coast bookies will prepare numbers
• Casino neighbors alert of hazards
• Tribe split regarding East Bay casino project
• Big Gamble On Customer Allegiance
• New Atlantic City casino lures a more youthful group
• AGA president to tackle legislators in Las Vegas
• Kansas gov. to make expanded gaming the focus
• R.I Bill Would Design Gaming Control Panel
• Aussie hotel-casino gets snapped up by SKYCITY
• BIA "out of control, lawless" insists Connecticut attorney general
• Internet casino provider gets big bolster from $500k investment
• Lynch advises commission to manage gaming
• Anti-casino group generates encouragement
• Old Vegas could continue to exist after all
• Town, parish argue over casino
• Pinnacle seeks to build two casino facilities in St. Louis
• Legislators suggest brand-new casino taxes
Online Casino News
States Targeting Tribes - 2004-02-10
Patricia Lopez and Dane Smith in the Star Tribune report that state governors and lawmakers are repeatedly looking with “an envious eye on an industry that is more profitable than ever: Indian gambling.”

In Wisconsin, Democrat Governor Jim Doyle last year signed a bill giving his state’s tribes the right to offer high-stakes games like roulette, baccarat and poker. The Wisconsin state government in return got “more than $200 million over two years,” the Star Tribune reported.
Read the full story at Online Casino News
 
Coast bookies will prepare numbers - 2004-02-10
Guess who'll be setting the numbers? The news of the partnership of Boyd and Coast properties had barely dried on the page when the telephone starting ringing profusely.
The concept that high-tech slot games can be downloaded into machines from remote locations isn’t as far off as people would believe.

A confidential document from Bear Stearns suggests that regulators are contemplating a variety of systems that would permit downloadable slot games over two to three years.
Read the full story at Gaming Today
 







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2008-12-02