US Gambling Online Provider Bovada Increases Casino Promotions for United States Players

Long before the states of Nevada, Delaware and New Jersey decided to legalize state based Internet gambling, Bovada delivered legal sports, casino, horse and poker gambling to residents of the United States. By qualifying for an interactive Internet gaming license from the Kahnawake Gaming Commission in Canada, Bovada now provides industry recognized certification. Way back when, Bodog was the leading Internet jurisdiction for US-friendly gambling. Bodog was founded back in 2000, well before the Department of Justice in the US decided to allow individual states to regulate and license online gambling offerings. The World Trade Organization (WTO) has time and again supported the right of Antigua (Bodog’s licensing provider) to offer Internet gambling services to US customers. Now owning respected Kahnawake licensing makes Bodog’s new entity ever more legitimate.

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United States Gambling Online – What Is and Is Not Legal in the US

This year the World Series of Poker will deliver a $10 million Main Event grand prize. This is the first year since 2006 that the winner of the world’s most popular poker tournament will take home eight figures. More than $50 billion was spent on state-run lotteries last year in the United States. And Las Vegas casinos make over $100 million each spring on March Madness alone. Additionally, March Madness brackets played in sports bars and office pools across the United States involve hundreds of millions, if not billions of dollars. In 2014, a record $119.4 million was wagered at Nevada casinos on the Super Bowl. The bottom line? Americans love to gamble. So with the majority of US citizens believing that responsible adult wagering is acceptable, why is United States gambling online illegal? Well, actually, it is absolutely legal.

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Powerful California Indian Tribes to Deliver Internet Poker Bill

California online poker at one point was deemed all but a certainty for 2014. Now that individual US states have the ability to license and regulate Internet poker and casino gambling for their residents, Nevada, New Jersey and Delaware have already done so. But the provision which laid the way for state-sanctioned Internet poker in the United States came into existence in December of 2011. With legally licensed offshore poker providers benefiting financially from US citizens living in those states where online poker is not currently delivered at the state level, it would make sense for cash-strapped states like California to get on board the growing US Internet gambling industry.

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Could a Pennsylvania Online Gambling Industry Outperform New Jersey

The United States gambling online industry still currently counts just three states as participants; New Jersey, Delaware and Nevada. Nevada’s next-door neighbor, California, boasts the largest population of any state in the US. That makes it very attractive when you consider potential revenue production if online gambling in the form of poker and/or casino games was legally presented to its residents. And it looked like Golden State web poker was going to become a reality in 2014, but it now appears that 2015 is probably the earliest that California residents will be able to legally play online poker at state-sanctioned California online poker websites.

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Why are US Gamblers Choosing Offshore Options Over NV, NJ, and DE Choices?

It has been almost a year since Ultimate Poker launched the new United States online gambling industry in Nevada. The Department of Justice decided it was okay for states to offer Internet gambling, as long as it was restricted to anyone physically located within that state’s boundaries, and sports gambling was not on the table. New Jersey and Delaware followed Nevada’s lead, adding Las Vegas style casino gambling as well as virtual poker, and as of this post, those three states remain the only in the US to legally deliver cyber wagering to their residents and visitors.

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Will Christopher Walken Lose His King Of New York Title to Online Poker

In 1990, popular actor Christopher Walken portrayed a drug kingpin recently out of prison in the movie “King of New York”. Brutally wiping out his competition, he handed out much of the profits of his illegal operations in the film to the poor and lower classes of New York. With thoughts of running for Mayor, his altruistic but albeit questionable actions earned him the nickname which is also the title of the movie. Similar to the drug war that Walken successfully emerged from in the film, there is currently a battle taking place in the cyber world in the United States. Online gambling has legally returned at the state level in the USA, but most US Internet poker players currently enjoy legal offshore options. State legislators from The Big Apple are aggressively fighting for their state to become the fourth in the USA to get on board as they  to strive to offer legal New York online gambling, hoping to gain control of much needed revenue which is moving out of state.

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Pennsylvania Resolution SR 273 Okays Online Gambling Study

With nearby New Jersey and Delaware already on board with legalized online gambling, Pennsylvania has also decided to take a look. Pennsylvania Resolution SR 273 was approved by the state Senate, which means that state is officially going to conduct a study of Internet gambling viability. Several other states are legitimately considering passing Internet gambling laws that would allow their residents and visitors to shuffle up and deal, play some virtual slots or enjoy popular casino table games over the Internet through state licensed options, expanding the list of existing offshore legal Pennsylvania online gambling options already available. Illinois and California appear to be the front-runners in the race to become state number four in the young and slowly growing United States based Internet gambling industry.

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iGaming North America 2014 – Internet Gambling Legislation a Huge Victory for US Gamblers

As reported in the Las Vegas Review Journal, important casino executives were in attendance at the iGaming North America 2014 conference which was held at the Planet Hollywood hotel casino in Las Vegas recently. Almost to a man the group of casino owners and managers called online gambling regulation in Delaware, Nevada and New Jersey a definite victory for them and their patrons. They also pointed out that the early predictions of immediate and incredible revenue didn’t come from educated industry analysts and experts. But regulation for online gambling is still seen as a huge success, as well as a breakthrough in the gambling world, which all of the iGaming board members agreed was the wave of the gambling future in America.

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New York to Copy Atlantic City Online Gambling Success?

The Atlantic City online gambling industry may be more influential than anyone imagined. New York City owns such memorable nicknames as The Big Apple, The City That Never Sleeps and The City of Dreams. And the state itself is known as the Empire State, even referred to by none other than United States founding father George Washington with that powerful sobriquet. But New York as the Copycat State? Most New Yorkers are proud of their image as unique self-starters and successful individuals that do things their own way. But if a new piece of legislation passes, it appears New York online gambling will simply copy and paste the successful model employed by its neighbor just across the bridge.

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Proposed Bill Looks to Kill Internet Gambling in the US – Even in Those States Where It Is Legal

A current piece of legislation threatens to outlaw all Internet gambling in the United States … even in those states where it is already legal. It took several changes in legislation to deliver the current legal online gambling entity we enjoy in the United States. A Department of Justice consideration that casino and poker games should not be bound by the Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act of 2006 means that each individual US state can decide whether or not it wants to offer those forms of Internet gambling to its citizens and visitors. Actually created as a Title VIII addition to the Safe Port Act which was concerned with US port security, the UIGEA legislation now currently applies to just Internet sports gambling in the United States. But there are those legislators in the US which want to outlaw Internet gambling altogether.

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