Category Archives: Gambling

Betting Stores in England to Reopen with Some Strange Rules

England’s national lockdown ends tomorrow and betting stores in parts of the country will reopen, albeit with some unusual restrictions in place.

Betting stores in England will reopen on December 2 but some will have to limit customers to 15-minute visits. (Image: William Hill)

The new tier system comes into force on December 2 and, although venues will be open in all regions, those in “high-risk” areas have to follow additional safety measures.

All operators in Tier 3 zones must follow a new set of rules that that include limits on how long customers can spend inside their stores.

GGPoker Opens Final Table Betting Markets with PokerShares

GGPoker has added another stitch to its ever-expanding tapestry of features thanks to a partnership with PokerShares.

GGPoker has partnered with PokerShares to allow betting on its final table line-ups. (Image: Twitter/GGPoker)

Off the back of hosting WSOP Online events and introducing novel products like SnapCam, it now has final table betting markets.

By linking up with PokerShares, GGPoker is able to offer odds on its final table line-ups. The first market open to bettors is the final table of the SuperMILLION$.

Germany clears the air on horserace betting taxes; operator to pony up

Very rarely – there are better odds of winning the Powerball – will someone fight any country’s tax authority and win. Unless there is clear, irrefutable support for the case, it’s not even worth trying it. Taxes are, for better or worse, a way of life and no government is going to be willing to give up any revenue stream it has established. A gambling operator targeting the German market has found out that its attempt at fighting the government over its tax obligations was like hitting your head against a brick wall, and will now either have to pay up or shut down. 

The unidentified operator is reportedly based in the European Union but has its headquarters outside Germany. That didn’t stop it from legally accept bets on horse races from German gamblers as far back as 2012 but, when it came time to pay its tax bill, it suddenly decided it didn’t need to. It argued that the newly-created State Treaty on Gambling, which had gone into effect that year, provided a “lack of specificity and clarity” regarding tax obligations on gambling activity and was, therefore, unconstitutional. 

The operator took its case to a court judge, who, in 201, ruled that the objection had no merit. Undeterred, the company then went to Germany’s Hessian Finance Court, which reached the same conclusion as the lower court in January 2019. Still not ready to accept defeat, the company met with Germany’s Finanzamt, the country’s tax office, which has now, like in the two previous attempts, determined that the operator had no foundation for its argument and that it is going to have to pay its outstanding tax bill. 

The operator had tried to argue that conflicting information in the Racing Betting and Lottery Act (RennwLottG) made it impossible for Germany to accurately calculate the taxes due. One section of the legislation, Section 11, discusses a 5% tax on the stakes of race wagers, while Section 17 states that wagers placed by a resident in Germany or processed by a German entity are to be taxed at 5% of the “nominal value of the betting slips.” Section 17 infers a higher tax rate, and the operator asserted that the “delimitation between the taxable elements of Section 11 of the RennwLottG and Section 17 of the RennwLottG is not clearly regulated.” It added that Section 17 doesn’t contain language that identifies horserace wagers as being governed by the section, but hasn’t been able to find any legal support for its argument. 

Hero Call on Final Hand Ruins Impressive Session for Daniel Negreanu

Daniel Negreanu was so close to chipping away a big chunk of Doug Polk’s $600,000 lead on Day 13. He was cruising along up big for the session. And then he lost most of that profit on the final hand of the day thanks in part to a questionable river call.

Daniel Negreanu played well on Monday, but only won a small amount. (Image: YouTube)

Monday’s session lasted just over 2 hours and 15 minutes, perhaps shorter than it would have if not for the last hand. The poker pros have agreed to play for at least two hours per day. After that point, either player can call it quits at any time.

Entering the session, Polk had won four straight sessions by at least $117,000, including his most recent $332,178 win on Saturday. That brought his total profit for the challenge up to $596,197 through 5,751 hands out of 25,000 (potentially only 12,500, however).

Private Poker Game Costs Man $3,000 Due to Canada’s COVID Restrictions

A private poker game has cost a 37-year-old Canadian more than he bargained for following a late-night police raid.

A 37-year-old from British Columbia, Canada, has been fined CA$3,000 for hosting a private poker game. (Image: Lake Country Calendar)

Officers stormed the unnamed man’s home at 1am after receiving an anonymous tipoff. Upon entering the property in Kamloops, British Columbia, they found a group of people playing poker.

Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) Superintendent Syd Lecky said the man was fined CA$3,000 for breaching COVID-19 guidelines.