Online
Poker Foe Sheldon Adelson Dead at 87 - January 12th,
2021



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By
Dan Katz
Built
a fortune from scratch
Sheldon
Adelson, the founder of Las Vegas Sands Corporation
and online pokers top villain, died Monday at
the age of 87. Adelson had been battling non-Hodgkins
lymphoma, a form of blood cancer, since 2018. Just
a few days ago, Las Vegas Sands announced that he
was taking a leave of absence from his role as CEO
for treatment. Both Sands and Adelsons wife,
Dr. Miriam Adelson, confirmed the news on Tuesday
morning.
Regardless
of ones views of him, Adelsons rise to
being one of the richest people in the world is quite
impressive. He was not born into money. He did not
receive a small loan of a million dollars from his
father. Rather, Adelson began his business career
with by borrowing $200 from his uncle when he was
12 so he could buy the rights to sell newspapers outside
of Filenes Basement in Boston. Four years later,
he started a vending machine business with a $10,000
loan from that same uncle.
Fast
forward to 1979, after he had already started dozens
of businesses, when he and his partners founded the
giant computer industry convention COMDEX. They sold
it in 1995 for $862 million; Adelsons take was
over $500 million.
He
and his partners bought the Sands Hotel and Casino
in Las Vegas in 1988 and tore it down in the 1990s,
building The Venetian in its place. Though that property
is probably the one most people know best in the Las
Vegas Sands portfolio, most of the companys
money comes from properties in Singapore and Macau.
Online
pokers public enemy number one
Which
is one reason why Adelsons crusade against online
gambling in the United States was so strange. For
the better part of the last decade of his life, Adelson
fought tooth and nail to try to see online poker and
online gambling as a whole banned in the US, saying
he would spend whatever it takes to make
it so.
He
claimed he was trying to protect children and vulnerable
adults, but his real fear was that online gambling
could negatively impact his land-based casinos in
the country. As smart as he was, he never realized
that online gambling allowed people to get used to
playing in a comfortable environment, which they often
made them want to visit a casino to give it a shot
live.
Swung
his political club
Adelson
founded the Coalition to Stop Internet Gambling (CSIG)
in 2014, using it to lobby lawmakers to take up his
cause to ban online poker. The biggest Republican
political donor since about 2012, he epitomized crony
capitalism when his lobbyists crafted the Restoration
of Americas Wire Act (RAWA) in 2014, getting
Rep. Jason Chaffetz and Sen. Lindsey Graham to introduce
into their respective chambers of Congress.
RAWAs
goal was to update the Federal Wire Act of 1961 to
make all online gambling illegal. Its text only restricts
interstate sports betting over telecommunications
wires, but the Department of Justice interpreted it
to apply to all online gambling (the online part makes
sense, as those are effectively telecommunications
lines). In late 2011, the DOJs Office of Legal
Counsel (OLC) reinterpreted the Wire Act, confirming
that it does only apply to sports betting, thus opening
the door for online poker.
In
early 2019, however, the OLC, now part of the Trump
Administration, reversed its decision, saying that
the Wire Act makes all online gambling illegal. The
Wall Street Journal reported that the unexpected move
was kickstarted by Adelson, whose lobbyists told the
DOJ that the Wire Act interpretation was wrong. The
DOJ then sent it to the OLC to review (wink wink).
(Poker
News Daily) |