Anurag Dikshit, one of India’s richest men and co-founder of online gambling giant PartyGaming, has just sold his remaining share in the company. Dikshit’s history with PartyGaming includes a legal battle with the US Department of Justice in 2008. The sale generated over 100 million pounds, which Dikshit intends to give to his charitable organization.
Financial Times: Dikshit sells remaining stake in PartyGaming
Anurag Dikshit, the co-founder of the online gambling company PartyGaming, has just sold the remainder of his stake in the group that he started in 1997.
In brief statement to the stock exchange, Dikshit’s vehicle Crystal Ventures said that it had sold the remaining 9% stake of about 38.8m shares at a rate of 270p per share. The shares were sold via an accelerated bookbuilt offering available only to institutional investors.
The sale came just days after Partygaming announced it was in preliminary discussions with several other companies in the industry regarding possible consolidation. Among those including in the talks is Bwin, an Austrian-based online gambling group.
In 2006 Dikshit stepped down from the board at Partygaming. Back in October, he sold two-thirds of his stake in the company for £188m, which he then donated to his charitable foundation.
Dikshit paid authorities $300m (£183m) after pleading guilty to an online gambling charge in the US in 2008. Taking this money into account, Dikshit has gained about £540m since PartyGaming floated in June 2005.
Bloomberg: PartyGaming Founder Dikshit Sells Remaining Stake
PartyGaming founder Anurag Dikshit sold his remaining stake in the PartyPoker online gambling site that he helped start in back 1997. After the sale, shares fell as much as 7% in London trading.
Dikshit sold 38.8 million shares for 270 pence per share to institutional investors through an accelerated bookbuild. The sale of the 9.5% holding generated about 105 million pounds.
This liquidation follows Dikshit’s sale of two-thirds of his stake already in October. “This is simply about moving on,” said Shimon Cohen, his spokesman. “It’s been a process over four years since he first withdrew from the board. And that’s now it.”
In December 2008, Dikshit pleaded guilty to involvement in unlawful online gambling operations in the U.S., and agreed to cooperate with the US Justice Department in its probe of his company. He paid $300 million in fines, and is scheduled to be sentenced in December.
“It’s brought its fair share of issues,” Cohen said. “We have the court hearing and sentencing still hanging over us. Anurag voluntarily went to America and pled guilty so that he could move on.”
PartyGaming shares fell as much as 20.5 pence to 273 pence, and traded at 276.4 pence at 9:23 a.m. in London, giving the company a total market value of 1.12 billion pounds ($1.82 billion).
Telegraph: PartyGaming founder Anurag Dikshit severs ties with company after £114m share sale
Indian software expert Anurag Dikshit asked Goldman Sachs to sell his remaining 38.8m shares in the online gambling operator PartyGaming via a bookbuilding exercise. The sale follows a similar move last October when Dikshit sold a £188m holding in the company. PartyGaming shares rose 8 to 293.5p.
Mr Dikshit was responsible for developing PartyGaming’s online gaming software, but he became concerned about the company’s operations being declared illegal in America when laws changed in 2006. The US was once PartyGaming’s biggest market.
In December 2008, under pressure from the US Department of Justice, Dikshit pleaded guilty to breaking US gambling laws and agreed to pay a fine of $300m (£185m). Dikshit may still face a two-year jail.
One of the richest men in India, Dikshit is estimated to have already taken out more than £700m from the company since its float in 2005, though most of it is has been donated to his charitable trust.
Last week, PartyGaming confirmed that it is “continuing to hold discussions with a number of companies in the gaming sector regarding potential consolidation opportunities”, including a possible tie-up with Austrian rival Bwin.
Anurag Dikshit, one of India’s richest men and co-founder of online gambling giant PartyGaming, has just sold his remaining share in the company. Dikshit’s history with PartyGaming includes a legal battle with the US Department of Justice in 2008. The sale generated over 100 million pounds, which Dikshit intends to give to his charitable organization.
Financial Times: Dikshit sells remaining stake in PartyGaming
Anurag Dikshit, the co-founder of the online gambling company PartyGaming, has just sold the remainder of his stake in the group that he started in 1997.
In brief statement to the stock exchange, Dikshit’s vehicle Crystal Ventures said that it had sold the remaining 9% stake of about 38.8m shares at a rate of 270p per share. The shares were sold via an accelerated bookbuilt offering available only to institutional investors.
The sale came just days after Partygaming announced it was in preliminary discussions with several other companies in the industry regarding possible consolidation. Among those including in the talks is Bwin, an Austrian-based online gambling group.
In 2006 Dikshit stepped down from the board at Partygaming. Back in October, he sold two-thirds of his stake in the company for £188m, which he then donated to his charitable foundation.
Dikshit paid authorities $300m (£183m) after pleading guilty to an online gambling charge in the US in 2008. Taking this money into account, Dikshit has gained about £540m since PartyGaming floated in June 2005.
Bloomberg: PartyGaming Founder Dikshit Sells Remaining Stake
PartyGaming founder Anurag Dikshit sold his remaining stake in the PartyPoker online gambling site that he helped start in back 1997. After the sale, shares fell as much as 7% in London trading.
Dikshit sold 38.8 million shares for 270 pence per share to institutional investors through an accelerated bookbuild. The sale of the 9.5% holding generated about 105 million pounds.
This liquidation follows Dikshit’s sale of two-thirds of his stake already in October. “This is simply about moving on,” said Shimon Cohen, his spokesman. “It’s been a process over four years since he first withdrew from the board. And that’s now it.”
In December 2008, Dikshit pleaded guilty to involvement in unlawful online gambling operations in the U.S., and agreed to cooperate with the US Justice Department in its probe of his company. He paid $300 million in fines, and is scheduled to be sentenced in December.
“It’s brought its fair share of issues,” Cohen said. “We have the court hearing and sentencing still hanging over us. Anurag voluntarily went to America and pled guilty so that he could move on.”
PartyGaming shares fell as much as 20.5 pence to 273 pence, and traded at 276.4 pence at 9:23 a.m. in London, giving the company a total market value of 1.12 billion pounds ($1.82 billion).
Telegraph: PartyGaming founder Anurag Dikshit severs ties with company after £114m share sale
Indian software expert Anurag Dikshit asked Goldman Sachs to sell his remaining 38.8m shares in the online gambling operator PartyGaming via a bookbuilding exercise. The sale follows a similar move last October when Dikshit sold a £188m holding in the company. PartyGaming shares rose 8 to 293.5p.
Mr Dikshit was responsible for developing PartyGaming’s online gaming software, but he became concerned about the company’s operations being declared illegal in America when laws changed in 2006. The US was once PartyGaming’s biggest market.
In December 2008, under pressure from the US Department of Justice, Dikshit pleaded guilty to breaking US gambling laws and agreed to pay a fine of $300m (£185m). Dikshit may still face a two-year jail.
One of the richest men in India, Dikshit is estimated to have already taken out more than £700m from the company since its float in 2005, though most of it is has been donated to his charitable trust.
Last week, PartyGaming confirmed that it is “continuing to hold discussions with a number of companies in the gaming sector regarding potential consolidation opportunities”, including a possible tie-up with Austrian rival Bwin.
He was arrested three years ago by FBI agents for running a company that let US players wager on sports over the internet. Carruthers was charged with racketeering and conspiracy.
Telegraph: Bet on Sports Online executive jailed
David Carruthers, the former head of an online sportsbook company called Bet on Sports Online, has plead guilty to charges of racketeering and conspiracy, and has been sentenced to 33 months in jail.
The charges are connected to the company’s operations in the US, where online gambling is restricted. The fiasco follows the government’s crackdown on offshore online gambling sites that illegally accept wagers from American players. Bet on Sports Online saw profits of $3.5bn (£2.2bn) between 2002 and 2004, and most of that revenue came from players in the US.
Carruthers has been living under house arrest in a hotel in Missouri for the last three years, ever since he was detained by the FBI at Dallas Airport while on his way to Costa Rica, where Bet on Sports Online is headquartered.
Assistant US Attorney Steven Holtshouser said: “Previously, executives, owners and investors believed that they were immune from the reach of US law enforcement. Both the conviction of, and sentence handed down against Mr Carruthers should send a message to any foreign business conducting illegal activities in the United States, that geography does not render it untouchable.”
Last year, founder of Bet on Sports Online, Gary Kaplan was sentenced to more than four years in prison after agreeing to forfeit more than £43m.
A SCOTS gambling executive has been sentenced to almost three years in the US after pleading guilty to charges of racketeering. David Carruthers has spent the last three years under house arrest at a hotel in Missouri for violating American gambling laws.
Edinburgh-born Carruthers was chief executive of the massive internet sporstsbook BetOnSports. Carruthers appeared in court on Friday, where he was sentenced to 33 months after striking a deal with prosecutors.
Carruthers read a prepared statement at the hearing, apologizing for breaking US gambling regulations in a prepared statement to the hearing. He said: “I understand now that the business was operating outside the laws of the United States. I realize I made the biggest mistake of my life. I am sorry for the actions of BetOnSports and the trouble it caused.”
He was arrested by the FBI agents in July 2006 as he passed through Dallas Airport on his way to the company headquarters in Costa Rica. His wife Carol was with him at the time, and was also detained.
Carruthers is accused of breaking US law by presiding over a company that accepted illegal sports bets on the internet from American bettors.
Gambling Executive Sentenced to Prison
David Carruthers, the former chief executive of the online sports betting company Bet on Sports Online, has just been sentenced to 33 months in prison.
On Friday, Carruthers pleaded guilty racketeering conspiracy. Carruthers and 10 other individuals, including the company’s founder Gary S. Kaplan were indicted in 2006. Each was accused of violating an old federal law that forbids the placement of wagers by wire.
“I understand now that the business was operating outside the laws of the United States,” said Carruthers in a statement he read to the judge Carol during his trial.
Bet on Sports Online saw $1.25 billion in profits in 2004, with 98% of that revenue coming from bets made across the internet by players in United States.
He was arrested three years ago by FBI agents for running a company that let US players wager on sports over the internet. Carruthers was charged with racketeering and conspiracy.
Telegraph: Bet on Sports Online executive jailed
David Carruthers, the former head of an online sportsbook company called Bet on Sports Online, has plead guilty to charges of racketeering and conspiracy, and has been sentenced to 33 months in jail.
The charges are connected to the company’s operations in the US, where online gambling is restricted. The fiasco follows the government’s crackdown on offshore online gambling sites that illegally accept wagers from American players. Bet on Sports Online saw profits of $3.5bn (£2.2bn) between 2002 and 2004, and most of that revenue came from players in the US.
Carruthers has been living under house arrest in a hotel in Missouri for the last three years, ever since he was detained by the FBI at Dallas Airport while on his way to Costa Rica, where Bet on Sports Online is headquartered.
Assistant US Attorney Steven Holtshouser said: “Previously, executives, owners and investors believed that they were immune from the reach of US law enforcement. Both the conviction of, and sentence handed down against Mr Carruthers should send a message to any foreign business conducting illegal activities in the United States, that geography does not render it untouchable.”
Last year, founder of Bet on Sports Online, Gary Kaplan was sentenced to more than four years in prison after agreeing to forfeit more than £43m.
A SCOTS gambling executive has been sentenced to almost three years in the US after pleading guilty to charges of racketeering. David Carruthers has spent the last three years under house arrest at a hotel in Missouri for violating American gambling laws.
Edinburgh-born Carruthers was chief executive of the massive internet sporstsbook BetOnSports. Carruthers appeared in court on Friday, where he was sentenced to 33 months after striking a deal with prosecutors.
Carruthers read a prepared statement at the hearing, apologizing for breaking US gambling regulations in a prepared statement to the hearing. He said: “I understand now that the business was operating outside the laws of the United States. I realize I made the biggest mistake of my life. I am sorry for the actions of BetOnSports and the trouble it caused.”
He was arrested by the FBI agents in July 2006 as he passed through Dallas Airport on his way to the company headquarters in Costa Rica. His wife Carol was with him at the time, and was also detained.
Carruthers is accused of breaking US law by presiding over a company that accepted illegal sports bets on the internet from American bettors.
Gambling Executive Sentenced to Prison
David Carruthers, the former chief executive of the online sports betting company Bet on Sports Online, has just been sentenced to 33 months in prison.
On Friday, Carruthers pleaded guilty racketeering conspiracy. Carruthers and 10 other individuals, including the company’s founder Gary S. Kaplan were indicted in 2006. Each was accused of violating an old federal law that forbids the placement of wagers by wire.
“I understand now that the business was operating outside the laws of the United States,” said Carruthers in a statement he read to the judge Carol during his trial.
Bet on Sports Online saw $1.25 billion in profits in 2004, with 98% of that revenue coming from bets made across the internet by players in United States.
A Las Vegas based company called Cantor Gaming recently introduced a mobile gambling device that lets patrons of participating casinos wager on sporting events and play games like blackjack and baccarat while wandering around the casino property. Credits are purchased ahead of time, and a special security chip that players keep in their pocket makes sure no other users can access their device. It is quickly catching on, and Cantor hopes to expand the system throughout Vegas over the next few years.
The New York Times: In Las Vegas, Sports Books in a Pocket
In the past, sports bettors in Las Vegas had to line up at sports book windows and pay cash for paper tickets in order to place bets. At the M Resort, things work a little differently, and betting is happening through hand-held devices not much bigger than an iPhone.
The new technology comes from Cantor Gaming, and lets gamblers wager on sporting events from anywhere in the casino. Live betting is also available, letting gamblers wager on the outcomes of events as they happen.
Casino operators love the new system. “All of a sudden, these same people who were betting once or twice a game at the beginning of a sporting event can place wagers every minute if they want,” says Anthony A. Marnell III, chief executive of the M Resort. “Having this technology changes the entire equation for everyone involved.”
Bettors must still hand cash over to ticket writers, but the money gets converted electronic credits that show up on the wireless hand-helds, called eDecks (or in some places, PocketCasino). These devices can be taken almost anywhere in the casino. The only restriction is that bettors cannot use them while playing table games.
All eDeck users must obtain a plastic card with an ID chip embedded in it. The eDeck will only work within a few feet of that chip, so no other bettor can pick up the device and wager on another user’s account. The devices were approved by the Nevada Gaming Commission in 2008, but are only now being rolled out to casinos.
Vegas News: Cantor Gaming Launches Mobile Gaming Throughout The Venetian and The Palazzo
Cantor Gaming announced yesterday that the PocketCasino, available at The Venetian and The Palazzo casinos in Las Vegas, is now offering casino games in addition to live sports betting. The PocketCasino lets gamblers play casino style games in most areas of the resorts, including the casino, bars, lounges and restaurants.
Cantor Gaming launched the PocketCasino sports betting system in September at The Venetian Race and Sports Book and Lagasse’s Stadium at The Palazzo. PocketCasino now also gives players access to games such like blackjack, video poker and slots. These games offer special propositional bets that calculate odds dynamically based on the cards dealt.
President and CEO of Cantor Gaming Lee Amaitis said, “The inherent flexibility of the mobile platform provides a new type of social gaming experience, where a group of friends can sit together yet all be playing different games: blackjack, poker, slots or baccarat. And for casino operators, mobile gaming has shown it can convert traditionally non-gaming areas of the property into revenue-generating areas, resulting in incremental income for the property.”
Robert Goldstein, president and COO of The Venetian and The Palazzo, added, “Pocketcasino gaming is the perfect way to enjoy the excitement of casino without missing the fun your friends are having at the bar, lounge, or in one of our amazing restaurants. It’s a multitasker’s dream come true.”
Las Vegas Review-Journal: Sports bets at your fingertips
A live, mobile betting system called “PocketCasino” recently debuted at The Palazzo and The Venetian casinos in Las Vegas. It lets bettors place live wagers on sport events, like whether a team will make the next goal. Standard bets are also offered, like point spreads and money lines on selected games.
Las Vegas-based Cantor Gaming introduced it in the spring at M Resort during the NCAA men’s basketball tournament.
Gregg Layman, a Palazzo patron from Panama, works for an online gambling website. Palazzo found the PocketCasino system to be similar to what online sportsbooks are offer.
“This is going to grow in popularity,” Layman said. “I wish I could use it from home.”
Another casino patron, Danny Tubiolo of New York, is hooked on the new system. “It’s fun to bet if a kicker will make or miss a field goal,” he said.
Mark Goldman, director of race and sports at the two casinos currently offering the PocketCasino, said that interest in the product is steadily increasing. “We have ambassadors working the room, handing out information,” says Goldman. “Once people understand it, it’s pretty easy to use. I think it adds to the excitement.”
Customers check out the devices, place money on a special account. When finished, gamblers return the device and cash out. The device is active throughout the casino.
Cantor is the first company to bring hand-held wagering devices into Las Vegas casinos.
A Las Vegas based company called Cantor Gaming recently introduced a mobile gambling device that lets patrons of participating casinos wager on sporting events and play games like blackjack and baccarat while wandering around the casino property. Credits are purchased ahead of time, and a special security chip that players keep in their pocket makes sure no other users can access their device. It is quickly catching on, and Cantor hopes to expand the system throughout Vegas over the next few years.
The New York Times: In Las Vegas, Sports Books in a Pocket
In the past, sports bettors in Las Vegas had to line up at sports book windows and pay cash for paper tickets in order to place bets. At the M Resort, things work a little differently, and betting is happening through hand-held devices not much bigger than an iPhone.
The new technology comes from Cantor Gaming, and lets gamblers wager on sporting events from anywhere in the casino. Live betting is also available, letting gamblers wager on the outcomes of events as they happen.
Casino operators love the new system. “All of a sudden, these same people who were betting once or twice a game at the beginning of a sporting event can place wagers every minute if they want,” says Anthony A. Marnell III, chief executive of the M Resort. “Having this technology changes the entire equation for everyone involved.”
Bettors must still hand cash over to ticket writers, but the money gets converted electronic credits that show up on the wireless hand-helds, called eDecks (or in some places, PocketCasino). These devices can be taken almost anywhere in the casino. The only restriction is that bettors cannot use them while playing table games.
All eDeck users must obtain a plastic card with an ID chip embedded in it. The eDeck will only work within a few feet of that chip, so no other bettor can pick up the device and wager on another user’s account. The devices were approved by the Nevada Gaming Commission in 2008, but are only now being rolled out to casinos.
Vegas News: Cantor Gaming Launches Mobile Gaming Throughout The Venetian and The Palazzo
Cantor Gaming announced yesterday that the PocketCasino, available at The Venetian and The Palazzo casinos in Las Vegas, is now offering casino games in addition to live sports betting. The PocketCasino lets gamblers play casino style games in most areas of the resorts, including the casino, bars, lounges and restaurants.
Cantor Gaming launched the PocketCasino sports betting system in September at The Venetian Race and Sports Book and Lagasse’s Stadium at The Palazzo. PocketCasino now also gives players access to games such like blackjack, video poker and slots. These games offer special propositional bets that calculate odds dynamically based on the cards dealt.
President and CEO of Cantor Gaming Lee Amaitis said, “The inherent flexibility of the mobile platform provides a new type of social gaming experience, where a group of friends can sit together yet all be playing different games: blackjack, poker, slots or baccarat. And for casino operators, mobile gaming has shown it can convert traditionally non-gaming areas of the property into revenue-generating areas, resulting in incremental income for the property.”
Robert Goldstein, president and COO of The Venetian and The Palazzo, added, “Pocketcasino gaming is the perfect way to enjoy the excitement of casino without missing the fun your friends are having at the bar, lounge, or in one of our amazing restaurants. It’s a multitasker’s dream come true.”
Las Vegas Review-Journal: Sports bets at your fingertips
A live, mobile betting system called “PocketCasino” recently debuted at The Palazzo and The Venetian casinos in Las Vegas. It lets bettors place live wagers on sport events, like whether a team will make the next goal. Standard bets are also offered, like point spreads and money lines on selected games.
Las Vegas-based Cantor Gaming introduced it in the spring at M Resort during the NCAA men’s basketball tournament.
Gregg Layman, a Palazzo patron from Panama, works for an online gambling website. Palazzo found the PocketCasino system to be similar to what online sportsbooks are offer.
“This is going to grow in popularity,” Layman said. “I wish I could use it from home.”
Another casino patron, Danny Tubiolo of New York, is hooked on the new system. “It’s fun to bet if a kicker will make or miss a field goal,” he said.
Mark Goldman, director of race and sports at the two casinos currently offering the PocketCasino, said that interest in the product is steadily increasing. “We have ambassadors working the room, handing out information,” says Goldman. “Once people understand it, it’s pretty easy to use. I think it adds to the excitement.”
Customers check out the devices, place money on a special account. When finished, gamblers return the device and cash out. The device is active throughout the casino.
Cantor is the first company to bring hand-held wagering devices into Las Vegas casinos.
LaForte directed players to an internet sportsbook hosted offshore, supplying them with user names and passwords for online sports betting. The website gave LaForte a share of the profits. LaForte now faces a possible prison sentence.New York Man Admits Role in Sports Betting Ring
A man from New York admitted last week that he helped to run an illegal online sports betting website that offered services in several US states, including New Jersey.
Joseph W. LaForte admitted to the crime in U.S. District Court in Trenton last Wednesday.
LaForte, 39, pleaded guilty to conspiracy to operate an illegal online sports betting business. LaForte is already serving time in New York on separate charges, and now faces a sentence of up top five years in prison along with a $250,000 fine. He will be sentenced April 6th.
LaForte’s admission said that between 2005 and 2006, he and several others helped punters to place wagers through an online sportsbook hosted outside the United States, then shared in the profits from the sports betting business.
NY man admits role in sports betting ring
A man from Staten Island, New York, recently pleaded guilty to setting a former employee’s Mercedes-Benz on fire in 2004 out of revenge.
James LaForte Jr., 32, also admitted last Wednesday to offering high-interest loans, then using threats and violence to collect on them. Loan sharking carries a maximum sentence of 20 years in prison and a $250,000 fine.
Additionally, LaForte’s brother Joseph W. LaForte admitted to a federal court that he had participated in an illegal online sports gambling business in New Jersey, New York, Florida and elsewhere. Joseph LaForte, 39, is currently serving a sentence in New York state prison on unrelated charges. He admitted to conspiring with others in 2005 and 2006 to helping bettors to place wagers at a foreign internet gambling site. They provided punters with user names and passwords so they could wager on online sports betting, LaForte admitted. He faces up to five years in prison and a $250,000 fine; sentencing is set for April 6.
Breaking Local News from Staten Island, NY: Staten Island man admits role in sports betting ring
Joseph W. LaForte, a Staten Island native who most recently lived in Huguenot, admitted on Wednesday that he helped operate an illegal online sports betting ring in New Jersey.
Joseph W. LaForte made this admission Wednesday at the U.S. District Court in Trenton.
Thirty-nine year old LaForte pleaded guilty to charges he was accused of, including conspiracy to operate an unlawful online sports betting business. LaForte, currently serving a prison term in New York on unrelated charges, faces up to five years and a fine of $250,000 when he is sentenced on the 6th of April.
In his admission, LaForte revealed that in 2005 and early 2006, he and his associates directed bettors to a particular online sports betting website located outside the United States. LaForte shared in the profits from the online business.
LaForte directed players to an internet sportsbook hosted offshore, supplying them with user names and passwords for online sports betting. The website gave LaForte a share of the profits. LaForte now faces a possible prison sentence.New York Man Admits Role in Sports Betting Ring
A man from New York admitted last week that he helped to run an illegal online sports betting website that offered services in several US states, including New Jersey.
Joseph W. LaForte admitted to the crime in U.S. District Court in Trenton last Wednesday.
LaForte, 39, pleaded guilty to conspiracy to operate an illegal online sports betting business. LaForte is already serving time in New York on separate charges, and now faces a sentence of up top five years in prison along with a $250,000 fine. He will be sentenced April 6th.
LaForte’s admission said that between 2005 and 2006, he and several others helped punters to place wagers through an online sportsbook hosted outside the United States, then shared in the profits from the sports betting business.
NY man admits role in sports betting ring
A man from Staten Island, New York, recently pleaded guilty to setting a former employee’s Mercedes-Benz on fire in 2004 out of revenge.
James LaForte Jr., 32, also admitted last Wednesday to offering high-interest loans, then using threats and violence to collect on them. Loan sharking carries a maximum sentence of 20 years in prison and a $250,000 fine.
Additionally, LaForte’s brother Joseph W. LaForte admitted to a federal court that he had participated in an illegal online sports gambling business in New Jersey, New York, Florida and elsewhere. Joseph LaForte, 39, is currently serving a sentence in New York state prison on unrelated charges. He admitted to conspiring with others in 2005 and 2006 to helping bettors to place wagers at a foreign internet gambling site. They provided punters with user names and passwords so they could wager on online sports betting, LaForte admitted. He faces up to five years in prison and a $250,000 fine; sentencing is set for April 6.
Breaking Local News from Staten Island, NY: Staten Island man admits role in sports betting ring
Joseph W. LaForte, a Staten Island native who most recently lived in Huguenot, admitted on Wednesday that he helped operate an illegal online sports betting ring in New Jersey.
Joseph W. LaForte made this admission Wednesday at the U.S. District Court in Trenton.
Thirty-nine year old LaForte pleaded guilty to charges he was accused of, including conspiracy to operate an unlawful online sports betting business. LaForte, currently serving a prison term in New York on unrelated charges, faces up to five years and a fine of $250,000 when he is sentenced on the 6th of April.
In his admission, LaForte revealed that in 2005 and early 2006, he and his associates directed bettors to a particular online sports betting website located outside the United States. LaForte shared in the profits from the online business.