A federal grand jury in the
Eastern District of Missouri
has returned a 22-count
indictment charging 11
individuals and four
corporations on various
charges of racketeering,
conspiracy and fraud, the
Department of Justice
announced today. The
indictment was returned on
June 1, 2006, and unsealed
today.
BetonSports PLC, a
publicly-traded holding
company that owns a number
of Internet sportsbooks and
casinos, was among the
companies charged in the
indictment. The founder of
BetonSports.com, Gary
Stephen Kaplan, 47, was
charged with 20 felony
violations of federal laws
including: the Wire Act,
Racketeer Influenced and
Corrupt Organizations (RICO)
Conspiracy, interstate
transportation of gambling
paraphernalia, interference
with the administration of
Internal Revenue laws and
tax evasion.
Other defendants in the
racketeering conspiracy
include: Kaplan's siblings,
Neil Scott Kaplan and Lori
Kaplan Multz; Norman
Steinberg; David Carruthers,
chief executive officer of
BetonSports.com; Peter
Wilson, media director for
BetonSports.com; and Tim
Brown, Steinberg's
son-in-law. The three other
charged companies, all
Florida-based, were Direct
Mail Expertise, Inc., DME
Global Marketing and
Fulfillment Inc. and Mobile
Promotions Inc. Also charged
are William Hernan Lenis;
Monica Lenis and Manny
Gustavo Lenis, owners and
operators of the Florida
companies; and William
Hernan Lenis' son, William
Luis Lenis.
"Illegal commercial gambling
across state and
international borders is a
crime," said U.S Attorney
Catherine L. Hanaway of the
Eastern District of
Missouri. "Misuse of the
Internet to violate the law
can ultimately only serve to
harm legitimate businesses.
This indictment is but one
step in a series of actions
designed to punish and seize
the profits of individuals
who disregard federal and
state laws."
The indictment alleges that
Gary Kaplan started his
gambling enterprise via
operation of a sportsbook in
New York City in the early
1990s. After Kaplan was
arrested on New York state
gambling charges in May
1993, Kaplan moved his
betting operation to Florida
and eventually offshore to
Costa Rica. According to the
indictment, BetonSports.com,
the most visible outgrowth
of Kaplan's sports
bookmaking enterprise,
misleadingly advertised
itself as the "World's
Largest Legal and Licensed
Sportsbook." The indictment
also alleges that Kaplan
failed to pay federal
wagering excise taxes on
more than $3.3 billion in
wagers taken from the United
States and seeks forfeiture
of $4.5 billion from Kaplan
and his co-defendants, as
well as various properties.
The indictment alleges that
Gary Kaplan and Norman
Steinberg, as the owners and
operators of Millennium
Sportsbook, Gibraltar
Sportsbook, and North
American Sports Association,
took or caused their
employees to take bets from
undercover federal agents in
St. Louis who used
undercover identities to
open wagering accounts. The
indictment also alleges that
Kaplan and Mobile Promotions
illegally transported
equipment used to place bets
and transmit wagering
information across state
lines and that DME Global
Marketing and Fulfillment
shipped equipment to Costa
Rica from Florida for
BetonSports.com.
The racketeering conspiracy
alleges that the defendants
agreed to conduct an
enterprise through a pattern
of racketeering acts,
including repeated mail
fraud, wire fraud, operation
of an illegal gambling
business and money
laundering.
In conjunction with the
indictment, the United
States has filed a civil
complaint in federal court
to obtain an order requiring
BetonSports PLC to stop
taking sports bets from the
United States, and to return
money held in wagering
accounts to account holders
in the United States. U.S.
District Judge Catherine D.
Perry issued the temporary
restraining order today. A
hearing in the civil case
has been requested within 10
days. As authorized by
federal statute, the
FBI
is issuing letters to four
telephone companies,
instructing them to stop
providing phone service to
the Internet sportsbooks and
casinos operated by
BetonSports PLC.
Gary Kaplan resides in Costa
Rica and a warrant has been
issued for his arrest. Neil
Kaplan, 40, is in custody in
Ft. Pierce, Florida.
Carruthers, 49, a resident
of Costa Rica and
Bromsgrove, Worcestershire,
England, is in custody in
Ft. Worth, Texas. William
Luis Lenis and Manny Gustavo
Lenis are in custody in
Miami. Tim Brown was
arrested near Philadelphia.
Warrants have been issued
for the other defendants not
currently in custody. The
United States will seek
extradition of all
defendants to St. Louis for
prosecution.
The charges are the result
of a joint investigation by
Internal
Revenue Service
Criminal Investigation and
the Federal Bureau of
Investigation. The
prosecution is being
conducted by the Organized
Crime and Racketeering
Section of the Justice
Department's Criminal
Division and the U.S.
Attorney's Office for the
Eastern District of
Missouri. The Florida
Department of Law
Enforcement, the Tampa
Police Department, the
Jacksonville, Fla. Sheriff's
Office, and NFL Security and
NCAA
Enforcement Office personnel
also assisted in the
investigation.
The charges set forth in an
indictment are merely
accusations, and each
defendant is presumed
innocent until and unless
proven guilty.