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Report questions
legality of Mohawk online gambling
The authors of a new
research paper are calling for a public inquiry into
Canada's $13-billion gambling industry, saying its
widespread growth has led to serious social
consequences, and claiming that some casinos are
illegal.
Written by a trio of researchers, the report was
prepared for the Law Commission of Canada, an
independent federal agency that advises Parliament on
emerging legal issues.
The report wonders why
Mohawks in Kahnawake, Que., are
allowed to run online gambling operations when
running internet
gambling operations remains illegal in the rest of the country.
Sol Boxenbaum, a Montreal-based consumer advocate, says
he's complained for years that governments are ignoring
laws that say only provinces and charities can legally
run gaming houses.
"Except for three provinces that are following the law,
private companies are involved and billions of dollars
are leaving our country, and are going to the United
States, and going to the coffers of these national
corporations," said Boxenbaum.
He says it's time for the federal government to step in
and review the situation.
"I think gambling has gotten out of hand," he said. "The
provinces have lost control and somehow the answer
[that] always seem to come back … is that gambling is a
provincial issue."
One of the authors of the new report, B.C. criminologist
Colin Campbell, says tens of thousands of Canadians are
addicted to gambling, and that some are turning to crime
to support their habit.
"Frauds, embezzlements … bad cheques, credit fraud … but
police generally don't have an interest in digging below
the surface of the crime to establish the root cause,"
said Campbell.
His report asks why gambling went from being considered
illegal a generation ago, to a $13-billion, provincially
run industry.
"There was very little opportunity for Canadians to have
any kind of input on this historic transformation," said
Campbell.
Campbell also points out that Ontario's policy of hiring
private American companies to run casinos may overstep
the Criminal Code.
"We think it's in Canada's national interest that the
federal government sit down and re-examine the whole
issue of gambling," said Campbell.
The Law Commission has just received the research paper
and won't decide on final recommendations for Parliament
until next year.
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CBC News
Originally published
July 18, 2005 10:22 am EST
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