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Gambling
tycoon Anurag Dikshit deals losing hand, by Matthew
Goodman - 28th December 2008
(Credit:
Times Online)
Anurag
Dikshit’s guilty plea to online gaming in
the US leaves former Party Gaming colleagues vulnerable
The
first time Anurag Dikshit moved to Gibraltar,
where Party Gaming, the online gambling company
he co-founded is based, he found his ideal home.
But
there was a snag — someone was already living
in it. That did not deter Dikshit. According to
industry legend, he simply offered the owner much
more than the property was worth to get him to
sell.
This
month the Indian-born tycoon has again been drawing
on his considerable fortune to buy himself peace
of mind. Dikshit pleaded guilty in a New York
court to a charge under the Wire Act, which, in
effect, makes it illegal to offer online betting
in the US, and agreed to pay a $300m (£204m)
fine.
Dikshit’s
decision has created a rift with his former Party
Gaming colleagues, in particular the three other
entrepreneurs who helped launch what was once
the world’s biggest internet poker service
— Ruth Parasol, her husband, Russell De
Leon, and their marketing guru, Vikrant Bhargava.
It will also have troubled executives at other
big online gaming companies, such as 888 Holdings.
And it could have grave implications for the entire
online gambling industry, estimated to be worth
more than $12 billion a year.
Dikshit
will be formally sentenced in two years’
time. He could get two years in prison, although
many observers think it is unlikely he will have
to spend time behind bars. Between now and his
sentencing date, he is expected to help the American
authorities with their inquiries into the world
of online gaming.
The
software engineer’s guilty plea is a significant
coup for the US Department of Justice, which has
been pursuing overseas companies that allowed
American citizens to play on their websites. David
Carruthers, a Scot who ran online sporting bookmaker
BetonSports, was detained in America while changing
planes to fly to Costa Rica in July 2006 and awaits
trial. Executives of online gambling firms all
face the risk of arrest if they travel to America.
The
determination of the American authorities to pursue
those involved in online gaming persuaded Dikshit
to plead guilty. According to those close to him,
it was simply a means of bringing the affair to
an end, even if it cost $300m. It is money he
can afford to lose, argue his friends. He has
already made more than £500m from the sale
of Party Gaming shares, and retains a 27.7% stake
in the business, worth £213m.
Executives
at other online gaming companies and his former
Party Gaming colleagues do not take such a sanguine
view. “It’s a dangerous precedent,”
said one executive. “If he’s admitting
wrong, I don’t like it.”
Dikshit’s
decision to break ranks has provoked anger among
former colleagues. According to one person who
knows them well, the other three founders of Party
Gaming are upset because it leaves them feeling
“guilty by association”. They believe
they have done nothing wrong, maintaining that
until the US explicitly banned online gaming in
October 2006, offering poker online to American
citizens was not illegal.
Dikshit
had been negotiating for a resolution since summer
2006, and in that time has travelled to America
only once — for this month’s court
appearance. An American law firm led the negotiations
with the US authorities on his behalf.
Dikshit
has barely spoken to the other three founders
in almost a year. Some say this is on legal advice,
but Dikshit’s friends insist that the two
factions have simply drifted apart.
His
former colleagues think that Dikshit has, in poker
parlance, folded. They believe that with the change
in administration in America next month, pursuing
those involved in online gambling will fall off
the agenda. Why, they argue, pay huge sums to
settle these disputes if the authorities will
be looking elsewhere in just a few weeks?
According
to executives close to them, the Party Gaming
entrepreneurs are convinced that the US will regulate
the entire industry within the next two years,
not least for the valuable revenue it will generate
in taxes.
Meanwhile,
the online gaming companies are pursuing their
own negotiations. The vast majority pulled out
of the American market after the 2006 ban but
want to ensure they will not be prosecuted for
business carried out in the US before the prohibition.
In
a statement released on the day of Dikshit’s
court appearance, Party Gaming revealed its own
negotiations with the Department of Justice were
making “good progress” and said that
it expected any financial settlement to be “significantly
lower” than the $300m Dikshit has agreed
to pay. City analysts think the sum is likely
to be between $50m and $100m, and that an agreement
could come in the new year.
Once
settlements are agreed, the sector is likely to
undergo a rapid round of consolidation. In the
recent past, deals, such as a mooted tie-up between
Ladbrokes, the bookmaker, and 888 have come to
nothing because of the risk of American litigation.
That could all change with a settlement.
In
a research note, Ivor Jones, leisure analyst at
Evolution Securities, said: “Party Gaming
and 888, as two of the largest companies, look
likely to start the process. We believe combining
the two would release at least $70m of synergies.”
It
looks odds-on that 2009 will be quite a ride.
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