Oskar Garcia
Hawaii verifies Obama’s birth records to Arizona
HONOLULU (AP) — The state of Hawaii has verified President Barack Obama’s birth records to Arizona’s elections chief after a nearly three-month back and forth that Arizona officials said could have ended without the incumbent’s name on its November ballot.
Joshua Wisch, special assistant to Hawaii Attorney General David Louie, told The Associated Press late Tuesday that the matter is resolved after Hawaii gave Arizona the verification it was looking for.
Hawaii — which has vouched for Obama’s birth in the state several times — didn’t bow to the request easily. The Aloha State told Arizona Secretary of State Ken Bennett to prove he needed the records as part of normal business.
Wisch says Hawaii got what it needed.
It’s not immediately clear whether the information will satisfy Bennett. A spokesman says he received the verification and will comment Wednesday.
Lobbyist: Casinos Want Fair Online Gambling
LAS VEGAS (AP) — A top lobbyist says commercial casinos companies want a fair shot for everyone when it comes to online gambling — not a leg up over state lotteries, American Indian tribes and others jockeying to be first in line.
CEO Frank Fahrenkopf of the American Gaming Association said Wednesday the only way to make that happen is with a federal bill that explicitly legalizes online gaming while shutting down some 2,000 websites that currently offer illegal online gambling to Americans.
Fahrenkopf says any laws must treat all forms of legalized gambling equally.
Fahrenkopf’s comments came during the start of the Gaming Laboratories International Roundtable in Las Vegas.
American Indian Tribes Cautious On Online Gambling
LAS VEGAS (AP) — Leaders who run casinos for Indian tribes are telling regulators and companies that they won’t support new laws involving online gambling unless it’s clear how tribes nationwide will be affected.
Chairwoman Leslie Lohse of the California Tribal Business Alliance said Tuesday that online gambling has cultural and economic implications that shouldn’t be brushed off because others are in a hurry to start taking bets.
Lohse says tribal sovereignty and other issues need to be addressed before tribes eagerly support Internet gambling laws in California or nationwide.
The comments reveal fierce competition between those who might want Internet gambling in some form. The tribes, like others, don’t want to be hurt or left out.
No Longer A Hilton: Las Vegas Casino Loses Brand
A hotel guest walks around the grounds of the Las Vegas Hotel and Casino Tuesday, Jan. 3, 2012, in Las Vegas. The Las Vegas Hilton hotel-casino is no longer affiliated with the Hilton following a name change to take the chain's brand off the building. (AP Photo/Julie Jacobson)(Credit: AP) LAS VEGAS (AP) — The Las Vegas Hilton hotel-casino has officially changed its name to drop its hotel chain moniker after a license agreement expired at the start of 2012.
Workers changed the hotel marquee Tuesday to reflect the new name for the property east of the Las Vegas Strip: The Las Vegas Hotel & Casino.
It’s the second time Elvis Presley’s former haunt has changed its name. Billionaire investor Kirk Kerkorian opened the property in 1969 as the International Hotel, then sold it to the Hilton chain. It became the Las Vegas Hilton in 1971.
The Hilton sought to end the agreement last year.
Las Vegas historian Michael Green says casino name changes are uncommon, though not unprecedented in Sin City.
The change means the property won’t be connected with Hilton’s loyalty program.
Online Gambling Fight Now About When, Who _ Not If
LAS VEGAS (AP) — The fight to fully legalize online gambling in the U.S. is now less about whether Americans will be able to play and more about who will bring the action to them — and when.
A recent U.S. Justice Department opinion opened the door for cash-strapped states and their lotteries to bring online gambling to their residents, as long as it does not involve sports betting.
The DOJ memo also enflamed a battle within the industry over how to legalize online gambling that once generated an estimated $6 billion yearly just from poker: Should each state have its own system, or should there be a nationwide law?
One lawmaker in New Jersey is already pushing to make online gambling legal, citing the DOJ memo.
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Oskar Garcia can be reached on Twitter at http://twitter.com/oskargarcia.
Online Gambling Fight Now About When, Who _ Not If
LAS VEGAS (AP) — The fight to fully legalize online gambling in the U.S. is now less about whether Americans will be able to play and more about who will bring the action to them — and when.
A recent U.S. Justice Department opinion opened the door for cash-strapped states and their lotteries to bring online gambling to their residents, as long as it does not involve sports betting.
The DOJ memo also enflamed a battle within the industry over how to legalize online gambling that once generated an estimated $6 billion yearly just from poker: Should each state have its own system, or should there be a nationwide law?
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