Mathematicians and Statisticians time to Unite: Supreme Courts Rules against Sports Betting Ban

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WASHINGTON — New Jersey won a landmark ruling from the Supreme Court Monday that could lead many states to legalize betting on college and professional sports.

The justices ruled 7-2 that a 25-year-old federal law that has effectively prohibited sports betting outside Nevada by forcing states to keep prohibitions on the books is unconstitutional. The ruling could set the stage for other states to expand legalized gambling as a source of government revenue.

Justice Samuel Alito, a New Jersey native, wrote the court's opinion in the case. Justices Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Sonia Sotomayor dissented.

It was a victory for the state's recently departed governor, Chris Christie, who had challenged the Professional and Amateur Sports Protection Act, passed by Congress in 1992 to preserve the integrity of the nation's most popular sports.

It was a defeat for the National Collegiate Athletic Association and the four major professional sports leagues -- baseball, football, basketball and hockey -- that had successfully blocked New Jersey in lower courts.

"Congress can regulate sports gambling directly, but if it elects not to do so, each state is free to act on its own," Alito said. "Our job is to interpret the law Congress has enacted and decide whether it is consistent with the Constitution. PASPA is not."

The court's action could jump-start action in Congress to pass legislation calling for federal regulation of sports betting -- something the sports leagues would prefer over separate rules from state to state.

Congress passed the 1992 law to preserve what lawmakers at the time felt was the integrity of the games. But New Jersey and its allies argued that it ran afoul of the 10th Amendment, which reserves for the states all powers not delegated to the federal government.

Christie, who left office in January, signed the state's first law legalizing sports betting in 2012 after voters in 2011 overwhelmingly approved an amendment to the state Constitution to allow it.

That law was overturned by federal district and appeals courts, but the state tried again in 2014 with a law that stopped short of legalization but repealed the prohibition against running a sports books at tracks and casinos. That also was rejected at the trial and appellate levels, but the Supreme Court agreed last June to hear the case.

During oral argument in December, several conservative justices said the law impermissibly "commandeered" states to keep their bans on the books. But several liberal justices said Congress merely pre-empted state laws, a commonplace action.

What has made the law anachronistic is the advent and rapid growth of Internet gambling. Rather than stopping sports betting, it helped push more of it underground, creating a $150 billion annual industry. That dwarfs the $5 billion bet in Nevada, the lone state with a legal sports book that preceded the federal law.

In the decades since the legislation was passed, opposition among the sports leagues has waned. The National Hockey League has located a team in Las Vegas, and the NFL's Oakland Raiders are due to follow. National Basketball Association commissioner Adam Silver has endorsed sports betting, and Major League Baseball has invested in fantasy leagues.

Supreme Court strikes down ban on sports betting in victory for New Jersey
 

Secure Da Bag

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Well now we'll watch these college kids flop like nobody's business. Rigged games are on its way.

The one good thing that may come of this is that college players may actually get paid now.
 

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Well now we'll watch these college kids flop like nobody's business. Rigged games are on its way.

The one good thing that may come of this is that college players may actually get paid now.
No they won't. There is another law that calls for all college sports to be treated the same. So if you pay college football players you will also have to pay women Field Hockey players and every college athlete in-between. And yeah, that's not happening.
 
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Secure Da Bag

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No they won't. There is another law that calls for all college sports to be treated the same. So if you pay college football players you will also have to pay women Field Hockey players and every college athlete in-between. And yeah, that's not happening.

There are ways to finesse that. For instance, giving them a stipend and free college (yes, again) after graduation.
 

88m3

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Are you against legalization of weed also?

You don't commonly hear about weed driving families into debt and murder suicide situations.

Weed also isn't going to influencing athletes and the people around them to throw games and who knows what else.


Do you support athletes cheating and using steroids?
 
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