Online Casino News





Online Casino News for Friday - January 16, 2004

More Online Casino News
• Casino 'crossfire' angers U.S. Sen.
• Oklahoma Tribes Fights For Colorado Casino
• Aberdeen Beach May Start Looking Like Vegas
• Coucils Ready To Cash In On Casino Growth
• Casino discussion grabs attention
• Slots Generate Lucrative Gifts for Casinos
• Tribe pursues land claim in federal court
• Tribes give friendship, but not funding
• Casino-hunting tribes land claim spreads across Colorado
• Minicasino abolishment tackle returns to court
• Burglary at North La Crosse casino
• St. Regis Mohawks schedule vote on land battle
• Station Casinos to pay $400 million in notes
• Transaction: Casino pays $32.8 million for slots
• Two city commissions pick Pinnacle's casino project
• The games not over for Binion's
• Raceway given approval to install VLTs
• Cal City supports Country Club Hills casino
• Major bid might land state's final casino license
• Tribe agree to sacrifice for casino
• Consultant shows casino enthusiasm
• Major profit foreseen for Red Rock Station casino
• Casino firms prepared to gamble on beach properties
• Horseshoe's plummeting fortunes were apparent to many in the end
• 'The Cooler' captivating Vegas story set in casino times
• Two Indian tribes declare 27M acres in Colorado
• Man sues for a place in tribe
• Dubuque casino extended development gets greenlight
• Gambling curriculum will have hearing
• Vega$ Tycoon hopes to get big bucks
• Mass. Lottery games to unite, jackpots will growth
• Illinois Casinos Show Mixed Outcome; Ameristar Earnings Rises 34 Percent
Online Casino News
Tribe pursues land claim in federal court - 2004-01-16
In an unsuccessful attempt to gain legislative authorization to operate slot machines in Pennsylvania, an Oklahoma tribe filed a federal lawsuit yesterday to reclaim 315 acres of ancestral tribal land in Northampton County.

The lawsuit - which claims the land was stolen from the Delaware Nation over 200 years ago - is the tribe's first of many efforts to secure land rights in Pennsylvania and, as a result, the right to establish a casino in the state.
Read the full story at Philadelphia Inquirer
 
Tribes give friendship, but not funding - 2004-01-16
Indian tribes with casino gambling are all for being good neighbors and citizens, their leaders state, but that doesn't really mean handing over more money to the state just because California is in an economic slump.

He and other tribal leaders balked at Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger's demands that casinos split more of their revenue with the state, which is struggling to maintain its budget in the black.
Read the full story at Las Vegas Sun
 






Disclaimer: Online Casino Guru Inc. is not not responsible for losses which may be incurred by persons using the information contained within this site. Use the information provided here at your own risk. The information at this site is for entertainment and news purposes only.

Copyright © 2008 Online-Casino-Guru.com

2008-11-19