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Online Casino News for Monday - January 26, 2004

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• Indians seek Palm Springs entertainment facility
• Major stakes, gambling initiatives Card rooms target tribe's monopoly
• Slow casinos in the Catskills
• Tribe seek casino facility in downtown Palm Springs
• Not Limited to the Reservation
• An A.C. establishment with antiques
• Tribe envisions entertainment district
• Bolton casino receives greenlight
• Queen Mary 2 Comes to Florida
• Don't take a chance on expanded gaming
• Schaghticoke decision could have major effect
• VLTs ready to launch in a city already familiar with gambling
• Tribe criticizes Carcieri proposals
• Legal slots in Berks not probable
• Graton tribe insists county disregarding hate speech
• Mob's 'mini-casinos' increasing, sheriff states
• Desperate for cash, N.Y. wager on gambling
• Music in casinos, from karaoke to Alan Parsons
• Sigma Game Given Mississippi Authorization
• Gambling fate decided by Franklin voters
• $100 gamble on Panthers could turn to $10,000 for one man
• VGMs prepared to launch in a city that's no stranger to betting
• Md. lawmakers received endowments from gaming interests
• Gambling, a lucrative profit or a curse?
• Playing rough with casino revenues
• Cardroom owner cautious about bets
• Gaming Tribes possibly fined for illegal machine
• Indians seek Palm Springs entertainment facility
Online Casino News
Graton tribe insists county disregarding hate speech - 2004-01-26
Members of the Indian tribe proposing a casino in Rohnert Park say they have been the victims of hate speech and have alleged the Sonoma County Commission on Human Rights did little to rectify the circumstances.

Letters and e-mails delivered to the tribe last summer within the onset of public outcry against the proposed casino consisted of racial slurs and were "tantamount to the Ku Klux Klan harassing community leaders through fear and intimidation," Tribal Chairman Greg Sarris stated.
Read the full story at Press Democrat
 
Mob's 'mini-casinos' increasing, sheriff states - 2004-01-26
There has been a distorted expansion of mob-controlled video gambling, as reported by the Cook County sheriff's office.

Taverns used to shove a single machine in the corner. Now, they line up four or more machines "like a mini-casino," a sheriff's spokesman stated. The majority of games are video poker or push-button slot machines.
Read the full story at Chicago Sun-Times
 






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