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Online Casino News for Tuesday - February 3, 2004

More Online Casino News
• Tribe gambling on success in different areas
• Charities cheated of funds
• Tribe to urge for casino vote
• State should look into ownership of casino with 'safeguards'
• $506M proposal project for state-owned casino
• Racino development is looming
• Lawmakers hear earful on gambling
• High court to disclose racetrack tax decision
• Castaways like gone for good
• Hollywood promoter gives Hard Rock helping hand
• 2 candidates for director of casino authority
• NY Leaders Urge for Casino In The Heart Of Buffalo
• Counties subject to great benefits from DeJope casino
• Lanesville looks to casino funds to help replace unsafe gym
• Strife divides tribe
• Super Bowl sparks increase in gambling
• Las Vegas Sands Discloses Fourth Quarter and 2003 Results
• Vestin Capital Acquires Penniless Castaways
• Atlantis purchases CasinoCAD from CDI
• Former casino employee's bomb prank rap
• City gambles on £250m casino venture
• Tribe Revives Bid for Kenosha, Wis., Casino
• SEC stops fraudulent Vegas casino scam
• King Neptunes Casino has a $114,930 Jackpot winner
• Venetian profit drops; cash flow, advancing revenue
• Targeting the Hispanic market online
• Widows honor victims of AC disaster
• Casino constructor gets job close to Vegas
• California Community Reacts to Tribal Casino Plan
• R.I. Investigates CVS Over Corporate Conspiracy
Online Casino News
Tribe gambling on success in different areas - 2004-02-03
Deron Marquez doesn’t smoke, never wagers and says he has no idea how to play bingo.

So the chairman of the San Manuel Band of Mission Indians struggles to comprehend why over one million gamblers contribute to his tribe’s smoke-filled casino and bingo hall each year, one of the biggest in Southern California.
Read the full story at thedesertsun.com
 
Charities cheated of funds - 2004-02-03
James Lenahan figured that the few thousand dollars his charity -- Akron's Vision Support Services, formerly Akron Blind Center -- got back from Rittman's Michael Moneypenny was a little modest. After all, people had crowded the charity's Vegas night that Moneypenny ran.

And like the casinos the operation mimicked, the house always won, stated Paul Soucie, supervisor of the economic crimes division for Cuyahoga County Prosecutor William Mason.
Read the full story at Akron Beacon Journal
 






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