Daily Archives: July 8, 2017

America’s War on Drugs Full Episodes, Video & More | HISTORY

Posted: July 8, 2017 at 9:40 pm

Americas War on Drugs is an immersive trip through the last five decades, uncovering how the CIA, obsessed with keeping America safe in the fight against communism, allied itself with the mafia and foreign drug traffickers. In exchange for support against foreign enemies, the groups were allowed to grow their drug trade in the United States. The series explores the unintended consequences of when gangsters, war lords, spies, outlaw entrepreneurs, street gangs and politicians vie for power and control of the global black market for narcotics all told through the firsthand accounts of former CIA and DEA officers, major drug traffickers, gang members, noted experts and insiders.

Night one of Americas War on Drugs divulges covert Cold War operations that empowered a generation of drug traffickers and reveals the peculiar details of secret CIA LSD experiments which helped fuel the counter-culture movement, leading to President Nixons crackdown and declaration of a war on drugs. The documentary series then delves into the rise of the cocaine cowboys, a secret island cocaine base, the CIAs connection to the crack epidemic, the history of the cartels and their murderous tactics, the era of Just Say No, the negative effect of NAFTA, and the unlikely career of an almost famous Midwest meth queen.

The final chapter of the series examines how the attacks on September 11th intertwined the War on Drugs and the War on Terror, transforming Afghanistan into a narco-state teeming with corruption. It also explores how American intervention in Mexico helped give rise to El Chapo and the Super Cartels, bringing unprecedented levels of violence and sending even more drugs across Americas borders. Five decades into the War on Drugs, a move to legalize marijuana gains momentum, mega-corporations have become richer and more powerful than any nations drug cartel, and continuing to rise is the demand for heroin and other illegal drugs.

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America's War on Drugs Full Episodes, Video & More | HISTORY

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Saturday’s best TV: Museum of the Year; Secret War on Drugs – The Guardian

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Worthy winner? the National Horseracing Museum. Photograph: Marc Atkins/Marc Atkins / Art Fund 2017

Earlier this year, Tristram Hunt swapped life as an MP for the cushier gig of director of the V&A. Wed speculate that hes rarely regretted his choice; tonight he presents coverage of the 2017 museum of the year ceremony. The finalists are Londons Tate Modern and Sir John Soanes Museum, the Newmarket Heritage Centre for Horseracing and Sporting Art, Birminghams Lapworth Museum of Geology and the Hepworth Gallery in Wakefield. Phil Harrison

While Only Connect fans might turn up their noses at it, this revived gameshow is shamelessly traditional and infectiously watchable. Stephen Mulhern hosts as ever, bidding three contestants to guess the familiar phrases concealed in brightly animated clues. The fun is in the sheer frenzy the players work themselves into as the answers dance on the tips of their tongues and 50,000 is up for grabs in the Super Catchphrase round. David Stubbs

What a world it is when pop goddess Kelis and over-enthusiastic music teacher type Gareth Malone coexist on a Saturday night TV show, critiquing the vocal tones of various bouncy choirs. Its like Glee has graduated, found its questionable aunties stash of speed and necked the lot. Now its the fourth heat, where choirs including the Bristol Suspensions, Over the Water and the Savannahs riff for their lives. Guest Seal joins the judges. Hannah Verdier

The blind audition rounds may now be a distant memory, but the under-15s fight for a 30,000 musical bursary (plus a trip to Disneyland Paris) intensifies as the remaining competitors approach a harmonic Hunger Games in the first battle round. The contenders are split into groups of three, each facing further forays on to the stage. Only one singer from each trio can triumph; which young Voicettes will break first? The round concludes on Sunday. Mark Gibbings-Jones

Like live-action Tinder, but with the added humiliation of doing it all in front of a baying studio audience, Paul OGrady invites a new crop of singletons on to the telly for some public matchmaking. Looking for some conscious coupling this week are Manchester-based recruitment consultant Antoni, and Alice, who is seeking a girlfriend who might be willing to look past her obsessive Cline Dion super-fandom in the pursuit of potential romance. Its a big ask, love. Ben Arnold

Hes the Palme dOr winner whos been banned from Cannes; a cackling, self-mythologising put-on merchant, whose divisive films have been accused of misogyny or perhaps should be regarded more, as Nymphomaniac actor Stacy Martin breezily says in this mini-profile, as a premise to conversation. However, collaborator Jean-Marc Barr sums the trickster-provocateur up best when he describes Von Trier as simply a showman. Ali Catterall

Debut of a new series chronicling arguably the most counter-productive conflict of all time the war on drugs, which has cost billions, immiserated millions, and does not appear to have stopped anybody taking drugs. This episode reflects on various shabby attempts by the US government to co-opt the drugs trade for its own purposes. Interesting enough, but the usual US documentary caveats, about annoying soundtrack and pompous voiceover, apply. Andrew Mueller

West (Christian Schwochow, 2014), Saturday, 1.30am, BBC2 This subtly gripping, atmospheric cold war drama about refugees from East Germany has a very contemporary resonance. Based on Julia Francks novel Lagerfeuer, its the story of young mother Nelli (Jrdis Triebel) who, after a humiliating interrogation, is allowed to leave with her son for West Berlin. They are detained in a holding camp, where Nelli finds herself dealing with suspicious officials not so different from the Stasi she left behind. Its an engrossing tale, reminiscent of Florian Henckel von Donnersmarcks more celebrated The Lives of Others. Paul Howlett

Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets, (Chris Columbus, 2002), 10.20am, ITV

The second entry in the Potter archive is like the first, but darker, with Daniel Radcliffe and pals encountering massive spiders, a flying Ford Anglia, a little comic hero in Dobby the house elf and Kenneth Branagh as dark arts master Gilderoy Lockhart. Plus theres the poignant farewell of Richard Harris as Dumbledore. Paul Howlett

Mea Culpa, (Fred Cavay, 2014), 9pm, BBC4 A fast and furious French policier with stubbly cops in leather jackets, from the director of Point Blank. The stars of those two films are reunited here: when ex-detective Vincent Lindons son is menaced by a gang of violent Serbian drug dealers, he teams up with old partner Gilles Lellouche to deal with them like in the old days. Traditional mayhem ensues on the atmospherically lit streets of Toulon. Paul Howlett

2001: A Space Odyssey, (Stanley Kubrick, 1968), 11.15pm, BBC2 Kubricks coruscating space saga boosted science fiction into a new orbit, the special effects setting the standard for the Star Wars generation. The enigmatic story has an alien monolith overseeing humanitys evolution from ape to star-child, with Keir Dullea the astronaut taking another great leap for mankind. Hal the calculating computer gives the most memorable performance, with menace in its smooth, ever-so-reasonable voice. Paul Howlett

Rugby Union: New Zealand v British & Irish Lions The third and final game from Auckland, with the three-match series tied at one-all. 7.30am, Sky Sports 1

Test Cricket: England v South Africa Day three of the opening game of the series from Lords. 10am, Sky Sports 2

Tennis: Wimbledon The latest mens and womens singles third-round matches. 2017 11am, BBC2

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Saturday's best TV: Museum of the Year; Secret War on Drugs - The Guardian

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Philando Castile, the War on Drugs and the Lynching of Black Humanity – The Root

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Philando Castile (Facebook)

Before Malcolm Shabazz, 28, the grandson of El-Hajj Malik el-Shabazz (Malcolm X) was assassinated in 2013 in Mexico City, he, like his entire familyand like too many black people in the United States of Americahad been hunted and harassed by law-enforcement officials.

It had gotten so bad that Shabazz spoke about the recipe for public assassinations two months before his death:

The formula for a public assassination is: the character assassination before the physical assassination; so one has to be made killable before the eyes of the public in order for their eventual murder to then be deemed justifiable. And when the time arrives for these hits to be carried out youre not going to see a C.I.A. agent with a suit and tie, and a badge that says C.I.A. walk up to someone, and pull the trigger. What they will do is to out-source to local police departments in the region of their target, and to employ those that look like the target of interest to infiltrate the workings in order to set up the environment for the eventual assassination (character, physical/incarceration, exile) to take place.

I immediately thought of young Malcolms words when, on July 6, 2016, Philando Castile was killed in broad daylight by St. Anthony, Minn., Police Officer Jeronimo Yanez. I thought of his words not because I believe that Castile was specifically the target of a CIA plot, but because the public assassination of black humanityand the character of black peoplehas been an ongoing project in this white-settler colonial project that flag wavers call the greatest country on earth.

The way we look, the way we talk, the way we attempt to live free in a country founded on our violent oppression, have all been reasons successfully used to render us killable in the eyes of society and to justify our state-sanctioned lynchings.

Black people are born into this world with targets on our backs and often leave this world the same way. Castile had already been pulled over an estimated 46 times before Yanez claimed that the 32-year-old mans wide-set nose made him look like a criminal suspect. Further, he was a legal gun owner in a nation that weaponizes blackness and steals black lives but loves steel weapons.

In Toni Morrisons 1987 Pulitzer Prize-winning novel, Beloved, the character Baby Suggs has

When Castile calmly and respectfully explained that he had a gun in the car, the trigger-happy Yanez feared for his life because a black man with a gun has always been viewed as a clear and present danger. This nation assigns us to that category so that state-sanctioned executions will be deemed necessary. And for those scarce times when blackness alone does not give officers a license to kill, marijuana smoke conjures up the rest.

The Washington Post reports:

I thought, I was gonna die, Officer Jeronimo Yanez told investigators from the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension fifteen hours after the shooting. And I thought if hes, if he has the, the guts and the audacity to smoke marijuana in front of the five year old girl and risk her lungs and risk her life by giving her secondhand smoke and the front seat passenger doing the same thing then what, what care does he give about me. And, I let off the rounds and then after the rounds were off, the little girl was screaming.

A wide-nosed black man in a car that allegedly smelled of marijuana had the audacity to carry a legal gun; that made him an enemy of the state.

Killable.

The war on drugs has been used to escalate a general sense that black people are beasts and that our communities are urban jungles, asha bandele, senior director of Drug Policy Alliance, told The Root.

Throughout so many of these horrific police shootings, drugs have been used to justify the slaughter of innocents, bandele continued. We saw it with Michael Brown, we saw it with Trayvon Martin, we saw it with shootings throughout the country, including that of Philando Castile. All you have to do is raise the specter of drugs, and supposedly no other question is supposed to be asked.

Sometimes when drugs are not the issue itself, the criminalization, the use of drugs, drug selling and drug usea criminalized feature in our nationis used to justify killing, bandele continued.

Killable.

Bandele points out that the war on drugs is a living, breathing manifestation of the hatred this country holds for black people, and a cover for police hypermilitization and the occupation of black and brown communities.

Once you declare something a war, you got to declare someone an enemy, bandele told The Root. The drug war has been used as a justification for police killings of 92-year-old grandmothers in their homes, where all they had to say was, Oops, wrong house. Its been used to justify the killings of 7-year-old Aiyana Stanley-Jones.

This declaration of war and the continuous war crimes that shape this war directly led to the lynching of Philando Castile, bandele said.

Bandele, like Malcolm Shabazz, was also clear that sometimes skinfolk are used to weed out members of the black community that some people find disposable.

We need to understand how we contribute to deaths like Philando Castiles when we contribute to stigmatizing people, or determining whos a decent black person and whos not a decent black person, bandele said. We may have, in progressive communities, a broader idea of who matters and who doesnt, but until we accept that every life has value and we see that in our communities, then were almost participating in who they say they can kill, and who they cant.

Killable.

This is why, bandele says, ending the war on drugs, dismantling white supremacy brick by brick and eradicating stigma is the necessary foundational work we need to engage in if we are ever to be free.

If we want to begin to roll back police militarization significantly, we have to work to end the drug war, bandele said. If we want to disrupt a major tool that they can wield against us, in not only killing us, but them not being held accountable for killing us, we have to end the drug war. If we want to begin to disrupt extraordinary levels of black poverty, then we have to begin to end the drug war.

In doing that, bandele continued, we will say, Were not going to spend money on over-incarceration or over-surveillance, or any of the other facets that make up mass criminalization. Were not going to have one more Philando Castile. Not on our watch.

Bandele gets to the root of the matter.

Black people have been shamed for financial poverty in a nation that is morally bankrupt; still, reparations for theft of our land, our labor and our lives is considered too much to ask for.

We are told that our lives come with white supremacist conditions. Young black men, women and gender-nonconforming people are corralled into deep pockets of destitution, then shot to death for trying to hustle their way out to some semblance of security and safety.

The so-called gentler war on drugsa necessary shift from draconian drug policies to something focused on health and humanityis not for us.

We are still under fire from heavy enemy artillary. We are still living in occupied territory. We are still considered warm bodies to fill cold prisons and balance bloated budgets. We are still lynched in broad daylight in front of our children, and the allegation of marijuana smoke is more than enough for killers with badges to walk free.

Because in the United States of America, to lynch a black person, state-sanctioned killers dont need a reason; all they need is an excuse.

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Man banned from town centre as police war on drugs continues across south Devon – Devon Live

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Class A drugs and cash have been seized by police in Totnes as part of a new operation to tackle the growing problem surrounding drug supply.

As part of 'Operation Applerose', one man was issued with a notice banning him from the town centre for a period of time after an incident on Friday night.

Totnes Police also executed a warrant under the Misuse of Drugs Act and a quantity of class A drugs and cash were seized.

It comes just days after the police in the town intercepted a woman who had a large quantity of drugs that were bound for the streets of Totnes.

The woman was searched by local officers in Westonfields, and a quantity of heroin, cannabis resin and other illicit pills were found.

Police say that these drugs were bound for the streets of the town and a woman from Totnes is now assisting them with their enquiries.

The police are also warning people that any person behaving in a manner that has caused harassment, alarm and distress in Totnes town centre this weekend will be directed to leave and not return within (a maximum of) 48 hours.

Should that individual return to the area, he/she is liable to be arrested .

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Man banned from town centre as police war on drugs continues across south Devon - Devon Live

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Reviving war on drugs could carry big costs in Michigan – Bridge Michigan

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Whats happening at the federal level is the disconnect we have in Michigan: A tough-on-crime attorney general against a legislature trying to pay the bills, and finding out that increased incarceration doesnt pay off, Heise told Bridge.

Look at the cost of corrections, (and ask) what are we really getting out of increased incarceration? The feds will come to the same conclusion we came to in Michigan, Heise said. Within the party, we will see the same debate and discussion in the Trump Administration.

A Michigan House Fiscal Agency analysis of the bill stated it would save the state money, eventually, by slowing prison population growth over a number of years, roughly 1,300 prison beds, a savings of roughly $30 million annually.

Marijuana remains illegal under federal law. Under the Obama administration, a 2009 guidance memo allowed states where voters or legislators chose to legalize it to do so without federal interference. That was one factor enabling marijuana laws to spread to 29 states, either as medicine or a strictly recreational drug.

Sessions memo said nothing about marijuana, but hes said plenty about it in other settings, most notably that good people dont smoke marijuana, and that allowing people to use it in a medical context in lieu of opiates, for example, amounts to trading one life-wrecking dependency for another.

And a letter released in mid-June reveals Sessions is gunning for weed, too, asking Congress to overturn the Rohrabacher-Farr amendment, a 2014 law that officially keeps the federal government out of state affairs on this issue.

Sessions argues that the Justice Department needs the authority to combat an historic drug epidemic and potentially long-term uptick in violent crime.

In Michigan, a drive to fully legalize recreational marijuana is in its early stages, aiming for a ballot initiative in November 2018. (An earlier effort failed to reach the ballot due to a dispute over the age of some signatures on petitions.)

Josh Hovey, spokesman for the Coalition to Regulate Marijuana Like Alcohol, formed to help pass the Michigan ballot measure, said he isnt worried.

The bottom line is, were paying close attention (to the issue), and think theres strong momentum across the country for more responsible marijuana laws, Hovey said. Were hopeful the momentum will carry through to the Administration, and they will think twice before they overturn (state laws).

Polling suggest strong support for fully taxed, legal marijuana in the state, with 58 percent of likely voters saying theyd approve it in one recent poll.

Todd Perkins is a criminal defense attorney in Detroit who has seen many clients go through the federal courts both under the old system and after the Holder memo. He sees the change by Sessions as hostile to people of color.

The war on drugs has not been successful, Perkins said. It was predicated on race, and has punished, unfairly, various sectors of society, predominantly African Americans and other minorities.

Besides studies showing sharp racial disparities in drug prosecution, and differences in sentences (since mitigated) for those possessing or selling crack or powder cocaine, Perkins contention is backed up by at least one key admission.

John Ehrlichman was President Nixons domestic policy adviser and a key player in launching the presidents war on drugs, declared in 1971 when Nixon called drug abuse Americas public enemy number one. In an interview given in the early 90s, but not published until 2016, 17 years after his death, Ehrlichman is quoted as saying the war on drugs was intended to demonize the antiwar left and black people.

After the Holder-led policy change in 2013, Perkins said, his clients in the federal courts who were lower-level, nonviolent offenders still got prison time, but less of it, he said.

Some punishment has to occur, Perkins said. But at the end of the day, we dont need to lock people up for long stretches if they dont deserve it.

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Reviving war on drugs could carry big costs in Michigan - Bridge Michigan

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Thailand won’t copy PH style on drug war – Inquirer.net

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President Dutertes bloody drug war may not be a suitable template for Thailand, as the countrys strategy is not to fight drugs with anger but compassion, according to the Thai secretary general of the Asean Inter-Parliamentary Assembly (Aipa).

After the failure of Thailands own violent crackdown on illegal drugs in the early 2000s, Aipa Secretary General Isra Sunthornvut said his country would now rather focus on rehabilitating drug addicts.

What works in the Philippines might not work in Thailand and what works in Thailand might not work in the Philippines, he told a media briefing early Thursday evening at the close of the meeting of Asean lawmakers in Manila.

Sunthornvut added, however, that Thailand and the Philippines could still learn from each others experiences.

Its a watch-and-learn and well see how it goes, as long as were serious in this fight, as long as there are examples for us to adapt to, he said.

Aipas fact-finding committee, composed of parliamentarians from Aseans 10 member economies, had a meeting in Manila hosted by House Speaker Pantaleon Alvarez and other Philippine lawmakers to discuss regional cooperation to combat the drug menace.

Each country gave a report on its campaign against illegal drugs, as concerns were raised over drug trafficking activities in Southeast Asia. The Philippines boasted a substantial drop in the narcotics trade and the crime rate since the start of the drug war.

Mr. Duterte has waged an aggressive campaign against illegal drugs since his assumption to office last year, leaving thousands of suspected users or pushers dead in police operations and vigilante-style killings and triggering accusations of widespread human rights abuses.

But Surigao del Norte Rep. Robert Barbers, chair of the House dangerous drugs committee, said there was no discussion of human rights violations during the Aipa meet.

I dont see any reasons why we should connect the issue of human rights to the campaign of the Duterte administration in the war against drugs, Barbers said at the same briefing.

Sunthornvut acknowledged that his country had gone through a similar phase as the Philippines, launching an all-out offensive against drug dealers and users.

There was a time when [the campaign] was to stand and yell at the drug users. And then they changed that to lets have compassion, lets understand them, he said.

But its always been alongside the policies and ideas like King Rama the Ninth when he said, You cant fight drugs with anger, you have to be compassionate because its your fellow countrymen, so try to find ways to help understand, Sunthornvut said.

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Will the NFL give in on marijuana or gambling first? – Niners Nation

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The NFL handles a variety of legal issues rather poorly, and two that I have found particularly problematic by the NFL are marijuana and sports gambling. Both have been in the news quite a bit in recent years, and both seem to be gaining public support.

Last week, an NFL writer posed an interesting question. He asked which would be legalized first, marijuana or sports betting. Im not surprised by the results of his poll, with sports betting getting 55 percent of the vote.

Which enemy of the NFL will be nationally legalized first?

The poll question came up in part because of the United States Supreme Courts decision to hear a case involving a New Jersey sports gambling law. Sports gambling is generally illegal under a law called PASPA. It grandfathered in some states, including Nevada, but has otherwise kept sports gambling illegal in most states. The court will potentially decide whether or not PASPA violates the Tenth Amendment, which protects state rights.

The Court will hear the case either this fall or early next spring. The four major sports and the NCAA are pushing for the Court to uphold the law, but the fact that the Court is even willing to hear the case is kind of a big deal.

Given the current political environment, Im inclined to think sports betting will be legalized before marijuana. Eight states have legalized recreational marijuana in some form or fashion, and another 21 states have legalized medical marijuana in some fashion. The momentum is there, but I am curious to see how the federal government approaches it. Under President Obama, they still left marijuana categorized as a Level I drug, but they cut back funding on the DEA going after states choosing to loosen the rules. The new attorney general wanted to go after it more, but the budget was not provided to do that, so well see what comes of it. While there is a states rights argument to be made, I doubt we see any improvement in how the federal government is willing to approach it anytime soon.

Leaders of the push to legalize sports betting want to get it legalized so as to bring it out of the darkness. A vast majority of money bet on sports happens on the black market, and legalizing it could bring a lot of that under regulation and taxation.

Two years ago, San Francisco 49ers owner Jed York offered some comments on both topics. He seems comfortable with the potential loosening of NFL rules on both issues of sports gambling and marijuana. I could see more of the younger executives being more comfortable with it compared to the old guard. Roger Goodell continues to talk about the issues (particularly marijuana) with language that seems to come from the days of Reefer Madness.

Marijuana in particular would be useful to the NFL in terms of trying to prevent players from getting hooked on pain medication. Former offensive tackle Eugene Monroe has been advocating for that for some time, but the NFL has not shown much interest in discussing that. The NFLPA might push for it in collective bargaining, but the owners would want some concessions in return. Even if it would help player health, NFL owners are not going to give in without financial concessions. They talk about player health, but an opportunity to really improve it is being ignored by the owners. Par for the course I suppose.

Given the NFLs move to Las Vegas, I imagine the league will be willing to make some adjustments there first. It will depend on how the national conversation goes, but there is plenty of money to be made from casinos and sports books. The NFL already does sponsorship deals with casinos, but it might take a big turn if things loosen up.

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Will the NFL give in on marijuana or gambling first? - Niners Nation

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Woman who started gambling-recovery group wants businesses to adopt self-reporting model – The Southern

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MURPHYSBORO In about 2014, Mary Frazer became aware that she knew almost every establishment between Southern Illinois and St. Louis with video gaming.

With that awareness, she realized that if she did not stop visiting these gambling sites, she was going to lose everything including her family, which included her eight younger children.

She took advantage of a system she'd heard of, a self-exclusion policy, in which a person willingly decides to ask gambling-establishment managers to forbid them to come in. By doing this, the person agrees that the business managers may have them arrested or otherwise removed from the property, possibly charging her with trespassing.

Frazer, who recently started a Gamblers Anonymous group at United Methodist Church in Murphysboro, would like to introduce the notion of self-exclusion to local businesses that have video-gaming terminals and to people who are struggling with an addiction to gambling.

She said she has already reported herself to three Murphysboro establishments with video gaming, asking them to turn her away if she shows up to gamble.

Their management was understanding and empathetic, she said.

Why should an establishment bear the responsibility of policing adults with their gambling issues?

Because self-exclusion works, Frazer said. If someone struggling with a gambling addiction goes to a place where they have selected to self-exclude themselves as persona non grata, they could experience embarrassment when the management, police officer, bouncer or other authority figure tells them they have to leave.

That, Frazer said in her experience, is a powerful deterrent.

"(Most) won't go back because they don't want the embarrassment," Frazer said.

A 2010 report that examined the self-exclusion programs noted that they were a growing trend that started in Missouri.

"Enrolling in a self-exclusion program is a form of help-seeking behavior, akin to attending a Gamblers Anonymous meeting or entering talk therapy," Glenn Christenson, then the chairman of the National Center for Responsible Gaming, wrote in an intro to the report. "Because most people struggling with addiction, including those with disordered gambling, do not seek external help, it is vital for scientists, health care providers and policymakers to understand what motivates the people who do seek assistance. "

Based on research from 2010, self-exclusion works, said Christine Reilly, senior research director with the National Center for Responsible Gaming in Massachusetts.

She said the concept could be used as part of a "cocktail therapy" approach to dealing with gambling addiction, an approach that could also include medical treatment, counseling and talk-therapy, among other means.

Based on what we know from the research, it is safe and can be effective for some people, not all, Reilly said. You should not load the program with great expectation.

Frazer might not be too far off, according to information from the Illinois Gaming Board's office on self-exclusion.

The Illinois Gaming Board has submitted proposed rules on self-exclusion in establishments with video-gaming to the Joint Committee on Administrative Rules, or JCAR, said Gene O'Shea, director of the state's self-exclusion program. He said that process of approval would take some time, as it took time, two years, to approve the state's casino self-exclusion rules. The public, he said, will have a chance to respond to the proposed rules once the Joint Committee on Administrative Rules makes them public.

Since the state adopted its casino gamblers' self-exclusion policy in 2002, some 12,651 people have registered to exclude themselves from the state's 10 casinos. There have been 4,317 arrests, with gaming officials seizing $1,958,293.43 in seizures from those who previously self-excluded, O'Shea said.

Within the past week, authorities arrested a woman who had abandoned $16,000 she won in summer 2016 at Casino Queen. She had returned to that casino, where she had self-excluded herself, and been arrested. The most seized at one time was $23,000, O'Shea said.

"They're addicted," O'Shea said.

According to the Illinois Gaming Board, there are a handful of Southern Illinois cities and villages where video gaming is not allowed or has limited use.

Baldwin in Randolph County and Campbell Hill in Jackson County do not permit video gaming at licensed truck-stop establishments.

Some don't allow it at all: De Soto, Elkville and Makanda in Jackson County; Brookport in Massac County; Bush, Cambria and Colp in Williamson County; Cave in Rock in Hardin County; and Karnak in Pulaski County.

It is, however, allowed in Murphysboro and nearby Carbondale.

Carbondale's 88 video-gaming terminals, in 20 establishments, netted $3.016 million this past year, with $150,806.88 going to the city. (Carbondale has a cap of 100 video gaming terminals in the city, according to the Illinois Gaming Board website.)

Murphysboro's 39 video-gaming terminals, in eight establishments, netted $1.328 million this past year, with $66,443.90 going to the City of Murphysboro.

Also for this past year, Du Quoin had 48 terminals, in 10 locations, that netted $1.785 million: some $89,283.95 of that went to the city.

Two weeks ago, Frazer held her first meeting of Gamblers Anonymous, a 12-step program that attracted three people she's hoping for many more. Though the program stresses anonymity, Frazer said she is publicizing her identity and struggle to help others facing the challenge in this area. She said those who struggle with gambling addiction face many challenges, including stress and broken marriages and families, money and job loss and even suicide.

In an online group that she is a part of, she says nine people, unable to find ways to deal with their gambling addictions, have taken their own lives in the past six months.

She said this area needs a local chapter of Gamblers Anonymous. According to the Gamblers Anonymous website, the closest meeting to Southern Illinois is in Belleville.

Murphysboro Mayor Will Stephens said he hasn't heard of gambling being a problem in the city.

"Although gambling brings with it certain challenges for individuals with addictions, the city council has not heard any complaints about video gambling in bars, fraternal organizations, or video gaming parlors," Stephens shared in an email to The Southern.

"I think Mary is on the right track," Stephens wrote. "It will allow her to establish relationships with those business owners, and allow her to better accomplish her goal of helping those who need help. Mostly because it will be the business owners who will most easily be able to identify problem gamblers."

Now that she's no longer gambling, Frazer said she is filling that void with a transportation business she and her husband have established.

They provide rides, to and from work, for people who frequently work for some local employment agencies and don't have their own vehicles.

"What I'm doing is helping families that don't have transportation (so) they can get to work," she said.

Additionally, she noted, "My house is more in order."

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New gambling deal leaves racetracks and Seminoles at odds – Sun Sentinel (blog)

Posted: at 9:40 pm

South Florida racetracks that offer certain types of card games are trying to hold onto the lucrative business after the state of Florida reached a settlement with the Seminole Tribe.

The state agreed not to appeal a 2016 court decision that allowed the Seminoles to offer blackjack through 2030. In return, the tribe will make revenue-sharing payments to the state until the end of the 2018 legislative session but only if Florida takes aggressive enforcement action against designated player games that operate as banked card games at pari-mutuel casinos around the state.

But the pari-mutuel industry maintains its games are in keeping with state regulations, leaving the state in the position of cracking down on a practice that the industry says is perfectly legal.

So-called designated player games such as Three-Card Poker and Ultimate Texas Holdem are major money-makers for the pari-mutuels. A study of 10 cardrooms estimated they made $55 million in revenue over five years, according to The Innovation Group.

As the games are currently dealt, they are in keeping with Florida law, said Palm Beach Kennel Club attorney John Lockwood.

The Palm Beach Kennel Club, Miamis Magic City Casino and Pompano Beachs Isle Casino all offer some form of the games. Casinos in Broward and Miami-Dade offer slot machines, unlike the rest of the state, which make the card games less popular.

The Seminole Tribe is supposed to have the exclusive right to offer banked card games games in which every player plays against the dealer instead of playing against each other as they do in poker.

Its really not complicated. If the players around the table are playing against one person, a bank, its a banked card game. If they all have the same bet in a pile and only ones going to win, then its not a banked card game, said Seminole Tribe lawyer Barry Richard. The tribe is paying a huge amount of money more than twice as much as all the pari-mutuels put together for exclusivity, and thats what they want. Theyre paying for it, theyre entitled to it.

While previous iterations of pari-mutuels designated player games only had one player act as a banker, these days, the designated player who acts as a banker can rotate, just like the dealer rotates in a game of poker.

No fixed banker, no banked card game, according to the pari-mutuels.

It doesnt matter what you label it, Richard said. If what theyre talking about when they say a designated player game is a poker game in which the dealer rotates around the table, then thats fine. But if, in any hand, everybodys playing against a banker, thats the issue. It doesnt matter what they call it.

The agreement between the tribe and the state settled a long-running lawsuit over blackjack. Under the terms of the agreement, the tribe will continue to offer blackjack at its casinos through 2030, while the state will get about $340 million over the next year.

In a 2016 federal court ruling, U.S. District Judge Robert Hinkle called designated player games an egregious example of the cardrooms' attempt to evade the prohibition on banked card games.

As long as the state cracks down on these games with aggressive enforcement though whats considered aggressive is open to interpretation the tribe will continue to make payments until after the 2018 legislative session.

After the session or at any time before that it if the tribe doesnt feel the state is shutting down the games aggressively enough it could affect the tribes payments to the state.

If the Legislature does nothing, it will be status quo unless the tribe believes there are still table games out there past the 2018 session. And then, they can stop making payments, said state Sen. Bill Galvano, R-Bradenton, the Florida Senates point man on gambling legislation.

Galvano fears that a coming crack down on pari-mutels will mean pushback by the industry and incredible pressure during next years session, especially as the pari-mutuels think they are now in compliance with the law.

Its a tough position for the state to be in, Galvano said. There are many pari-mutuels that have already started designated player games, and they are quite profitable. So, youre going to have an enforcement challenge, and then from a legislative policy perspective, the choices have now been significantly narrowed. Do you maintain the status quo of gaming in Florida and rely solely on tribal payments, or do you now look to the pari-mutuel industry for the revenues in lieu of what you have with the tribe?

dsweeney@SunSentinel.com, 954-356-4605 or Twitter @Daniel_Sweeney

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New gambling deal leaves racetracks and Seminoles at odds - Sun Sentinel (blog)

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Online gambling racket busted in south Delhi, four arrested – Hindustan Times

Posted: at 9:40 pm

Police on Friday busted an illegal online casino at Kotla Mubarakpur in south Delhi and arrested four persons in this connection. Sleuths suspect the racket could be linked to money laundering.

The alleged mastermind of the racket, a woman named Neetu, is absconding. Police seized cash Rs 35,800, seven CPUs, a laptop and a landline telephone set among other items.

Even though online gambling is illegal in India, the market is estimated to be a few thousand crore rupees. Only Sikkim has laid down regulations for controlled and monitored online gambling, police said.

Four persons Deepak Chandra, Raj Kumar, Arif Khan and Prakash have been arrested. Deepak used to operate the gambling den and handle all the cash and maintain transaction details. We are now searching for Neetu said a senior police official.

Police said for the past few days, information was pouring in about an online gambling racket operating from Kotla Mubarakpur area.

Acting on the tip-off, a special team was formed and the sleuths zeroed down on the house on Friday.

Preliminary investigations revealed that Neetu was linked to an organised online casino syndicate. She had provided Deepak with login ID and password of an online account created on the website. The website had links to another gaming portal. Deepak used to handle the daily transaction and report to the kingpin Neetu

The most popular gamble was on the game of Roulette where the winner was assured a return which was 18 times the bet money, said a police officer.

Cops are now trying to find out whether the master account on the gaming website was created using an Indian identity or otherwise and whether the linked bank details are Indian or off-shore.

Raids are being conducted and further investigation is going on, said the officer.

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Online gambling racket busted in south Delhi, four arrested - Hindustan Times

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