Daily Archives: May 23, 2022

Black Lives Matter received over $90M in donations last year

Posted: May 23, 2022 at 12:10 pm

The Black Lives Matter foundation has revealed it received more than $90 million in donations last year despite the movement being splintered by ongoing feuds about the lack of funding.

The Black Lives Matter Global Network Foundation announced the massive influx of money late Tuesday the very first time BLM has disclosed its finances in its nearly eight-year history.

With $8.4 million in expenses and $21.7 million committed to local chapters, the group ended 2020 with an approximate balance of $60 million, it stated in an impact statement.

We are no longer a small, scrappy movement. We are an institution, the foundation boasted.

We are entering spaces previously unimaginable.

The financial disclosure came amid heightened tensions in the network of activists with group of 10 chapters, called the #BLM10 and including ones in New Jersey and Hudson Valley, splitting in November while publicly ripping the main organization over financial transparency, decision making, and accountability.

To the best of our knowledge, most chapters have received little to no financial support from BLMGN since the launch in 2013, the 10-chapters insisted in a public demand for accountability.

That lack of funding came despite BLM getting donations from A-list celebrities such as Beyonc, Jay-Z and prior to his death in 2016 Prince, The Associated Press noted.

BLM co-founder Patrisse Cullors the foundations executive director insisted that the financial boost in 2020 was radically different than previous years, however, without releasing further records.

Because the BLM movement was larger than life and it is larger than life people made very huge assumptions about what our actual finances looked like, Cullors told the AP.

We were often scraping for money, and this year was the first year where we were resourced in the way we deserved to be.

The donations exploded following the May 2020 death of George Floyd, whose death under the knee of a white Minneapolis police officer sparked protests across the US and around the world, the foundation said.

That was matched by online interest, with the BLMGNF website getting a record 1.9 million visitors on June 2 an almost 5,000 percent increase over the most trafficked day in March, the report said.

BLM vowed to use the money to be more active.

Black folks have waited over 400 yearsto be seen, to be heard, to live in a world where their lives are fundamentally valued, the report stated.

Despite the strength of our movement, this has yet to happen. Our demands continue to go ignored. As the organization supporting this movement, weve decided that we will wait no longer.

Cullors told the AP that a key focus was now on a need to reinvest into black communities.

One of our biggest goals this year is taking the dollars we were able to raise in 2020 and building out the institution weve been trying to build for the last seven and a half years, she said in an interview.

With Post wires

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Opinion | George Floyd and the Fading Signs of Black Lives Matter – The New York Times

Posted: at 12:10 pm

Wednesday will be the second anniversary of the lurid street murder of George Floyd by a Minneapolis police officer. The killings of Black people had become almost banal in their incessancy and redundancy, but something about this one captured during an advancing pandemic that had forced people apart and inside, watching the world through windows and screens drew thousands of people out into the streets, where boarded-up storefronts produced the tempting tableau of a country strewn with canvases.

Some saw in the uprising the potential for revolution. They talked about the protests in the lofty language of a racial reckoning, an inflection point, a fresh start on Americas path to absolution from its original sin.

But flashes of guilt, outrage and shame often stir fleeting fealties, and the heavy gravitational pull of racial privileges and power can quickly draw mercurial allies back into the refuge of the status quo.

Some good came of the protests, to be sure. Some states and local municipalities passed or instituted police reforms. Money poured into Black Lives Matter, as well as other racial justice organizations and Black institutions. Individuals began personal journeys to become more egalitarian and more actively antiracist. And artists produced hundreds of murals and thousands of pieces of other street art that, for a time, transformed this country.

In the end, transformative national change proved to be an illusion. Inflation, a war in Ukraine, public safety, abortion and even a baby formula crisis have overtaken the zeitgeist. Support for Black Lives Matter has diminished. Federal police reform and federal voter protection both failed to pass the Senate. And the founders of Black Lives Matter have been drawn into controversies about how they handled its money.

Ive learned not to expect much from America; it has a deep capacity for change but a shallow desire for it. I have embraced the wise desire not to be betrayed by too much hoping, as James Baldwin put it. But I worry about young people in all of this. It is their faith thats most vulnerable to damage. They were the ones who most believed that change was not only possible but imminent, only to have America retreat and retrench.

Now not only are their allies reversing course on issues like police reform; the country is also facing a full backlash toward protest itself. Dozens of states have passed laws restricting the right to protest (just this week, Gov. Ron DeSantis of Florida barred citizens from protesting outside private homes), and more than a dozen have now criminalized teaching full and accurate racial history.

The Great Erasure is underway, not so much an attempt to erase the uprising itself as an attempt to blunt its effects.

There is no example of this erasure more striking than the continual destruction, removal or slow vanishing of much of the street art produced in the wake of Floyds killing.

According to a database compiled by three professors at the University of St. Thomas in Minnesota Heather Shirey, David Todd Lawrence and Paul Lorah there were once approximately 2,700 murals, graffiti, stickers, posters affixed to surfaces and light projections created in response to Floyds killing, mostly in the Twin Cities of Minneapolis and St. Paul. Shirey and Lawrence called it the largest proliferation of street art around one idea or issue or event in history. But many of those pieces have disappeared, sometimes because of exposure to traffic or the elements and sometimes because of deliberate attempts to erase them. Business owners quietly removed the graffitied planks from their storefronts. Some of the murals have been defaced.

For this project, my colleagues and I looked at 115 murals created after Floyds death and tried to determine how many had been maintained. (It is not a comprehensive list, although it is hard to imagine any such list could be.) Only 37 were fully intact. In cities from Oklahoma to California, few vestiges remain of what were once vibrant murals, painted on asphalt and walls.

In 2021, six police officers sued Palo Alto, Calif., because it had commissioned this mural, which included aportrait of Joanne Chesimard, a former member of the Black Liberation Army convicted of killing a state trooper in1973. The lawsuit was dismissed, but by that point,the city had already removed the mural.

This mural, designed by Avrion Jackson, was one of six that an army of some 1,000 volunteers paintedaround Kansas City in 2020. Last fall, the organizers said they planned to raise funds to restore the murals, but work on this one has not yet begun.

In spring 2020, city officials teamed up with local organizations to commission variousartists to design and paint each letter of this eclectic colorful mural. The city reopened the street to traffic that fall, and the paint has since worn away.

When this mural first appeared on Fulton Street in June 2020, the districts council member said he would seek to turn the street into a permanent pedestrian plaza. But it soon opened to traffic, which erased the lettering.

Over the past two months, I talked to art historians, museum directors and curators, activists and artists who had created murals. The picture that emerges is of a group determined to preserve as much of the art as possible while understanding that it cant all be saved, and an acknowledgement of the inherent, ephemeral nature of street art. This art was created in a moment, for a moment. Permanence was often not its central consideration. But to lose it would be to lose a cultural record of the time, a record of the profound significance and magnitude of what transpired: A generation of young people and young artists found their voice and used it, creating an arts movement that sits in the canon alongside the Black Arts Movement of the 1960s and 70s and the Harlem Renaissance. You might even say it mirrors on an enormous scale the Wall of Respect mural first painted in 1967 by the Visual Arts Workshop of the Organization of Black American Culture in Chicago.

What may have been different about this movement was the outlook of the generation that created it. Aaron Bryant, curator of photography, visual anthropology and contemporary history at the Smithsonians National Museum of African American History and Culture, described it to me as a sense of entitlement. These activists and artists believe they have an absolute right, and even a responsibility, to express themselves, he told me. They arent necessarily a generation that was raised to be silent.

The art produced during and after the uprising was powerful, emotional and energetic, like a lightning storm. But like lightning, the illuminated contours of the way it split the sky soon dimmed and vanished.

The art tapped into something and provided a language for it. As Franklin Sirmans, director of the Prez Art Museum Miami, put it, Some of the best art is created under situations of not only duress but of immediate response, and that is part and parcel with this sense of collective identity that I think many of us felt in that moment, and to see it visualized was really heartening.

For me, it was transcendent. It brought a fresh, abounding energy to a standing tradition.

Murals as instruments of memorial have long been a feature of Black grief and remembrance. They are what Amaka Okechukwu, assistant professor of sociology and anthropology at George Mason University, so eloquently describes as gravestone murals or wake work haunting the urban spaces where Black lives have been lost.

By no means are these murals the expression solely of African Americans. They can be found in many communities and in many cultures around the world, where the tradition of producing them is centuries old.

But in a way, Floyds murder globalized gravestone murals in service of a singular subject. Perhaps the most iconic of these murals were thoses with the words Black Lives Matter written in large block letters down the middle of streets. The first was painted by the District of Columbia and was so large that it was legible on satellite images.

People like Sarah Lewis, associate professor of history of art and architecture and African and African American studies at Harvard University, saw it as a powerful testament symbolizing the precarity of black life in open terrain. But activists soon pointed out that the politicians who supported the art often resisted policies designed to rectify the historic injustices Black Lives Matter had highlighted. When the District of Columbia painted its mural, the local Black Lives Matter chapter called it a performative distraction from real policy changes designed to appease white liberals while ignoring our demands. Mayor Muriel Bowser was on the wrong side of history, they said. Black Lives Matter means defund the police.

These tensions stretched beyond Washington.

In Minneapolis, at the intersection where Floyd was murdered now called George Floyd Square the George Floyd Global Memorial project has taken on the Herculean task of preserving all protest objects, items the group calls offerings, including art and murals, in the square. So far it has collected over 5,000 artifacts, preserved them with the help of art conservators and stored them in cardboard boxes in a small room in a community theater. The group has ambitions to one day build a museum to house it all. Some of the murals in George Floyd Square were being repainted when I visited this month, ahead of the observances of the second anniversary of Floyds murder. New ones have been added featuring other Black people killed elsewhere, some lost to community violence rather than state violence.

This level of ambition makes Minneapolis both the epicenter of the preservation efforts and an anomaly. Governments in cities across the country, like Tulsa, Okla. and Redwood City, Calif., have erased the murals, reflecting the reality that many lacked the true, sustained commitment to Black lives.

Activists painted this mural on what was once "Black Wall Street," the wealthy community ravaged in Tulsa's 1921 race massacre. City officials later removed themural because it was never officially approved, but before they did, protesters erected paper tombstones on the siteto memorialize Black lives lost to violence.

A married couple worked with volunteers to paint this mural on the fence outside their home in 2020. It was painted over the following year to comply with city ordinances that prohibit fences from being more than one color or from displaying words, pictures or signs.

Further complicating the preservation efforts is the degree to which these pieces of art were politicalized from the moment of their creation: Murals were going up as Confederate monuments in cities like Montgomery, Ala., continued to come down. It fueled the fears held by white supremacists that white people and white culture would eventually be superseded.

In their zero-sum worldview, BLMs pro-Blackness was inherently anti-white. President Donald Trump called a Black Lives Matter mural to be painted in front of Trump Tower in New York City a symbol of hate. Historical revisionists held fast to the lie that Confederate monuments were about history, rather than racism. The fight was over which art representing which points of view was more deserving of public display.

Its perhaps also no coincidence that much of the artwork created after Floyds death is vanishing as the public embrace of the Black Lives Matter movement is waning. Polls last year by the Pew Research Center found that support for Black Lives Matter, which peaked in the immediate aftermath of George Floyds death, had fallen back to its 2017 levels, pre-George Floyd. Black support had remained high; it was the support among white people that fell.

Activists chafe at the notion that the BLM movement itself is waning.

Every off year we write Black Lives Matters obituary, and we eulogize it and we talk about the waning Black Lives Matter Movement, Frank Leon Roberts, creator of the Black Lives Matter Syllabus, a public curriculum for teaching BLM in classrooms and communities, and newly appointed assistant professor of English and Black studies at Amherst College, told me.

The movement actually is not waning, he said. The movement from its inception has operated in waves. He predicts that there will inevitably be another heinous event of police violence which will once again incite something in the people, and then well be having this same conversation.

But police killings have continued unabated. In fact, last year saw a record number of police shootings, the most since The Washington Post began keeping count in 2015. The police killed 1,055 people across the country in 2021. And yet, there were no nationwide protests.

In my life I have arrived at the conclusion that real liberation equity, safety and the pursuit of happiness is not rooted in feelings and personal evolutions. Only a change in the parameters of power political, economic and cultural, who has it and who gets to exercise it, who is benefited by it and who is harmed by it can transform this country.

Passions flare and subside; power endures. Like the art, broad-based, transracial interest and energy to support the Black Lives Matter movement are fading. I mourn the loss of that energy, but I also mourn the loss of the movements art from public space. In the streets it was both declaration and confrontation, brazen and assertive. It was forcefully in your face.

Now, even among the artifacts that can be or have been saved, the context will change from the urgency of in-situ to the sterility of institutions or the impersonal distance of digital space.

The art that once shouted and demanded and documented the movement is being culled and reduced to the dulcet-toned advocacy of a few heroic curators.

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Opinion | George Floyd and the Fading Signs of Black Lives Matter - The New York Times

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New pillar honouring Black Lives Matter Movement to be unveiled at the Milton Keynes Rose – MKFM

Posted: at 12:10 pm

A new inscription will be unveiled at the Milton Keynes Rose in Campbell Park on Wednesday 25 May 2022 at 5pm with a ceremony that is open to the public.

25th May is the second anniversary of the murder of George Floyd in Minneapolis, an event which was instrumental in the development and spread of the Black Lives Matter movement.

Following a public consultation exercise in 2021, a new pillar inscription at the Milton Keynes Rose will mark 25 May and Black Lives Matter.

The wording on the inscription refers to George Floyds death and states:

No person should put their knee, chain or noose

on anothers neck because of their colour

Revd Edson Dube, who led the campaign to have the inscription on behalf of the MK Council of Faiths, said: "25th May is a date which globally will forever be commemorated and remembered for the crime that was committed against Mr. Floyd in Minneapolis.

"This date is one of deep importance to both the city and the people of Milton Keynes as the date stands as a consistent reminder of the need to eradicate hate, racism and prejudice from our community and the world."

Debbie Brock, Chair of the Milton Keynes Rose Trustsaid: "The Trust is grateful for the considered and helpful nomination it received in favour of the Black Lives Matter pillar and welcomes the day being commemorated for many years into the future to remind us of the horrific murder of George Floyd and to affirm that in Milton Keynes Black Lives Matter."

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New pillar honouring Black Lives Matter Movement to be unveiled at the Milton Keynes Rose - MKFM

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Two years after George Floyd’s murder, where have all the police reforms gone? – City & State

Posted: at 12:10 pm

The 2020 racial justice demonstrations in New York City became a stage for the brutal police tactics that drove protesters to the streets following the murder of George Floyd on May 25 of that year. Dozens of videos of New York City Police Department officers shoving, beating and pepper-spraying protesters emerged, sparking even more outcry. Former Mayor Bill de Blasio was widely criticized for his response or lack thereof to NYPD aggression against protesters, leading members of his own staff to publicly denounce his approach to criminal justice and policing.

What began as an emotional response to police brutality evolved into a movement to defund the police. Beyond calls for cuts to the massive NYPD budget, demands from protesters in 2020 were far-reaching, including everything from emptying Rikers to enhancing officer accountability.

On a state level, the Legislature responded to protesters demands by passing a package of reforms aimed at lifting the Blue Wall of Silence, a term that refers to police departments attempts to hide officer misconduct, by limiting the use of chokeholds by police and requiring officers to record demographics when making low-level arrests.

The City Council also passed a package of reforms that summer on officer accountability and to tamp down excessive force, along with cataloging surveillance technology.

But as the Black Lives Matter protests swept the city and the country, so did a pandemic-induced counterforce to the progressive policereform movement. The unraveling of societal norms contributed to a national increase in shootings and homicides.Domestic violence incidents spiked as victims were stuck at home with their abusers. The uncertainty drove record increases in gun sales across the U.S. School closures, along with household disruptions, were widely believed to have contributed to an increase in killings and violence among youth. Distrust in police reached an all-time high.

In the two years since Floyds murder by a white police officer in Minneapolis, Minnesota and the popular movement sparked by his death these factors have contributed to a marked shift away from policies and rhetoric meant to radically change the role of policing in New York. New York City Mayor Eric Adams, a former police officer, has reinstated the controversial NYPD anti-crime unit and proposed an NYPD operating budget that maintains the increases under de Blasio, exceeding the budget put in place before the protests.

Adams participated in the 2020 protests as Brooklyn borough president. During the mayoral primary, he touted his work as a reformer of the NYPD who called out racism from the inside. He helped paint Black Lives Matter in front of Trump Tower in July of that year.

But the citys second Black mayor now finds himself on the opposite side of the police reform debate. While he once stood in solidarity with Black Lives Matter demonstrators, local leaders of the protest movement have reacted to many of his new policing policies with vitriol. Brooklyn Movement Center Executive Director Anthonine Pierre recently penned an op-ed in the Daily News in which she accused Adams of caving to the demands of the police instead of meeting the needs of Black communities.

Its really disheartening at this point to be going back to broken windows policing the way Giuliani did.

Jessica Sanclemente-Gomez, board chair of the Justice Committee

Its really disheartening at this point to be going back to broken windows policing the way Giuliani did.

Adams, in turn, has used the movements own rhetoric to contest the criticism and what he views as the movements lack of action against gun violence. If Black lives matter, then the thousands of people I saw on the street when Floyd was murdered should be on the streets right now stating that the lives of these Black children that are dying every night matter, Adams said in April on NY1, speaking about the Brooklyn subway shooting in April. We cant be hypocrites.

In this new political climate, Adams has also promised policies to target underlying causes of crime and community-police relations such as new investments in the citys mental health crisis teams and youth programs advocates said theyre overshadowed by a return to what they view as problematic policing tactics.

All Adams has done is create more of a narrative of The way we combat violence is by more policing, Jessica Sanclemente-Gomez, board chair of the police reform organization the Justice Committee, told City & State. And its really disheartening at this point to be going back to broken windows policing the way (former Mayor Rudy) Giuliani did. That clearly showed no real dent in creating a better system and better flow of accountability.

Adams, when asked by City & State where he thinks the city stands in implementing the reforms he and others called for in the wake of the 2020 protests, said he remains committed not only to holding bad cops accountable, but also to supporting police.

You had (calls to) defund the police. I didnt call for those. I support police accountability. I also support police support. We need to be there for law enforcement officers, he said during a Q&A with reporters on May 18. The small number that are not suitable to be police officers, they need to expeditiously be removed from our department because they hurt our police department.

There are some specific reforms I called for there may be reforms that I dont think are reforms. I think they could hurt public safety. And Im never going to do anything thats going to hurt public safety.

Reforms enacted at the state and city levels have resulted in some changes to holding police accountable for incidents of violence and racial bias, but they have also faced fierce legal challenges and stonewalling from police departments and their unions.

Heres where some of the most prominent police reforms that came out of the 2020 protests stand today.

What was promised: Amid calls from protesters, de Blasio agreed to cut the NYPD budget by $1 billion. The City Council approved the budget in August 2020, and council leaders and activists accused the mayor of using some budget trickery to create a perception that funding had been cut more significantly than it was.

Where we are now: De Blasio ultimately fell short of the demands, and the police budget has since been restored to an amount thats even higher than it was before the 2020 protests.

The fiscal year 2021 budget, which was approved in July 2020 amid the summer protests, included $4.9 billion in city-funded NYPD operating expenses, what was projected to be a $345 million reduction, according to the Citizens Budget Commission. A large portion of the proposed reduction came from unrealistic cuts to overtime, the CBC reported. These savings are unrealistic; they were not accompanied by a plan or operational strategy, and prior efforts to reduce overtime at the uniformed agencies have been more successful in slowing growth rather than decreasing expenses.

In reality, the city spent $317 million less on the NYPDs city-funded operating budget in fiscal year 2021 compared to fiscal year 2020, according to the CBC. Overtime expenses exceeded the projected cuts by $216 million.

The fiscal year 2022 NYPD budget raised the NYPDs operating expenses by $465 million to a level even higher than its preprotest budget.

In addition to promises to cut overtime spending, de Blasio also pledged to shift funding for school safety agents and crossing guards to the city Department of Education, but that never happened. Adams first proposed budget also keeps school safety agents under the NYPD.

There may be reforms that I dont think are reforms. I think they could hurt public safety. And Im never going to do anything thats going to hurt public safety.

New York City Mayor Eric Adams

There may be reforms that I dont think are reforms. I think they could hurt public safety. And Im never going to do anything thats going to hurt public safety.

Adams NYPD spending plan, pending approval from the City Council, raised city-funded operating expenses by $539 million, according to the CBC. This increase is largely due to the city employing a one-time, $500 million use of American Rescue Plan funds in the previous fiscal year, said CBC Deputy Research Director Ana Champeny. However, the full picture of projected NYPD spending in fiscal year 2023 has yet to be determined due to an expected influx of federal funds. As of now, city-funded operating expenses are budgeted at $5.3 billion.

Rather than calling for blanket budget cuts to the NYPD, progressive City Council members and community activists have become more targeted in their rhetoric, instead focusing on reinvestments in programs and services to curb the underlying causes of crime and negative interactions with cops.

In a statement responding to Adams Blueprint to End Gun Violence, the progressive advocacy group Communities United for Police Reform had a mixed reaction.

Pieces of Mayor Adams plan support non-police safety solutions that we have been demanding for years, like expanding the Summer Youth Employment Program and providing resources for programs and organizations in communities working to interrupt violence, the organization wrote in a statement. But these initiatives are made secondary to an approach that increases the power and reach of the NYPD, expands the notoriously violent plainclothes unit, and doubles down on dangerous police surveillance technologies.

Adams gun violence plan included plans to offer a record number of 100,000 summer job opportunities for young people ages 14-24. Advocates, however, have called for at least an additional 50,000 spots to meet the high demand for the program.

Reformists said that while theyre not marching the streets en masse, the 2020 protests shone a spotlight on their movement and drew new recruits and resources that they have used to further their goals. Theyre now working to strike a balance between the defund rhetoric and more practical solutions.

You cant just say, defund the police and that's it, Sanclemente-Gomez said. Its defund the police to redirect that funding to potentially pay teachers more or to provide more affordable housing. Communities want a lot more and for us to not really be able to dive deep into what that strategy could look like, is a disservice to us as organizers.

What was promised: Among the bills state lawmakers passed targeting police reform in the wake of Floyds death was the repeal of the states Section 50-a law. Sponsored by Assembly Member Daniel ODonnell and state Sen. Jamaal Bailey, the bill largely rescinded the 1976 law that shielded officer disciplinary records from the public. Under the 2020 legislation, disciplinary documents are subject to release via Freedom of Information Law requests.

Where we are now: The 2020 law has faced legal roadblocks from police unions that have sued to prohibit the release of records, some successfully. Police departments have also found ways to circumvent 50-as repeal by using narrow interpretations of the law to deny records requests. The New York Civil Liberties Unionsued the NYPD in September, claiming its complaint database published in March 2021 following 50-as repeal only included details of investigations that were substantiated.

Sanclemente-Gomez said the 50-a legislation was definitely progress and sparked a new conversation surrounding police accountability, but it is not the silver bullet by any means. We just chipped away at the problem.

Legislation introduced earlier this year by Assembly Member Jessica Gonzlez-Rojas and Baileysought to formally eliminate the availability of the unsubstantiated excuse. The bill would amend the 2020 law to explicitly state that records can not be denied because such records concern complaints, allegations or charges that have not yet been determined, did not result in disciplinary action or resulted in a disposition or finding other than substantiated or guilty, according to the bill text.

While the legislation is still in committee, another bill that changed some of the provisions under the repeal of 50-a was recently passed and signed by Gov. Kathy Hochul on March 18. The law removed the requirement that a judicial hearing be held to determine if disciplinary documents related to an ongoing investigation an exception frequently cited by police departments can be withheld. Instead, under the newly passed amendments, government agencies must simply obtain a certificate from the investigating agency that the FOIL-requested records may be withheld because they would impede an ongoing investigation, according to an explanation of the bill, which was sponsored by Democrats state Sen. James Skoufis and Assembly Member Steve Englebright.

There was some disagreement about whether the new changes would hinder or help public access to records. The government watchdog group Reinvent Albany said the newly enacted provisions improve transparency by requiring police departments to explain why releasing records would impede an ongoing investigation. But some legal experts have said it gives police departments more leeway in making those determinations by eliminating judicial intervention. We are back to a situation where the police simply have to give no justification, just blanket denials for access to information. They can simply cite the existence of an ongoing investigation, lawyer James Henry told the New York Post.

What was promised: Amid the protests, de Blasio promised to do away with the citys anti-crime unit that was notorious for its controversial use of stop and frisk. Former NYPD Officer Daniel Pantaleo, who put Eric Garner in a lethal chokehold while arresting him on Staten Island in 2014, was a member of the anti-crime unit. Made up of about 600 undercover police officers, the unit was formally disbanded in June 2020 under former NYPD Commissioner Dermot Shea. I would consider this in the realm of closing on one of the last chapters on stop, question and frisk, Shea said at the time.

Where we are now: In one of his first major policing announcements, Adams said the city would bring back the anti-crime units, sparking criticism from progressive City Council members and criminal justice activists.

The anti-crime unit has just been rebranded in some other capacity, especially under Mayor Adams, Sanclemente-Gomez said. Were just going back to square one.

The units, now called Neighborhood Safety Teams, were deployed on March 14. The approximately 200 officers are divided into groups of five officers and one sergeant, stationed in 30 precincts and four housing police service areas where 80% of the citys gun violence occurs, officials have said. While the officers historically wore street clothes, they now wear a less conspicuous version of the NYPDs uniform. Adams said the officers selected for the teams would undergo enhanced training and a strict vetting process.

These anti-crime teams are not the anti-crime teams of old. They look different. Theyre vetted different. Theres significant oversight," NYPD Commissioner Keechant Sewell said during a March City Council hearing.

A spokesperson for the mayor said Adams will not allow abusive practices to take place within the NYPD. To show his commitment to transparency and accountable policing, Mayor Adams is making sure the NYPDs new anti-gun unit will not make the mistakes of the past. Like all uniformed officers of the NYPD, the Neighborhood Safety Teams all wear body-worn cameras. Additionally, all members of the anti-gun unit wear modified uniforms that clearly identify them as NYPD, spokesperson Fabien Levy said in a statement.

The units were supposed to be responsible for finding illegal guns, but department data showed most of their arrests have been for low-level crimes. As of April 5, the most frequent arrest made by the units was for criminal possession of a forged instrument, such as a fake ID. The teams had made 27 such arrests of 135 total, according to the NYPD. As of May 10, the unit had made 397 total arrests and removed 69 guns, according to the department.

Meanwhile, a federal monitor reported earlier this month that the NYPD continues to underreport stops but has made significant strides regarding stop and frisk, including increases in justifiable stops and the use of body-worn cameras. However, the monitor found that 29% of stops made by the NYPD last year were not properly documented, something the department said was, in part, an effect of the pandemic. This report describes many accomplishments primarily relying on data from 2019-2020, the NYPD said in a statement. In the time period since the report, compliance has steadily and consistently increased.

What was promised: First introduced in 2017, City Council legislation requiring the NYPD to publicly report technology it uses and plans to acquire in order to surveil the public, such as drones and license plate readers, gained momentum during the 2020 protests and passed in June of that year. In 2019, national backlash to the use of facial recognition software by police and bans on the technology in other cities, such as Oakland and San Francisco, also brought renewed attention to the legislation. The NYPD has used facial recognition on children as young as 11 years old to compare crime scene photos to mug shots, The New York Times reported. Department leaders staunchly opposed the legislation, stating that it would help criminals and terrorists and endanger police officers, Deputy Commissioner of Intelligence and Counterterrorism John Miller said in an interview with AM 970s John Catsimatidis in 2017.

Where we are now: The NYPD in January 2021 released a list of the surveillance technology it deploys, including geolocation tracking devices and mobile X-ray technology, along with an impact and use policy for each device. Advocates said the data dump did not go far enoughand did not disclosewho is shared on the information collected from the technology or how the NYPD prevents racial biases historically associated with the technologies. In general, the disclosures obscure the breadth, depth, and complexity of the NYPDs surveillance, and in some instances even include misrepresentations and inaccurate statements, the NYCLU wrote in response to the release of the information.

Advocates continued to report racial bias associated with facial recognition software technology that faced widespread criticism for its use during the 2020 protests. The technology was used to track down Black Lives Matter activist Derrick Ingram, a co-founder of the group Warriors in the Garden, who was accused of yelling in an officers ear through a megaphone during the protests. Days later, in August 2020, dozens of NYPD officers swarmed his Hells Kitchen apartment building in an hourslong standoff. Amnesty International, along with the Surveillance Technology Oversight Project, sued the NYPD to demand it release records showing how it used facial recognition software during the protests.

In February, Amnesty International reported more troubling revelations about facial recognition software. The group mapped 25,500 CCTV cameras across the city and found that facial recognition technology was disproportionately used in nonwhite communities in Brooklyn, Bronx and Queens.

Adams Blueprint to End Gun Violence plan released in January suggested expanding the use of facial recognition, along with the responsible use of new technologies and software to identify dangerous individuals and those carrying weapons. He explained in a press conference: Were looking at all of this technology out there to make sure that we can be responsible within our laws. Were not going to do anything thats going to go in contrast to our laws. But were going to use this technology to make people safe.

What was promised: Both the New York City Council and the state Legislature passed laws banning the use of chokeholds by police. The Eric Garner Anti-Chokehold Act, sponsored by then-Assembly Member Walter Mosley and then-state Sen. Brian Benjamin, was passed by the Legislature in June 2020. The bill made it so a police officer who injures or kills someone by using a chokehold or similar restraint could be charged with a class C felony, punishable by up to 15 years in prison. The council legislation criminalized the use of restraints that restrict the flow of air or blood by compressing another individuals windpipe or arteries on the neck, or by putting pressure on the back or chest, by (a) police officer making an arrest. The NYPDs own policy has prohibited chokeholds for decades, but the new law made it so that officers who engage in the practice could face a class A misdemeanor charge under the law.

Where we are now: The NYPDs police unions sued over the legislation, and last yeara state Supreme Court judge ruled that the policy was unconstitutionally vague and must be rewritten. On May 19, an appeals court reinstated the law, writing the Supreme Court should have not found the diaphragm compression ban to be unconstitutionally vague. The diaphragm compression ban is sufficiently definite to give notice of the prohibited conduct and does not lack objective standards or create the potential for arbitrary or discriminatory enforcement.

Officers have continued to use the restraint tactic since Garners death, according to the New York City Civilian Complaint Review Board, which reported in January last year 40 instances in which officers have used chokeholds since Garners death.

What was promised: The NYPD Internal Affairs Bureau, along with the Civilian Complaint Review Board, was charged with investigating hundreds of complaints of officer misconduct during the 2020 protests. De Blasio, at the time, said he was concerned about the dozens of videos of officers behaving aggressively toward protesters, but he also expressed support for the departments handling of the demonstrations overall. Look, there are some specific instances I dont accept, where there needs to be discipline, the mayor told WNYCs Brian Lehrer on June 5, 2020. But the vast majority of what Ive seen is peaceful protest that has been respected as always, and folks making sure voices heard for change, and police have shown a lot of restraint.

Where we are now: The Civilian Complaint Review Board earlier this month reported that it has substantiated 267 of 316 cases of officer misconduct related to the 2020 protests and recommended the highest level of discipline for 88 officers. The NYPD has closed 44 of those cases and agreed with the Civilian Complaint Review Boards recommendations just 10 times. However, the board said it faced barriers in investigating many of the complaints due to its inability to identify some of the officers seen on the video footage engaging in aggressive tactics, forcing it to close 26% of cases for that reason.Some of the officers covered or refused to disclose their badge numbers when asked by protesters a violation of NYPD protocol under the 2018 Right to Know Act passed by the City Council. In releasing the results of the protest investigations on May 11, the Civilian Complaint Review Board said it would publish a report sometime this summer with recommendations on how to enhance the NYPDs protest response.

The CCRB was flooded with complaints, interim Chair Arva Rice said in a statement about the 2020 protests. In the height of the pandemic, our investigators used all possible resources, including thousands of hours of (body camera) footage, civilian footage, police records and more, to fairly and impartially investigate some of the most complicated cases the Agency has seen. She said, as of mid-May, the Civilian Complaint Review Board had finalized 98% of cases and submitted its recommendations to the NYPD.

with reporting by Jeff Coltin

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How technological advancements impacted online casino – TechGenyz

Posted: at 12:09 pm

Most businesses, such as the online gaming sector, have been dramatically influenced by recent technological advances. Enjoying casino sites has never been more fun than it is today, thanks to a slew of great new developments. Because of this, internet casinos continue to draw an increasing number of players from across the globe.

Today, well take a closer look at some of the most important technological influences on the ever-expanding internet gambling sector. With this knowledge, you will be able to see how online casino game providers have been impacted by recent technology developments.

Improved odds for the Player If you look at a casino from 50 years ago and compare it to the UK live casino in 2022, youll come to realize how much the chances for players to win have actually improved over time. There are so many casino game providers and developers competing with each other that they have resorted to winning the players preference by designing games that have an immensely high return to player (RTP) percentages, which can go up to 95-99%. Were also seeing a wide variety of games with progressive jackpots that can help players win more frequently.

Among the most intriguing impacts of innovation on the online gambling sector is the emergence of A.I. or artificial intelligence technology. In casinos, youll find a lot more of this sophisticated tech than you may expect. Youre more likely to get assistance from chatbots than a live human when you do have difficulty with an online service and decide to get in contact with customer care. Most likely, you wont notice a decline in the overall quality of customer support provided by these robots.

Yet neural network system technology isnt only being used in customer support. The use of this new tech is also to enhance the overall gaming experience, especially when playing versus a program, which is popular in many of todays casino games.

People spend a lot of time on their cell phones in todays technology-driven environment. They use social media, watch movies, check their email, and do a host of other online activities. Its not enough for online casinos to concentrate just on traditional games if they want to attract this demographic. To meet their demands, they must develop games that can be played on mobile devices such as smartphones and tablets.

Gaming companies have made it possible for individuals to play their favorite online casino games on the move, wherever they are. A broad choice of engaging, mobile-friendly games

and applications are available for them to pick from. Having a cell phone and internet access is all they need, nothing more!

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Online sports betting could be in NC by football season, legislative supporters say – WRAL News

Posted: at 12:09 pm

By Brian Murphy, WRAL sports investigative reporter

Raleigh, N.C. Sports bettors in North Carolina could be placing legal online wagers as early as this football season if state lawmakers pass a bill in the new legislative session.

Senate Bill 688 passed a divided North Carolina Senate last year and the bills backers say the legislation has enough support to pass the House during the states even-year short session, which began Wednesday. Gov. Roy Cooper has indicated in the past that he would sign legislation legalizing online sports gambling.

We just want to make sure we have drummed up the votes, and I think we have, state Sen. Paul Lowe, D-Forsyth, the bill's sponsor, said in an interview with WRAL News. I feel confident about it.

Sports gambling is currently legal in North Carolina, but only at the two Cherokee casinos in the far western part of the state. The legislation would allow for up to 12 online sports gambling operators to take mobile wagers from users located in the state. North Carolina would join a growing list of states to legalize widespread sports gambling after a 2018 U.S. Supreme Court decision opened the door for state-by-state decisions.

About half of U.S. states have legalized online sports gambling, including southeastern states such as Virginia, Tennessee, West Virginia, Maryland and the District of Columbia. Kansas became the latest state to approve mobile sports betting earlier this month.

Were ready to rock n roll. Ive not heard any new opposition, state Rep. Jason Saine, R-Lincoln, an advocate of the bill, told WRAL News. I think we have a pretty smooth glide path once we do kind of start rolling into session.

Legalized sports betting has majority support across North Carolina, according to WRAL News poll results released in April. About 52% of respondents said sports gambling, including online gambling, should be legalized in the state. Support hit or topped 50% among Republicans, Democrats and unaffiliated voters. Twenty-eight percent said widespread sports betting should remain against the law. Another 19% said they werent sure.

Supporters say approval will enable the state to capture millions of dollars in gambling-related revenue each year and reduce the use of unregulated, off-shore sites. When individuals see other companies that are doing the same thing and doing it in our state, and were not getting any revenue from it, a light bulb kind of goes off, Lowe said. People are doing this anyway.

He mentioned the number of sports gambling advertisements played throughout major sporting events, such as the Super Bowl and the NBA playoffs, offering legal betting in other states. Many of the sports wagering operators are partnered with sports leagues, teams and venues.

Thats a lot of lost revenue that our citizens are participating with, he said, and we're getting nothing out of it and some of those [offshore] sites are not safe, he said.

Social conservatives at the statehouse have pushed back against the proposal, saying it will cause an increase in gambling addiction and hurt society and families. Some Democrats are opposed to additional gambling in the state as well, concerned about its impacts on low-income residents and college athletics.

For a state with a $25 billion annual budget, the revenue from sports gambling likely wont be a game-changer. Tennessee, a state like North Carolina that has professional sports franchises in the NBA, NHL and NFL and popular college teams, collected $4.6 million in taxes in March off $370 million in sports wagers, according to the Tennessee Sports Wagering Advisory Council. The sports books made $22.7 million in adjusted gross income during the month.

Virginia legalized online sports gambling in January 2021. It has since collected $26.7 million in taxes. Twelve companies can take sports bets in Virginia, but only five have paid taxes because the state, like Tennessees law and North Carolinas proposed legislation, allows companies to write off some expenses, including promotional and credit expenses to reach its adjusted gross income total.

Under the bill, sports bets would be allowed on professional sports, college sports, electronic sports and amateur sports like those at the Olympics. Betting on youth sports, such as high school games and horse racing would not be allowed under the current legislation.

Operators would pay $500,000 for a five-year license, which can be renewed for $100,000. The Lottery Commission would oversee sports gambling in the state. The legislation calls for an 8% tax on operators adjusted gross revenue, which allows for the deduction of certain expenses, including promotional credits, from the total gross revenue.

Both the license fee and the tax rate are low compared to other states. Illinois, for example, has a $20 million fee and a $1 million renewal fee every four years. Pennsylvania charges a $10 million license fee with $250,000 for renewals. New York taxes operators at 51%. Virginia taxes adjusted gross revenue at 15%. During a committee hearing in November, some North Carolina lawmakers asked if the tax rate could be raised.

Saine said the House will pass the same exact bill that passed the Senate, which passed the bill 26-19 with more Republicans voting no than yes on it. Once that passes, lawmakers could attempt to pass a second bill doubling the license fee, raising the tax rate to 14% and making several other technical changes to the bill.

No sense in reliving the wounds that may be there. It will make it or not make it on the House side the way the Senate sent it to us, Saine said. Based on the conversations Ive had with other members, they seem OK with that approach.

Said Lowe: Once we pass this bill, theres some tweaks were going to do. But right now were just trying to get it out of the chute.

Under the current legislation, half of the tax collected would go to a newly created North Carolina Major Events, Games, and Attractions Fund administered by the North Carolina Department of Commerce.

The fund can be used to provide grants to major events that chose a site within North Carolina after considering multiple sites outside of the state to host an event held not more than once a year. The legislation defines the events as entertainment, musical, political, sporting or theatrical and says they must be held at a sports facility or sponsored by a major golf association.

The state Lottery Commission would also give $1 million per year to the state Department of Health and Human Services for gambling addiction education and treatment programs.

Lowe said he wants some of the money to be used for education.

Education, education. Plain and simple, he said. Certainly we want to do all we can for K-12. Im still concerned about things like Head Start, still concerned about higher ed. When we say education, we have to look at the whole gamut, teachers. Community colleges even need some help so they can compete.

The states three major professional sports teams the Carolina Hurricanes, the Carolina Panthers and the Charlotte Hornets back the legislation. They, along with Charlotte Motor Speedway and others, could stand to benefit from the bill since the owner or operator of a sports facility that hosts professional sports and has a capacity of at least 17,000 people (or hosts a professional golf tournament with more than 50,000 live spectators), can open a sports lounge near its venue. Customers would still have to place their bets electronically, but the facilities could be a way to attract sports fans to venues that might otherwise be unoccupied for much of the year.

I feel very confident its going to pass early in the session, said Ches McDowell, a lobbyist for the Hornets who worked on the legislation.

If the legislation passes that quickly, it could be several months before bettors can begin creating accounts with mobile operators and placing bets.

Its conceivable, if not by the first of football season, certainly by mid-season, Saine said. There might be a couple games already played, but I do think everyone who is involved in it has known something might be coming. Its not a shock to anyone.

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SOFTSWISS Becomes the Best Online Casino Provider in the Nordics 2022 – European Gaming Industry News

Posted: at 12:09 pm

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Events agency now gearing up for Prague Gaming Summit on June 21st

European Gaming, Hipther Agencys Central and Eastern European betting and gaming media platform, has celebrated its return to live events with a resounding success at the MARE BALTICUM Gaming Summit.

The summit was held on May 12, 2022, in Vilnius, Lithuania, at the eco-friendly Radisson Blu Royal Astorija Hotel, located in the Baltic capitals UNESCO-certified old town.

The fifth edition of Hipthers boutique European Gaming summit marked the return of the Baltic regions first in-person gaming event since the onset of COVID in 2020.

Dedicated to providing a platform for discussion between the two regions regulatory authorities, operators and suppliers, the MARE BALTICUM Gaming Summit featured a full days panel discussions and presentations from leading figures in the iGaming industry, totalling more than 80 industry delegates.

After promising a hugely impressive roster of regional thought leaders and regulatory authorities, Hipther delivered, with the likes of Dainis Niedra (Managing Director Central & Eastern Europe at Enlabs), Kaido Ulejev (Commercial Director CEECA at Betsson Group) and Maria McDonald (Managing Partner at Nordic Gambling).

Providing a unique open platform for stakeholders and industry operators, as well as a wealth of networking opportunities for gaming executives, the MARE BALTICUM Gaming Summit was sponsored by Tom Horn, Endorphina and Nordic Gambling.

Alongside the summit were the Baltic and Scandinavian Gaming Awards (BSG), launched in 2019, which have become the most important gaming industry awards in the region.

Totalling 28 nomination categories, BSG awards were established to provide an independent, fair and representative awards event that recognises significant achievements across the Baltic and Scandinavian gaming industries, and this year was no different.

Among the winners of the wide selection of highly competitive categories, were Betsson, who was awarded the Best Sports Betting Operator in the Nordics 2022 title, whilst Altenar won the Best Sports Betting Provider in The Baltics 2022, as well as BetGames taking home Best Live Casino Provider.

Commenting on the success of the MARE BALTICUM GamingSummit, Zoltan Tuendik, Founder and Head of Business and Events at European Gaming and Hipther Agency said:

It was a pleasure to provide the industry with the MARE BALTICUM GamingSummit proving to be the regions first proper in-person gaming conference in three years.

Whilst we have always been aware of the value of the networking opportunities, panel discussions and BSG awards, we were thrilled to see the demand of the summit translated into a sell-out event, with a wonderful opportunity to bring everyone back together.

With just one month to go, we are now gearing up for the Prague Gaming Summit, which has also grown year on year. This is a key event in the Central and Eastern European region and one of our longest-standing conferences.

We aim to bring a wealth of information within quality networking spaces as well as a focus on the DACH regions main regulatory updates.

The Prague Gaming Summit is Central and Eastern Europe (CEE)s largest betting and gaming industry conference.

The fifth edition of the show, organised by European Gaming and Hipther Agency,will take place on the 21st June 2022 at Vienna House in Pragues Andel district, starting at 08.45am.

The event already has record number of sponsors confirmed, including Tom Horn Gaming and Nordic Gambling.With a limited number of sponsorship packages still available, interested companies can contact: Andrada Marginean, B2B Sales Manager at Hipther Agency, by email on[emailprotected].

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The UK’s Gamstop SchemeWhat Exactly Is It And How Can It Help You? – UrbanMatter

Posted: at 12:09 pm

Since April 2018, the National Self-Exclusion Scheme (Gamstop) Gamstop stands for Gambling Self-Exclusion has been helping people deal with their gambling habits responsibly.

While it is currently a voluntary opt-in program only, theres a plan to make it mandatory for all UK gambling sites and operators in the coming future.

All poker, bingo and casino sites licensed within the UK market must display Gamstops logo on their site or marketing materials. Lets have a deeper look at how you could benefit from it.

GamStop is a voluntary and free service program that allows you to self-exclude from all licensed online gambling sites in the UK. To register, you fill out an online form and then agree not to use any of these sites for a specific time.

Once your application is processed, you will receive an email confirmation, including a unique code that can be used on any site you wish to opt-out of gambling. This code allows you access without re-entering all the necessary details every time you sign up for an account or make a deposit at these sites.

If youve signed up with Gamstop, but would like to gamble again sooner than you anticipated, there is an option to remove yourself from the scheme. To do so, however, youd need to contact Gamstop and request early removal.

Gamstop is designed to help people who struggle with gambling problems, which can lead to severe issues, including debt and relationship breakdowns. The good news is that users are not limited to the options provided by GamStop. There are other ways to control the flow of digital funds they receive and even more opportunities to consider when looking to control their access to online gambling.

The length of time you want to exclude yourself from online gambling is entirely up to you, within certain restrictions set by Gamstop. You can opt for six months, one year or five years.

If you have ever felt like gambling has become a problem in your life but dont know where to go for help, then GamStop may be able to help.

However, suppose you decide that you want to bypass Gamstop after some time of having sent your submission to the program. In that case, you should look for a Non-UK bookmaker. In this case, you can still find some reputable online casinos not listed on Gamstop, rated according to reliability, verification and withdrawals policy.

Beware! Many fake bookmakers are offering free bets and bonuses. Still, they are just trying to fool you into depositing money they will never payback.

We also recommend using an e-wallet like Skrill or Neteller, which allows you to make deposits using credit cards or bank accounts directly from your account. This way, you will guarantee a successful transaction.

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Pay n play casino sites are leaving the Dutch market Retail Technology Innovation Hub – Retail Technology Innovation Hub

Posted: at 12:09 pm

Take, for example, people consider gambling as a way of making part-time money.

This all happened due to the convenient nature of playing games. Various industry rules have powered significant changes to entice a vast amount of consumers.

But it isnt all plain sailing as governments think about a regulated online gambling world.

We have heard much about the Dutch gambling industry. It all happened due to making new policies in the gambling space. Hence, the market faces a massive loss of customers and other issues.

Now pay n play, the most lucrative feature of online casinos, will be leaving the Dutch market sometime soon.

You read that right, the pay n play casino ideal may not be a part of the Dutch gambling industry.

Government bodies have made several changes to steer the industry in to legal waters.

Many of us have seen reports about clients' illegal gambling sources. According to reports, it has been found that internet gambling is responsible for large amounts of fraud. These casinos have made government sectors take tough decisions to prevent such illegal activities.

Know about new Dutch regulations

The Dutch government is trying to find a way to regulate the gambling market. New market regulations will be launched in 2022.

It might be the case that Netherlands Pay n Play casino sites will be banned. Either that or considerable restrictions will be introduced.

The Netherlands' new guidelines will give us a sense of the new paradigm of regulated online casinos coming to market. These are bringing about several restrictions on casino owners, including qualifying for a five-year licence.

Currently, players are waiting to see what the future will bring. They hope the new regulations will be finalised soon.

Conclusion

Dutch central bodies are working with security firms to legalise the gambling industry.

This involves strict methods of profile verification, KYC, etc. According to reports, a significant slump has been seen in the Netherlands online gambling market.

Many players are calling it quits due to the aforementioned security push.

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Portugal SRIJ Inspectorate first to move on regulating Crash type games – Casino Beats

Posted: at 12:08 pm

SRIJ Portugals gambling inspectorate aims to become the first European regulatory agency to incorporate laws to govern the new casino game types of Crash and Loot.

Last week, SRIJ published its technical framework on proposed standards to govern the multiplier games of Crash and Loot, which are recognised among online casinos fastest-growing vertical popular with new audiences.

Launching its draft framework, the inspectorate that serves as Portuguese Gamblings market supervisor under the authority of the Portugal Tourism Board launched a 30-day consultation for feedback on its proposals to be reviewed by stakeholders.

Crash and Loot are multiplayer games that allow players to instantly multiply their wagers by cashing out of each game round against a randomised clock.

The games multiplier starts at x 1.00 and begins to incrementally increase, with players allowed to cash-out at any point. However, a player will lose his stake if he waits too long and the multiplier crashes.

Game rounds can immediately crash at X 1.00, providing no winnings for participants. Likewise, the games have been recorded to provide cash-out opportunities of X 1000 in certain instances.

Of concern to regulatory agencies, Crash and Loot have become the most popular game types amongst a new generation of players, introduced to the games via crypto casinos.

A consultation is required to define Crash and Loot game type characterises legally, which will help the inspectorate establish specific and complementary rules that will be applied to Portugals existing online gambling regime.

Draft proposals will allow licensed operating entities to request for the authorisation to operate Crash and Loot games, which must follow SRIJs approved criteria for offering the game types to Portuguese players.

The document outlined 49 technical rules that operators must observe should they offer Crash or Loot.

SRIJ prefered gameplay rules state that the starting base value of the multiplier increment is X 1.00, in which operators must ensure that each game maximum increment stands of X 100.

Operators must ensure that the cash-out option is immediately available at X 1.01 multiplier for participants.

Players will only be allowed to place one-to-two bets per multiplier round, in which the operator must ensure that auto cash-out functionalities are provided to customers.

Incorporating specific Portuguese market rules, SRIJ stated that, without prejudice, operators must ensure that Crash and Loot type games provide a theoretical rate of return in prizes to players that cannot be less than 80%.

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