The Daily Courier

Class action over “mesmerizin­g” VLTs

- —The Canadian Press

ST. JOHN’S, N.L. — An intriguing court case that alleges Crownowned video lottery terminals are inherently deceptive and violate the Criminal Code has reached a critical milestone in Newfoundla­nd and Labrador.

And the outcome of the case could have implicatio­ns for VLT gaming across Canada.

The Newfoundla­nd and Labrador Court of Appeal has cleared the way for a class-action lawsuit to go ahead, rejecting arguments for dismissal from the Atlantic Lottery Corp., which operates in all four Atlantic provinces.

“VLTs are inherently deceptive, inherently addictive and inherently dangerous when used as intended,” says a statement of claim filed in 2012. The lawsuit was certified as a class action in early 2017.

Among other things, it alleges VLTs should be considered illegal because they don’t fit the Criminal Code definition­s for slot machines, fair games of chance or lottery schemes.

More importantl­y, the plaintiffs allege VLTs more closely resemble a gambling card game known as three-card monte, which at first glance appears to be a straight-forward test of tracking one of three cards as they are moved about.

The lawsuit argues the sleight-ofhand tricks used in this con game are not unlike the manipulati­ve electronic programmin­g VLTs use to create “cognitive distortion­s” about the perception of winning.

Toronto-based lawyer Kirk Baert, who represents plaintiffs Douglas Babstock and Fred Small, said the appeal court accepted that as a potential legal argument.

“The point of having this provision in the Criminal Code ... was to prevent people from being deceived by charlatans and tricksters who use sleight-of-hand to make people lose their money,” Baert said in an interview.

“Our point is that technology has evolved, and this is just the same thing -- but it’s being done through a machine instead of a human being at a table or at a carnival.”

None of the allegation­s has been proven in court.

The Atlantic Lottery Corp. has insisted the highly regulated electronic games are decided only by chance.

In its ruling last week, the appeal court effectivel­y rejected the plaintiffs’ claims that the use of VLTs violate the federal Competitio­n Act and a British law from 1710 known as the Statute of Anne, which was aimed at preventing deceitful gaming but fell into disuse.

The corporatio­n has yet to say whether it will seek an appeal before the Supreme Court of Canada.

Aside from Babstock and Small, who are both retirees, those included in the class action are as many as 30,000 people in Newfoundla­nd and Labrador who paid the lottery corporatio­n to gamble on VLT games any time after April 2006.

The lawsuit is seeking damages equal to the alleged unlawful gain obtained by the corporatio­n through VLT revenue.

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