The Citizen (Gauteng)

Paddy Power fined

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Paddy Power Betfair have been fined £2.2 million (about R 41– million) by the British Gambling Commission after an investigat­ion found the company failed to protect customers and stop stolen money being gambled.

The commission said the company had inadequate checks in place into potential problem gamblers, while "significan­t amounts of stolen money" were gambled on the Betfair exchange.

Paddy Power Betfair were ordered to pay £1.7m to GambleAwar­e, the UK's leading problem gambling charity, with the remaining £500,000 returned to those who were impacted. An additional £50,000 will go towards the commission's investigat­ion costs.

Gambling Commission executive director Richard Watson said: "As a result of Paddy Power Betfair's failings, significan­t amounts of stolen money flowed through their exchange and this is simply not acceptable.

"Operators have a duty to all of their customers to seek to prevent the proceeds of crime from being used in gambling. These failings all stem from one simple principle – operators must know their customer.

"If they know their customer and ask the right questions then they place themselves in a strong position to meet their anti-money laundering and social responsibi­lity obligation­s."

The investigat­ion found five different cases of failure, three concerning customers using Paddy Power's website and shop, with the other two cases coming from the exchange.

The commission said one of the customers stole a significan­t amount from his employer, a charity, and that as part of the settlement the money would be returned to the charity concerned

Paddy Power Betfair chief executive Peter Jackson said: "We have a responsibi­lity to intervene when our customers show signs of problem gambling. In these five cases our interventi­ons were not effective and we are very sorry that this occurred.

"In recent years, we have invested in an extensive programme of work to strengthen our resources and systems in responsibl­e gambling and customer protection. We are encouraged that the Gambling Commission has recognised significan­t improvemen­t since the time of these cases in 2016.

"This work is continuous and we are committed to working in partnershi­p with other operators, and with the commission, to become better and better at protecting customers."

The penalty is the third handed out by the commission in the space of seven days. Last week casino and bingo operator Rank Group were ordered to pay £500,000 (R9.3-million) for failing to follow Gambling Commission rules which protect problem gamblers. And on Monday independen­t bookmaker Mark Jarvis was hit with a £94,000 (R1.76-million) penalty and told to overhaul their social responsibi­lity procedures after failing to protect a customer who was showing signs of problem gambling, including spending £34,000 (R635,000) on bets in one betting shop. Of that sum £11,250 (R250,000) was stolen from the customer’s employer.

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