Daily Times (Primos, PA)

IRS seizes cash, accounts of ex-Pace-O-Matic exec

He was also a longtime Pa. state trooper

- By Peter Hall Pennsylvan­ia Capital-Star

Federal investigat­ors have seized more than $400,000 from a retired Pennsylvan­ia State Police corporal who, until recently, served as compliance director for Pace-O-Matic, the maker of Pennsylvan­ia skill games at the center of a legal quandary over whether they are gambling devices.

The Internal Revenue Service’s Criminal Investigat­ion branch posted a notice of forfeiture on Sunday listing $443,052 in cash and accounts seized from Rick Goodling, who worked as national director of compliance for Georgia-based Pace-O-Matic Inc., according to a notice posted online by the IRS.

A spokesman for Pace-O-Matic said Goodling resigned from his position with the company more than a month ago after company officials became aware of the IRS investigat­ion regarding his personal tax filing.

“We have and will continue to cooperate fully with the IRS investigat­ion and will continue to cooperate with law enforcemen­t regarding this issue,” spokespers­on Mike Barley said in a statement.

Goodling did not return a call for comment on Monday.

Pace-O-Matic is the state’s leading distributo­r of skill games — slot machine-like devices that allow players to pay to play a game to win a jackpot. The company contends, and a state court has agreed, that the games are distinguis­hable from slot machines because players must use skill to win, rather than relying on chance.

The Pennsylvan­ia Attorney General’s Office last week filed a petition in the state Supreme Court to appeal a November Commonweal­th Court decision that skill games are not gambling devices and therefore are not illegal.

27 years with state police

Goodling testified in a Senate Community, Economic and Recreation­al Developmen­t Committee hearing on skill games in October that he retired from the Pennsylvan­ia State Police in 2019 after 27 years. During his service, Goodling said he became recognized as a national expert in illegal video gaming devices and led the state police gambling unit for more than 15 years.

In a 2019 House Gaming Committee hearing, Goodling testified that Pace-O-Matic has a team of former state troopers and liquor enforcemen­t officers tasked with visiting the company’s clients “to weed out illegal gaming machines that should not be in the marketplac­e.”

The team reports illegal machines to state police and encourages organizati­ons such as fire companies and VFW halls to replace illegal gambling machines with skill games, Goodling testified.

The company says skill games provide a vital stream of revenue for small businesses and fraternal organizati­ons.

Pace-O-Matic does not disclose how many machines it has in operation in Pennsylvan­ia or publish revenue figures except in the District of Columbia and Wyoming where it is required by law to do so. According to the Wyoming Gaming Commission’s annual report, distributo­rs of PaceO-Matic’s

game Cowboy Skill reported a combined $74.5 million in revenue in 2022.

IRS spokespers­on Eric Smith said the agency could not comment on the investigat­ion into Goodling’s tax filings beyond what the public notice states.

According to the notice, on Nov. 14 and 15, IRS Criminal Investigat­ions seized from Goodling $152,862 in cash and froze Goodling’s bank accounts at PESCU Credit Union in the amount of $81,871, at PNC Bank in the amount of $194,413, and Bogowe Consulting in the amount of $13,906.

While litigating the legality of its devices in Pennsylvan­ia, Pace-O-Matic has also pushed to have the machines regulated and taxed, which lawmakers who support the idea say would raise millions in new revenue for the state.

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