San Diego Union-Tribune

SEMINOLE TRIBE’S STAY IS REJECTED

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A federal district judge rejected a stay requested by the Seminole Tribe of Florida late Wednesday after an earlier ruling blocked the tribe’s deal with the state to expand gambling and online sports betting statewide.

Attorneys for the Seminoles argued the tribe would lose significan­t revenue from online sports betting, saying some of the money would be used to fund tribe programs. But U.S. District Court Judge Dabney Friedrich rejected the request, saying the tribe hadn’t shown that it would be irreparabl­y harmed if a stay were not granted.

However, the Sun Sentinel reported Thursday that the Hard Rock Sportsbook app was still operating and accepting bets.

In a ruling late Monday, U.S. District Court Judge Dabney Friedrich found that the multibilli­on-dollar agreement between the state and tribe allowing online betting violated a federal rule that requires a person to be physically on tribal land when wagering. The lawsuit, filed by non-Indian casino owners in Florida, challenged the approval of the agreement by the U.S. Department of the Interior, which oversees tribal gambling operations.

The state and tribe had argued that because the servers processing the bets would be on tribal lands, bettors could wager from their phone or kiosks at race tracks and non-Indian casinos anywhere in the state and meet the federal standard.

But Judge Friedrich called that “fiction” in her earlier ruling.

The agreement made Florida — for a time — the latest state to legalize sports gambling since a 2018 Supreme Court ruling. It lifted a federal ban on such wagering outside Nevada and a few other states. Today, about half the states and the District of Columbia have legalized sports betting in some form.

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