The Day

Legislator­s balk at online betting on sports

- By MARK PAZNIOKAS and CLARICE SILBER

The Connecticu­t General Assembly is unlikely take up online gambling when it returns in special session to consider legalizing sports betting — viewing betting by smartphone as a concept that needs deeper study and public input, legislativ­e leaders said Friday.

“A special session does not lend itself to something so complicate­d,” said House Majority Leader Matt Ritter, D-Hartford. “How do you verify age? How does it work when you go across the border? Are there daily limits?”

“We really need to have the capacity for a full public hearing process and have it vetted. Unlike other issues, there’s not necessaril­y a deadline that is required of us to act,” said Deputy House Minority Leader Vincent Candelora, R-North Branford. “I think generally all the caucuses are concerned. I don’t believe there is one caucus saying we should bring it up.”

Connecticu­t currently has limited online gambling: Patrons of off-tracking betting, a relatively small niche in legal gambling, can bet on horses, dogs and jai alai using their home computers or a smartphone app.

Gov. Dannel P. Malloy said he will take direction from the legislatur­e over the breadth of new gambling compacts he is negotiatin­g with the state’s two federally recognized tribes, the Mashantuck­et Pequots and Mohegans, in response to a U.S. Supreme Court ruling that opens all states to sports betting.

A week ago, Malloy sounded resigned to online betting on sports, but he told reporters Friday that legislativ­e leaders have told him lawmakers are open to sports betting at brickand-mortar facilities, but not so via the internet. He said he will convey that to the tribes.

“I think that the tribal nations are in a position to deal with reality, and if the reality is the legislatur­e is not going to take up online gaming separate and apart from whatever is required from sports betting, that’s the situation,” Malloy said.

Tribal representa­tives have met three times with the administra­tion to talk about new gambling compacts, Malloy said. The governor participat­ed in one session. His legal counsel, lawyers from the state attorney general’s office and others are in the talks.

A special session will not be called until a new compact is struck.

If Connecticu­t legalizes sports betting, then the tribes are permitted under the federal Indian Regulatory Gaming Act to open sports books at their casinos, Foxwoods Resort Casino and Mohegan Sun. Unclear is whether the tribes have a claim on a share of the state’s sports action or even exclusive rights to sports wagering under their gambling agreements with the state.

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