South Florida Sun-Sentinel Palm Beach (Sunday)

Biden wants judge to dismiss challenge to Florida’s gambling deal with Seminoles

- News Service of Florida

TALLAHASSE­E — President Joe Biden’s administra­tion is asking a federal judge to dismiss a lawsuit filed by Florida pari-mutuel operators challengin­g a 30-year gambling agreement reached by Gov. Ron DeSantis that gives the Seminole Tribe control over sports betting throughout the state.

Owners of Magic City Casino in Miami-Dade County and Bonita Springs Poker Room in Southwest Florida contend in the lawsuit, filed against the federal agency that oversees tribal gambling, that the sports-betting plan violates federal laws and will cause a “significan­t and potentiall­y devastatin­g” impact on their businesses.

The Havenick family, which has owned both facilities for more than five decades, filed a similar lawsuit in July against the state in federal court in Tallahasse­e.

The gambling agreement, signed in April by DeSantis and Seminole Tribe of Florida Chairman Marcellus Osceola Jr. and later ratified by the Legislatur­e, opens the door for the first time to sports betting in Florida. Under the agreement, known as a compact, the Seminoles will serve as the host for sports betting and contract with pari-mutuels that would get a cut of online bets placed using the pari-mutuels’ mobile apps.

In seeking dismissal of the lawsuit that names U.S. Department of the Interior Secretary Deb Haaland and her agency as defendants, the federal government’s lawyers argued that the plaintiffs lack standing because they failed to “adequately allege an actual or certainly impending injury that derives from the compact becoming effective by operation of law.”

“At most, plaintiffs identify highly speculativ­e, hypothetic­al injuries that turn in part on plaintiffs’ own decision whether to participat­e in the online sports betting program to which they object. Such contention­s fail to establish standing and thus this suit must be dismissed,” the Biden administra­tion lawyers wrote in a motion filed Tuesday.

The compact allowed the tribe to offer online sports betting beginning Friday, but the Seminoles haven’t launched the operation. It’s unclear when sports betting will be available to Florida gamblers.

The “hub-and-spoke” sports-betting plan would allow gamblers throughout the state to place bets online, with the bets run through computer servers on tribal property. The compact says bets made anywhere in Florida “using a mobile app or other electronic device, shall be deemed to be exclusivel­y conducted by the tribe.” The tribe is ultimately expected to pay billions of dollars to the state because of sports betting and other parts of the compact.

But calling Florida’s sports-betting model a “legal fiction,” the pari-mutuels’ lawsuits maintain that federal law does not authorize bets that occur off tribal lands.

“Through this fiction, the compact and implementi­ng law seek to expand sports betting outside of Indian lands to individual­s located anywhere in Florida so long as they have a computer and internet connection —subject only to the tribe’s monopoly,” lawyers for the pari-mutuels wrote.

The federal Bureau of Indian Affairs, which Haaland oversees as part of the Department of the Interior, in August allowed a 45-day review period to elapse without taking action on the gambling agreement.

The motion filed this week said the lawsuit should be dismissed because, under federal law, a compact that goes into effect without action “shall be considered to have been approved by the secretary, but only to the extent the compact is consistent with the provisions” of the Indian Gaming Regulatory Act, or IGRA.

“In any event, if plaintiffs are correct that certain provisions of this compact are contrary to IGRA, then under their own theory, those provisions are not actually deemed approved. As a result, the secretary could not have made the allegedly unlawful approvals” that the legal complaint alleges, the motion said.

The pari-mutuel operators challengin­g the compact argued that the sports betting system will “cannibaliz­e” their customer base, causing them to lose money.

But Haaland and her agency brushed aside that concern, arguing that the plaintiffs “appear to assume … that if online sports betting becomes available, it will have an instantane­ous and transforma­tive impact on the Florida gaming market to their detriment.”

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