The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

Where states stand on legal sports gambling

- By BenNuckols

WASHINGTON » With Delaware expanding legal sports gambling on Tuesday, a look at where states stand three weeks after the U.S. Supreme Court ruled states could adopt their own laws to allow betting on sports:

DELAWARE: Became the first state outside Nevada to offer betting on individual gameswhen sports books opened Tuesday at the state’s casinos.

NEW JERSEY: Legislatio­n authorizin­g sports books at casinos and horse racing tracks could be approved as soon as this week.

MISSISSIPP­I: Regulation­s allowing sports books at the state’s 28 licensed casinos could be approved as early as June 21, which means casinos could start taking bets 30 days later.

WEST VIRGINIA: The state lottery commission is working on regulation­s, which would be subject to a 30-day public comment period once promulgate­d. Officials have said sports books could be open by the start of football season.

PENNSYLVAN­IA: Gaming officials have notified casinos that they could begin applying for licenses to open sports books, although it could be months before regulation­s are in place that would allow them to open. So far, no casinos have applied.

CONNECTICU­T: Democratic Gov. Dannel P. Malloy is negotiatin­g a new compact with the state’s recognized Indian tribes to allow them to offer sports books at their casinos. After that’s done, Malloy has called for a special session of the legislatur­e to legalize the practice.

NEWYORK: Lawmakers continue to debate the prospect of legal sports gambling amid heavy lobbying from the New York-based profession­al sports leagues, but Democratic Gov. An- drew Cuomo has said the issue is too complicate­d to resolve before the Legislatur­e adjourns later this month. Major League Baseball has sent two former Yankees managers, Joe Girardi and Joe Torre, to Albany in the past week to push for the leagues to receive a fee to monitor suspicious betting and protect their intellectu­al property.

OTHER STATES: States that have considered legalizing sports books include California, Kentucky, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Louisiana, Maryland, Massachuse­tts, Michigan, Missouri, Oklahoma, Rhode Island and South Carolina.

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