Sat, 04/09/2011 – 00:19 – PokerPages Staff
Sweden’s Supreme Court has ruled that the cash poker is predominantly a game of chance and not skill.
Lawmakers in the Scandinavian country have been attempting to clarify the situation since six poker players were arrested for organizing a Texas Hold’em tournament four years ago.
Two of the men involved received jail time in 2008 as laws in the country state that playing a game which is predominantly based on luck is against the law.
However, The Court of Appeal overturned that ruling in May 2009, stating that tournament play is skill based.
Judge Goran Lamberth outlined the details of the decision which upheld that ruling.
“We have found that the main tournament and its side tournaments were not random chance games, but that skill does come into it.”
Therefore, the tournament held in Grebbestad did not breach gambling laws in Sweden though those involved did receive fines for participating in luck based side games.
Lamberth went onto reveal that cash games were deemed to have a higher degree of luck because players can leave whenever they choose.
“The cash games constitute games that primarily depend on luck as in the meaning of chapter 16, article 14 of the Criminal Code, while the main tournament and side tournament (sit and go) do not constitute games of luck.”
Fri, 04/01/2011 – 01:57 – PokerPages Staff
Two poker players who organized an illegal £20,000 poker night have been handed two year conditional discharges.
Brothers Terence and Paul Quinn organized the ‘Texas Hold’em Night’ in December 2009, in Londonderry, Northern Ireland.
Police seized the money, playing chips and cards at the River Club venue in John Street after receiving numerous complaints regarding the legality of the event.
The barrister at Londonderry Magistrates Court confirmed that the two men did not have licenses to organize the event.
Poker players, who attended the Texas Hold’em night paid £250 in registration, pay in and buy-in fees.
Defense barrister, Mark Reel, revealed that the brothers had spoken to police about the activities prior to the raid but confusion surrounding the legality of poker led them to break the law.
Reel said that the brothers believed the game was a game of skill and not a game of skill and chance which the Court of Appeal had previously ruled.
He also spoke of the problems the seizure of money had caused for Terence and Paul, with a number of poker players demanding their money back following the incident two years ago.
However, the district judge confirmed that the money would remain with the police though the two men would receive £800, a mobile phone and computer.