According to a statement released by the office of Congressman Barney Frank (D-MA), legislation to exempt licensed internet gaming companies from the Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act (UIGEA) will be introduced on Wednesday.

The legislation is expected to establish a comprehensive licensing and regulatory framework for the internet gambling industry in the United States. In essence, it will likely be similar in scope to last session’s HR 2046, the Internet Gambling Regulation and Enforcement Act. The press statement sent out on Tuesday morning reads, “Tomorrow, Financial Services Committee Chairman Barney Frank (D-MA) will hold a press conference to unveil legislation that will enable Americans to bet online and put an end to an inappropriate interference with their personal freedom.” The bill would “create an exemption to the UIGEA for operators that are licensed and regulated. UIGEA, which was enacted in 2006, restricts the use of the payments system for Americans who seek the freedom to gamble online.”

The new legislation does not repeal the UIGEA. Also, according to the Safe and Secure Internet Gambling Initiative, it may not include a provision to tax the industry. During the last Congress, which concluded in December, Congressman Jim McDermott (D-WA) introduced HR 2607, which called for the taxation of 2% of all funds deposited onto regulated internet gambling sites by U.S. customers. The money would then be “deposited in the general fund of the Treasury and treated as revenue,” according to the legislation’s text. Similar companion legislation may be needed once again. A study released by PricewaterhouseCoopers revealed that similar legislation to McDermott’s combined with Frank’s HR 2046 could generate up to $52 billion in revenue over a 10 year period.

The press conference is scheduled for 10:00am ET on Wednesday morning in Room 2220 of the Rayburn House Office Building. The Safe and Secure Internet Gambling Initiative added, “The legislation is expected to include a number of significant consumer protections, including safeguards against compulsive and underage gambling, money laundering, fraud, and identity theft.” HR 2046 was officially introduced to the world on April 30th, 2007 and attracted 48 co-sponsors. However, it was not passed into law during the 110th Congress, leading to Wednesday’s re-introduction of what appears to be similar legislation.

The UIGEA was passed during the waning moments of the 2006 Congressional session and was attached to an unrelated security measure called the SAFE Port Act. Then-Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist (R-TN) was instrumental in its passage. The UIGEA deemed financial transactions between U.S. customers and illegal online gambling operations to be against the law, although no clarification was given as to what constituted “illegal gambling.” The UIGEA’s vagueness has led to a lawsuit by the Interactive Media Entertainment and Gaming Association (iMEGA) to declare it unconstitutional. The Third Circuit Court of Appeals will hear the case on July 6th following a decision by District Court Judge Mary L. Cooper last March, who granted iMEGA standing, but disagreed with many of the organization’s core arguments.

Last week, internet gambling came under fire in Minnesota, where the state’s Department of Public Safety issued written notice to 11 internet service providers (ISPs) calling for blocking access to 200 websites. The list of sites affected by the order includes USA-friendly rooms Bodog, Full Tilt Poker, and Players Only. It also features a bevy of sites that do not accept players from the United States, including World Series of Poker presenting sponsor Everest Poker, iPoker Network flagship site Titan Poker, and Party Gaming’s casino arm, Party Casino. Party Gaming, a publicly traded company on the London Stock Exchange, pulled out of the U.S. market after passage of the UIGEA in 2006. Its online poker room, Party Poker, is not among the 200 sites.

We’ll have a full breakdown of the bill when it is released on Wednesday right here on Poker News Daily.

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