SB546 - Reorganizes authority for licensing and regulation of excursion gambling boats and gaming
| SB 0546
| Reorganizes authority for licensing and regulation of excursion gambling boats and gaming
|
| Sponsor: | Kenney |
| LR Number: | 1281S.06C | Fiscal Note: | 1281-06 |
| Committee: | Pensions and General Laws |
| Last Action: | 05/18/01 - S Inf Calendar S Bills for Perfection w/SCS | Journal page: | |
| Title: | SCS SB 546 |
| Effective Date: | August 28, 2001 |
Full Bill Text |
All Actions | Available Summaries | Senate Home Page | List of 2001 Senate Bills
Current Bill Summary
SCS/SB 546 - Under current law, the Missouri Gaming
Commission has authority over the economic development aspects,
licensing, regulation and regulatory enforcement of excursion
gambling boats and gaming in Missouri. In order to create
critical checks and balances within the regulatory framework and
to provide for more effective investigation and enforcement in
the area of gambling boats and gaming, this act creates the
Missouri Gaming Regulatory Board which will work in conjunction
with the Commission in the licensing, regulatory and enforcement
aspects of the industry.
CREATION OF THE MISSOURI GAMING REGULATORY BOARD - The Board is
composed of three members appointed by the Governor for staggered
three-year terms and is assigned to the Department of Public
Safety. Upon referral by the Commission, the Board will conduct
suitability investigations of applicants for excursion boat
licenses, gaming operator licenses, supplier licenses and certain
gaming-related occupational licenses. The Commission will
continue to perform the function of choosing from among competing
applicants and ultimately issuing such licenses, but either the
Board or the Commission may deem an applicant unsuitable for a
license.
The Board will also take over the enforcement and
sanctioning/disciplining aspects of excursion gambling boats and
gaming. The Board will be empowered to enforce applicable laws,
rules and regulations and the Board may restrict, suspend or
revoke the license of, or otherwise sanction, licensees for any
of a number of specified acts, such as: dealing with unlicensed
suppliers; engaging in fraud, deception, misrepresentation,
extortion or bribery; failing to cooperate with a board
investigation; or failing to appear and provide testimony to the
board. The Board is authorized to investigate violations and has
both power of subpoena and authority to enter into agreements
with other investigatory agencies (e.g., IRS and Mo. A.G.) to aid
in its investigations.
The Board will create and enforce a code of ethics for its
members and employees and the act contains strict restrictions
prohibiting blood or business relationships between and among
Board members, applicants, licensees, suppliers, investigatory
authorities, appointed officials and others.
NEW CRIME OF "GAMING CORRUPTION" - This act creates the crime
of"gaming corruption", a Class D felony (punishment: 5 years or
less and/or a fine of $5,000 or less, or double the gain ($20,000
maximum)). Any person convicted of this crime is barred for life
from Missouri gambling boats. A person commits the crime if such
person performs any of several enumerated acts for a prohibited
purpose. The prohibited purposes include:
1. Influencing a decision or investigation of the Board or
the Commission;
2. Influencing the outcome of any gambling game; or
3. Profiting from the influence of any Board or Commission
decision or the outcome of any gambling game.
The prohibited acts include:
1. Entering into a gaming-related or profiteering contract
with a "government official" (i.e., a Board or Commission member
or employee, a public official of the state or of a city or
county, a highway patrolman or assistant attorney general
assigned to investigate/regulate gaming, or a person who was in
any such capacity within the last 2 years);
2. Employing or offering employment to a government
official;
3. Selling or giving a gaming-related business interest to
a government official;
4. Giving any gift or gratuity to a government official;
5. Engaging in ex parte communications with a government
official; or
6. Engaging in any of the acts prohibited above while being
a government official, or within 2 years after being a government
official.
EXISTING MISSOURI GAMING COMMISSION - This act curtails the
jurisdiction of the existing Commission. The Commission will
continue to issue all licenses and will continue to have
regulatory authority over the operational aspects and all taxing
and economic development aspects of excursion gambling boats and
gaming. The Commission's former authority in the areas of
investigation and sanctioning/disciplining of licensees, however,
is shifted to the new Board. The Commission continues to have
subpoena power and authority to investigate violations of its
rules and regulations concerning operation of excursion gambling
boats (e.g., cruising and docking restrictions) and gaming (e.g.,
loss limits, wagering restrictions, approval of games). The
Commission also continues to collect and distribute excursion
admission fees and continues to regulate the assessment,
collection and disbursement of taxes on adjusted gross receipts
from gambling games.
This act strengthens the subpoena power of the Commission
and authorizes the Commission to prohibit any applicant for a
license from beginning construction of a casino until such time
as the Board has found the applicant to be suitable. The act
also requires applicants for excursion gambling boat licenses to
provide an affirmative action plan and to report on the
effectiveness of the plan.
The act provides that gaming-related licenses are a
revocable privilege, not a vested right. It also clarifies the
requirement that applicants and licensees cooperate with the
Commission and the Board in the licensing process and in any
investigations. The act requires the design and aesthetics of
gambling boats to be consistent with the riverboat history of
Missouri or of the home dock city or county.
The act also caps the number of excursion gambling boat
licenses at 15 and caps the total number of slot machines which
may be located on any single excursion gambling boat at 1,900.
The Commission may require gambling boat licensees and gaming
equipment suppliers to remove any slot machines that are in
excess of the maximum number allowed. Additionally, the Board
may restrict, suspend or revoke the license of any licensee who
operates an excursion gambling boat with a number of slot
machines in excess of the maximum number allowed.
ALAN KELLY