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Mississippi's Online Sports Betting, Anti-Sweepstakes Bill Dead

From OSINT Commons


This year's project to legislate statewide online sports betting in Mississippi looks dead, and dragged down in addition to it is an effort to prohibit sweepstakes gambling establishments in the Magnolia State by means of legislation.


Monday was the deadline for conference committee reports on basic bills and constitutional modifications to be filed in Jackson.


This included a report for S.B. 2510, which was an anti-online betting expense (sweepstakes consisted of) when it passed the Senate 51-0 in February.


However, that was before the Mississippi Legislature made some tweaks to the bill in March, including by inserting statewide online sports wagering into the legislation.


The modifications were declined by the Senate and triggered the creation of a conference committee last week.


It appears lawmakers on the conference committee were eventually unable to reach a compromise on S.B. 2510 and submit a report, due to the fact that the state legislature's website stated Monday night that the measure was dead.


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As an outcome, it appears like both a sweepstakes casino ban and statewide online sports betting in Mississippi by means of legislation may have to wait until next year.


Yet another working effort to legislate statewide online sports wagering in Mississippi highlights the sticking around issues that lawmakers in the Senate have about licensing any form of online gaming that could possibly cannibalize the business of the state's brick-and-mortar gambling establishments.


Those issues obviously outweighed the danger positioned by sweepstakes casinos that have actually spread out throughout the U.S., triggering action by legislators and regulators looking for to rein in the more recent form of online betting.


Appears like Mississippi's last, finest possibility at legalizing statewide online sports wagering this year is dead, in addition to the proposed ban on sweepstakes gambling establishments to which House lawmakers attempted to connect OSB: pic.twitter.com/DWLgRJxxew


Mississippi could still do something about it versus sweeps operators as regulators in other states have actually done, such as by releasing cease-and-desist letters. But a specific, statutory restriction and criminal charges for breaching that ban appears like they are off the table for now. The Mississippi legislature is arranged to adjourn on April 6.