Sure, no one is accusing these of any involvement in the two major cases announced at a press conference: One involving people accused of being part of an insider conspiracy concerning NBA games; and the other involving many more people, including former professional athletes and mobsters, in high-stakes poker games that allegedly were rigged.
A year ago, the CBS show “60 Minutes” interviewed reformed gambler and current therapist Harry Levant, a specialist in gambling addictions, who talked about how these companies use algorithms, fueled by artificial intelligence, to lure people in.
“I have patients who gamble in the shower. I have patients who gamble before they get out of bed in the morning. I have patients who gamble while they are driving. There are no guardrails,” Levant said on the show.
And now, beginning Nov. 1, a new NCAA rule will allow college athletes to gamble on professional sports games, something previously forbidden. They still won’t be allowed to gamble on college games, however.
Are we to expect that college athletes, after years of being allowed to bet on pro games, will suddenly lay aside that habit when they are drafted by a professional team and subsequently forbidden to gamble on those games? Or will Thursday’s bombshell announcement end up being a mere preview of coming events?
“We scientifically know the human brain, the risk-reward system for a young man isn't fully formulated until you're 25,” Levant told 60 Minutes.
Thursday morning was an extremely bad one for the NBA. Miami Heat guard Terry Rozier and Portland Trail Blazers head coach Chauncey Billups both were arrested. U.S. Attorney Joseph Nocella Jr. told a news conference that the two allegedly were involved with others in a plot that focused on providing insider information. Gamblers often place proposition, or “prop” bets on the individual performances of athletes. They wager on players scoring, rebounding or assisting at higher or lower amounts than average.
Officials allege athletes faked injuries or altered their performances as part of a scheme.
The poker scheme allegedly involved former NBA players and mobsters, and some may have been connected to both investigations.
Les Bernal, national director of the advocacy group Stop Predatory Gambling told me Americans are now paying the price for allowing legal gambling to “metastasize into every part of American life.”
He harkened back to the words of NBA Commissioner Adam Silver, who in 2014 said the league had to allow legal gambling on games to get control of what had been widespread underground gambling. “I believe that sports betting should be brought out of the underground and into the sunlight where it can be appropriately monitored and regulated,” he wrote in a New York Times op-ed. The implication was that the league’s integrity would be protected.
“We have seen now for the last seven years that this is a complete and blatant lie,” Bernal said, noting he believes illegal gambling problems have grown as a result of the legal enterprises and all the advertising. “We as a nation need to acknowledge this has been an epic failure as a public policy.”
Indeed, a study published earlier this year by the Journal of the American Medical Association found that sports wagers rose from $4.9 billion in 2017 to $121.1 billion in 2023. Also, the number of people seeking help for addictions dramatically increased.
Unfortunately, few people in Congress seem interested in this topic.
I don’t know how much deeper the current investigations will go or what the outcomes will be. Certainly, the NBA must confront this threat headon.
But the legal gambling “victims” of all this seem undeterred. As Marketplace.org reports, they now are moving into prediction markets, normally used only for cultural or event wagering.
Why is this noteworthy? Because, as the website notes, those markets are regulated by federal commodities rules, not state laws.
“Meaning they can operate even in big states where (sports) gambling is illegal like California and Texas.”
Or Utah, which until now has avoided being a real victim of gambling.
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