SB 51, as amended, Wright. Internet gambling.
The Gambling Control Act provides for the licensure of certain individuals and establishments that conduct controlled games, as defined, and for the regulation of these gambling activities by the California Gambling Control Commission. The Department of Justice has related investigatory and enforcement duties under the act. Any violation of these provisions is punishable as a misdemeanor, as specified.
This bill would establish a framework to authorize intrastate Internet gambling, as specified. The bill would authorize eligible entities to apply to the commission for abegin delete 5-yearend deletebegin insert 10-yearend insert license to operate an intrastate Internet
gambling Web site offering the play of authorized gambling games to registered players within California. The bill would prohibit the offer or play of any gambling game provided over the Internet that is not authorized by the state pursuant to this bill. The bill would provide that any violation of its provisions is punishable as a misdemeanor. By creating a new crime, this bill would impose a state-mandated local program.
The bill would require a license applicant to pay an application deposit to the commission, for deposit into the Internet Gambling Licensing Fund, as created by the bill, to be continuously appropriated to the department and the commission for the reasonably anticipated costs of investigating the applicant and evaluating the suitability of the applicant. The bill would also create the Internet Gambling Fund, for the deposit of an unspecified regulatory fee, which would be administered by the Controller subject to annual
appropriation by the Legislature for the actual costs of license oversight, consumer protection, state regulation, problem gambling programs, and other purposes related to this bill, and which would not be subject to the formulas established by statute directing expenditures from the General Fund. The bill would require each licensee to pay a one-time license fee in the amount ofbegin delete $30,000,000end deletebegin insert $15,000,000end insert for deposit in the General Fund. The license fee would be credited against monthly fees imposed on the licensee’s gross gaming revenue proceeds, as specified.
Existing law provides that a statute that imposes a requirement that a state agency submit a periodic report to the Legislature is inoperative on a date 4 years after the date the first report is due.
This bill would require the department, notwithstanding that requirement, in consultation with the commission, the Treasurer, and the Franchise Tax Board, to issue a report to the Legislature describing the state’s efforts to meet the policy goals articulated in this bill within one year of the operative date of this bill and, annually, thereafter.
The bill would also require the Bureau of State Audits, at least 4 years after the issue date of any license by the state, but no later than 5 years after that date, to issue a report to the Legislature detailing the implementation of this bill, as specified.
The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.
This bill would provide that no reimbursement is required by this act for a specified reason.
This bill would declare that it is to take effect immediately as an urgency statute.
Vote: 2⁄3. Appropriation: yes. Fiscal committee: yes. State-mandated local program: yes.
The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
Chapter 5.2 (commencing with Section 19990.01)
2is added to Division 8 of the Business and Professions Code, to
3read:
4
This chapter shall be known and may be cited as the
12Internet Gambling Consumer Protection and Public-Private
13Partnership Act of 2013.
The Legislature hereby finds and declares all of the
15following:
16(a) Californians participate in illegal online gambling on
17unregulated Internet gambling Web sites. These Internet gambling
18Web sites are operated by offshore operators that are not regulated
19by United States authorities. As such, neither federal nor California
20laws provide any consumer protections for California players.
21California players assume all risks, any negative social or financial
22impacts are borne by the citizens of California, and the revenues
23generated from online gambling are being realized by offshore
24operators and do not provide any benefits to the citizens of
25California.
26(b) The presence, operation, and expansion of
offshore,
27unlicensed, and unregulated Internet gambling Web sites available
28to Californians endanger Californians because the current Internet
29gambling Web sites operate illegally and without regulation as
30demonstrated by criminal prosecutions of some Internet gambling
31purveyors, and questions often arise about the honesty and the
32fairness of the games played on these Internet gambling Web sites
33as well as about the use of proceeds generated by these unregulated
34Internet gambling Web sites.
35(c) In October 2006, Congress passed the SAFE Port Act (Public
36Law 109-347), to increase the security of United States ports.
37Embedded within the language of that act was a section entitled
38the Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act of 2006
P4 1(UIGEA), which prohibits the use of banking instruments,
2including credit cards, checks, or fund transfers, for interstate
3Internet gambling, essentially prohibiting online gambling by
4United States citizens. UIGEA
includes exceptions that permit
5individual states to create a regulatory framework to enable
6intrastate Internet gambling, provided the bets or wagers are made
7exclusively within a single state, whose state laws or regulations
8comply with all of the following:
9(1) Contain certain safeguards regarding those transactions,
10including both of the following:
11(A) Age and location verification requirements.
12(B) Data security standards designed to prevent access by minors
13and persons located outside of that state.
14(2) Expressly authorize the bet or wager and the method by
15which the bet or wager is made.
16(3) Do not violate any federal gaming statutes, including all of
17the following:
18(A) The Interstate Horseracing Act of 1978.
19(B) The Professional and Amateur Sports Protection Act.
20(C) The Gambling Devices Transportation Act.
21(D) The Indian Gaming Regulatory Actbegin delete of 1988end delete (IGRA).
22(d) State provision of Internet gambling consistent with federal
23law provides California with the means to protect its citizens and
24consumers under certain conditions by providing a framework to
25ensure that, among other things, minors are prevented from
26gambling, citizens participating in gambling activities are protected,
27and the state is not deprived of income tax revenues to which it
28would otherwise be
entitled.
29(e) The state currently maintains and implements substantial
30regulatory and law enforcement efforts to protect thousands of
31Californians who gamble and play, among other things, real-money
32poker in licensed California cardrooms and tribal government
33casinos, yet the state provides no licensing requirements, regulatory
34structure, or law enforcement tools to protect millions of
35Californians who play the same games daily for money on the
36Internet.
37(f) California has a legitimate state interest in protecting the
38integrity of state-authorized intrastate Internet gaming by licensing
39only entities already engaged in legal gambling operations subject
P5 1to the scrutiny and discipline of California regulatory agencies and
2that are in good standing with those state agencies.
3(g) In order to protect Californians who
gamble online, allow
4state law enforcement to ensure consumer protection, and keep
5the revenues generated from Internet gambling in California, it is
6in the best interest of the state and its citizens to authorize,
7implement, and create a legal system for intrastate Internet
8gambling.
9(h) It is also the interest of the state to provide hundreds of
10millions of dollars annually for the public services that have been
11cut repeatedly during the state’s budget crisis. It is the intent of
12the Legislature in enacting this act to ensure that the state realizes
13a minimum of two hundred million dollars ($200,000,000) of
14General Fund revenue from licensing fees during the 2013-14
15fiscal year.
16(i) The state’s interests are best met by a public-private
17partnership between the state and private entities, the terms of
18which would facilitate meeting the important consumer protection
19interests of
the state while ensuring, through the success of the
20private entities, that the state receives the benefits of the licensing
21scheme as well as tax revenues that it would otherwise not receive.
22(j) The state’s interests are best met by encouraging competition
23among qualified entities with the technical expertise and systems
24that comply with federal law, protect registered players, and ensure
25that the state collects consideration under the licensing scheme
26with those qualified entities, personal income taxes owed by
27registered players, corporate taxes from the earnings of licensed
28entities, and property, employment, and sales and use taxes created
29from new businesses, jobs, and other economic inducements from
30the authorization, regulation, and control of Internet gambling.
31(k) The California Gambling Control Commission and the
32Department of Justice, in conjunction with other state
agencies
33and private partners, has the expertise to evaluate the qualifications
34of applicants for a license to conduct intrastate Internet gambling
35services, and to license the best qualified and most responsive
36applicants to meet the needs of the state and its citizens.
37(l) The authorization of intrastate Internet gambling pursuant
38to this chapter does not violate the California Constitution or
39interfere with any right under any compact between the state and
40any federally recognized Indian tribe. Moreover, the authorization
P6 1and regulation of intrastate Internet gambling pursuant to this
2chapter do not violate the exclusivity provisions of any compact
3between the state and any federally recognized Indian tribe. Internet
4gambling will take place throughout California. Moreover, the
5facilities used in the provision of Internet gambling are not slot
6machines or gaming devices as defined in any of those compacts,
7and it was not the intent of any
party to a tribal-state gaming
8compact to prohibit the use of a gaming system, or an Internet
9access device not located in a place of public accommodation, to
10play nonbanked games that are not subject to the compacts,
11including the Internet poker authorized by this act. While the
12federal Indian Gaming Regulatory Actbegin delete of 1988end delete balanced the
13interests of three sovereigns, the state, the tribes, and the federal
14government, UIGEA was designed to balance the federal interest
15in secure financial transactions with the state’s power to determine
16how online gambling should take place within that state. Finally,
17application of UIGEA in California does not violate federal Indian
18law by impinging upon protected tribal sovereignty.
19(m) Nothing in this chapter prohibits any federally recognized
20Indian tribe within California with a tribal-state gaming compact
21with the state
pursuant to IGRA from participating in intrastate
22Internet gambling pursuant to these provisions subject to the
23jurisdiction of the state.
It is the intent of the Legislature to create a licensing
25and regulatory framework to:
26(a) Ensure that authorized games are offered only for play in a
27manner that is consistent with federal and state law.
28(b) Authorize the California Gambling Control Commission to
29issue licenses, with the recommendation of the Department of
30Justice, to applicants that meet the background requirements and
31demonstrate the technical expertise to ensure that game play
32authorized by this chapter is offered only to registered players who
33are physically present within the borders of California at the time
34of play and who are 21 years of age or older.
35(c) Authorize the commission, after any licensee has been
36providing authorized games forbegin delete fiveend deletebegin insert 10end insert years, to renegotiate the
37fees paid by the licensees, as provided in this chapter, based in
38large part on the report and recommendations of the Bureau of
39State Audits to the Legislature pursuant to Section 19990.96, and
40subject to the statutory approval of the Legislature. Each existing
P7 1licensee shall have the opportunity to agree to any changes in fees
2and continue in partnership with the state, or to relinquish its
3license.
4(d) Include all of the provisions in this chapter as terms of the
5license between the state and each licensee, subject to the
6enforcement provisions delineated in this chapter.
7(e) Ensure that each licensee complies with federal and state
8laws and regulations.
9(f) Grant power to the state agencies authorized in this chapter
10to oversee the operations of each licensee and to enforce the
11provisions of this chapter to ensure that the interests of the state
12and registered players are protected.
13(g) Establish a process that includes a background investigation
14and requires that each employee of each licensee or subcontractor
15receives all necessary licenses and work permits from the state.
16(h) Ensure that the state is able to collect income tax revenues
17from registered players.
18(i) Distribute regulatory fees collected by the state from each
19licensee to the Internet Gambling
Fund, as established in Section
2019990.86, which shall be administered by the Controller, subject
21to annual appropriation by the Legislature, and which shall not be
22subject to the formulas established by law directing expenditures
23from the General Fund, for the following:
24(1) The actual costs of license oversight, consumer protection,
25state regulation, and problem gambling programs.
26(2) Other purposes related to this chapter as the Legislature may
27decide.
28(j) Create systems to protect each registered player’s private
29information and prevent fraud and identity theft.
30(k) Ensure that registered players are able to have their financial
31transactions processed in a secure and transparent fashion.
32(l) Ensure that all applicable state agencies will have unrestricted
33access to the premises and records of each licensee to ensure strict
34compliance with state law concerning credit authorization, account
35access, and other security provisions.
36(m) Require that each licensee provide registered players with
37accessible customer service.
38(n) Require that each licensee’s Internet Web sites contain
39information relating to problem gambling, including a telephone
P8 1number that an individual may call to seek information and
2assistance for a potential gambling addiction.
3(o) Require that each licensee and all of its subcontractors be
4organized in California. The licensee, its facilities, its bank
5accounts and accounting records related to its intrastate online
6gambling operations, and its registered players’
deposits shall be
7located entirely within the state.
8(p) Ensure that there are no artificial business constraints on the
9licensee, such as limits on the percentage of revenues that may be
10paid to technology supply contractors or limits on the number of
11intrastate Internet gambling Web sites a licensee may operate.
12Licensees and suppliers are free to structure their own desired
13relationships without interference from the state.
14(q) Ensure that all employees of the licensee are physically
15present in the state when working on the licensee’s Internet
16gambling Web site or in its facilities connected to the play of
17Internet gambling in this state, or when in contact with registered
18players. However, the licensee shall have discretion to use the
19expertise of personnel not physically present in the state when
20necessary to protect registered players and state interests, including,
21but not
limited to, for the purposes of diagnosing and addressing
22technological problems, investigating fraud and collusion, and
23supervising software and configuration changes.
24(r) Create an express exemption from disclosure, pursuant to
25the California Public Records Act under subdivision (b) of Section
266253 of the Government Code, that exempts from public disclosure
27proprietary information of a license applicant or a licensee in order
28to permit disclosure of confidential information to state agencies
29while achieving the public policy goals of deploying secure systems
30that protect the interests of the state and players.
31(s) Preserve the authority of the state to opt out of, or opt into,
32any federal framework for Internet gambling, or to enter into any
33agreement with other states to provide Internet gambling.
34(t) As a matter
of statewide concern, preempt any city, county,
35or city and county from enacting any law or ordinance regulating
36or taxing any matter covered in this chapter.
For the purposes of this chapter the following words
4have the following meanings:
5(a) “Authorized game” means a game approved by the
6department pursuant to Section 19990.14 and played using an
7intrastate Internet Web site pursuant to the authority of the state
8or offered by a licensee as authorized by the state on an intrastate
9Internet Web site operated by a licensee pursuant to this chapter.
10(b) “Background investigation” means a process of reviewing
11and compiling personal and criminal history and financial
12information through inquiries of various law enforcement and
13public sources to establish a person’s qualifications and suitability
14for a license.
15(c) “Bet” means the placement of a wager in a game.
16(d) “Commission” means the California Gambling Control
17Commission.
18(e) “Core functions” and “core functioning” mean any of the
19following:
20(1) The management, administration, or control of wagers on
21authorized games provided over the Internet.
22(2) The management, administration, or control of the games
23with which those wagers are associated.
24(3) The development, maintenance, provision, or operation of
25a gaming system.
26(f) “Department” means the Department of Justice.
27(g) “Employee” means any natural person employed in, or
28serving as a consultant or independent contractor with respect to,
29the core functioning of the actual operation of an intrastate Internet
30gambling Web site.
31(h) “Employee work permit” means a permit issued to an
32employee of the licensee or a subcontractor by the commissionbegin insert or
33by an authorized tribal regulatory office end insert after a background
34investigation.
35(i) “Finding of suitability” means a finding by the commission
36that a person meets the qualification criteria described in Article
374 (commencing with Section 19990.20), and that the person would
38not be disqualified from being a licensee on any of the grounds
39specified in Article 4 (commencing with Section 19990.20).
P10 1(j) “Gambling” means to deal, operate, carry on, conduct,
2maintain, or expose for play any game for money.
3(k) “Game” means any gambling game.
4(l) “Gaming system” means the technology, including hardware
5and software, used by a licensee to facilitate the offering of
6authorized games to registered players.
7(m) “Good standing” means that a person has not had a gambling
8or racing license suspended or revoked by a final decision of the
9board or commission that issues that license or been finally ordered
10by a court of competent jurisdiction to cease conducting gaming
11activities. A suspension, revocation, or order shall be deemed final
12for purposes of this definition when it is no longer subject to
13challenge or appeal through administrative or court processes.
14(n) “Gross revenues” means the total amount of money paid to
15a licensee pursuant to activities authorized under this chapter.
16Gross revenues shall not include player deposits and wagersbegin insert or
17other items excluded from gross revenues pursuant to generally
18accepted accounting principlesend insert.
19(o) “Internet Gambling Fund” means the fund established
20pursuant to Section 19990.86 for annual appropriation by the
21Legislature.
22(p) “Intrastate” means within the borders of California.
23(q) “Key employee” means any natural person employed by a
24licensee, subcontractor, or player recruiter, or by a holding or
25intermediary company of a licensee, subcontractor, or player
26
recruiter, who is an officer or director of the licensee or certificate
27holder, or who, in the judgment of the commission, has the
28authority to exercise significant influence over decisions
29concerning the operation of the licensee or certificate holder as
30that operation relates to the Internet gambling authorized by this
31chapter.
32(r) “Land-based gaming entity” means a card club operated
33pursuant to Chapter 5 (commencing with Section 19800) or a
34casino operated by a federally recognized Indian tribe on Indian
35land in California that provides any game for players on its
36premises that is offered on an intrastate Internet gambling Web
37site.
38(s) “Licensee” means an entity licensed pursuant to this chapter
39to offer the play of authorized games to registered players on an
40intrastate Internet Web site.
P11 1(t) “Online self-exclusion form” means a form on which an
2individual notifies a licensee that he or she must be excluded from
3participation in authorized games for a stated period of time.
4(u) “Owner” means any person that has a financial interest in
5or control of a licensee, subcontractor, or other entity required to
6be found suitable under this chapter.
7(v) “Per hand charge” means the amount charged by the licensee
8for registered players to play in a per hand game.
9(w) “Per hand game” means an authorized game for which the
10licensee charges the player for each hand played.
11(x) “Person” means an individual, corporation, business trust,
12estate, trust, partnership, limited liability company, association,
13joint venture, government,
governmental subdivision, agency, or
14instrumentality, public corporation, or any other legal or
15commercial entity.
16(y) “Play settings” means the options and default parameters
17made available by a licensee to a registered player in the play of
18authorized games.
19(z) (1) “Poker” means any of several card games that meet all
20of the following criteria:
21(A) Not banked by either the house or by a player.
22(B) Commonly referred to as “poker.”
23(C) Played by two or more individuals who wager against each
24other on the cards dealt to them out of a common deck of cards,
25including games using electronic devices
that simulate a deck of
26cards.
27(D) Players compete against each other and not against the
28person or entity operating the game.
29(E) Success over time is influenced by the skill of the player.
30(F) Wagers of one player are often designed to affect the
31decisions of another player in the game.
32(G) The operator of the game may assess a fee.
33(2) “Poker” includes poker tournaments in which players pay
34a fee to the operator of the tournament under the authority of the
35state pursuant to this chapter.
36(aa) “Proprietary information” means and includes all
37information that, whether or not patentable or registerable under
38patent, copyright, trademark, or similar statutes, (1) can be
39protected as a trade secret under California law or any other
40applicable state law, federal law, or foreign law, or (2) derives
P12 1independent economic value, actual or potential, from not being
2generally known to the public or to other persons that can obtain
3economic value from its disclosure or use. “Proprietary
4information” includes, but is not limited to, computer programs,
5databases, data, algorithms, formulae, expertise, improvements,
6discoveries, concepts, inventions, developments, methods, designs,
7analyses, drawings, techniques, strategies, new products, reports,
8unpublished financial statements, budgets, projections, billing
9practices, pricing data, contacts, client and supplier lists, business
10and marketing records, working papers, files, systems, plans and
11data, and all registrations and applications related
thereto.
12(ab) “Registered player” means a player who has registered with
13a licensee to play authorized games.
14(ac) “Registration information” means the information provided
15by a person to a licensee in order to become a registered player.
16(ad) “Robotic play” means the use of a machine or software by
17a registered player or licensee to automate the next player action
18at any point in a game.
19(ae) “State” means the State of California.
20(af) (1) “Subcontractor” means any person that does any of the
21following:
22(A) On behalf of a licensee, knowingly manages, administers,
23or controls
wagers on authorized games provided over the Internet
24by a licensee pursuant to this chapter.
25(B) On behalf of a licensee, knowingly manages, administers,
26or controls the games with which those wagers are associated.
27(C) On behalf of a licensee, develops, maintains, provides, or
28operates a gaming system.
29(D) Sells, licenses, or otherwise receives compensation for
30selling or licensing information on individuals in California who
31made wagers on games over the Internet that were not licensed
32under this chapter via a database or customer lists.
33(E) Provides any product, service, or asset to a licensee and is
34paid a percentage of gaming revenue by the licensee,
not including
35fees to financial institutions and payment providers for facilitating
36a deposit by a customer.
37(F) Provides intellectual property, including the trademarks,
38trade names, service marks, or similar intellectual property under
39which a licensee identifies its games to its customers.
P13 1(2) “Subcontractor” shall not include a provider of goods or
2services that provides similar goods or services to the public for
3purposes other than the operation of Internet gambling activities,
4and is not otherwise directly or indirectly involved in the operation
5of an intrastate Internet gambling Web site pursuant to a license
6issued under this chapter.
7(ag) “Terms of Use Registered Player’s Agreement” means the
8agreement offered by a licensee and
accepted by a registered player
9delineating, among other things, permissible and impermissible
10activities on an intrastate Internet gambling Web site and the
11consequences of engaging in impermissible activities.
12(ah) “Tournament” means a department-approved competition
13in which registered players play a series of authorized games to
14decide the winner.
15(ai) “Tournament charge” means the amount charged by the
16licensee for registered players to play in a tournament.
17(aj) “Tournament winnings” means the amount of any prize
18awarded to a registered player in a tournament.
19(ak) “Tribe” means a federally recognized California Indian
20tribe, including, but not limited to, the governing body of that tribe
21or any entity that is an affiliate of that
tribe.
22
Under the federal Unlawful Internet Gambling
27Enforcement Act of 2006, California is permitted to authorize
28games as long as all players and the online wagering activities are
29located within the state and the games are not played by minors.
Notwithstanding any other law, a person in
31California 21 years of age or older is hereby permitted to participate
32as a registered player in an authorized game provided over the
33Internet by a licensee as described in this chapter.
(a) A person shall not offer any game on the Internet
35in this state unless that person holds a valid license issued by the
36state to offer the play of authorized games on an intrastate Internet
37gambling Web site pursuant to this chapter.
38(b) It is unlawful for any person to offer or play any gambling
39game provided on the Internet that is not authorized by the state
40pursuant to this chapter.
P14 1(c) It is unlawful for any person to aggregate computers or other
2access devices in a public setting for the purpose of playing
3gambling games on the Internet, whether or not otherwise
4authorized pursuant to this chapter, or to promote or market that
5activity.
6(d) Any violation of this chapter is punishable as a misdemeanor.
Chapter 5 (commencing with Section 19800) does
8not apply to this chapter.
(a) Only poker shall be offered for play on an
10intrastate Internet gambling Web site pursuant to this chapter.
11(b) Only the types of poker games approved by the department
12for play on an intrastate Internet gambling Web site shall be offered
13for play on an intrastate Internet gambling Web site pursuant to
14this chapter.
15
(a) A license to operate an intrastate Internet
20gambling Web site pursuant to this chapter shall be issued for a
21term ofbegin delete fiveend deletebegin insert 10end insert years. Subject to the power of the commission to
22deny, revoke, suspend, condition, or limit any license, as provided
23in this chapter, a license is eligible for renewal at the end of each
24term. Failure of a licensee to file an application for renewal may
25be deemed a surrender of the license. The commission shall draft
26necessary regulations for the licensing renewal process.
27(b) All initial licenses issued pursuant to this
chapter shall take
28effect on the same date, as determined by the department, but not
29later than January 1, 2015.
(a) Each entity described in subdivision (b) is
31eligible for a single intrastate Internet gambling license. There is
32no limit on the total number of licenses the state may issue. Any
33of the eligible entities may jointly apply for a license, either as a
34consortium or by forming an entity comprised entirely of eligible
35entities. Each eligible entity may have an interest in only a single
36license.
37(b) An entity eligible to apply for, receive, and maintain an
38intrastate Internet gambling license pursuant to this chapter includes
39all of the following:
P15 1(1) A gambling enterprise, as defined in subdivision (m) of
2Section 19805, that holds an owner license issued pursuant to
3
subdivision (a) of Section 19851, and that has been subject to
4oversight by, and in good standing with, the commission for the
5three years immediately preceding its application for licensure.
6(2) A federally recognized California Indian tribe operating a
7casino pursuant to a tribal-state gaming compact under the federal
8Indian Gaming Regulatorybegin delete Act of 1988,end deletebegin insert Act,end insert or pursuant to
9procedures prescribed under Section 2710(d)(7)(A)(vii) of Title
1025 of the United States Code, that has been subject to oversight
11by, and in good standing with, the commission and the department
12for the three years immediately preceding its application for
13licensure.
14(3) A thoroughbred, quarter horse, or harness
association
15licensed by the California Horse Racing Board that has been subject
16to oversight by, and in good standing with, the board for the three
17years immediately preceding its application for licensure.
18(4) An operator of an online advanced deposit wagering site
19regulated by the California Horse Racing Board that has been
20subject to oversight by, and in good standing with, the board for
21the three years immediately preceding its application for licensure.
22(5) A wholly owned subsidiary of any of the entities described
23in paragraphs (1) to (4), inclusive, created for the purpose of
24engaging in the activities permitted by this chapter.
25(c) For the purposes of this section, incorporation or other
26change in legal form of ownership during the three years
27immediately preceding application for
licensure shall not disqualify
28an entity otherwise eligible for licensure pursuant to subdivision
29(b). Additionally, for the purposes of this section, a group of
30eligible entities jointly applying for a license, either as a consortium
31or by forming an entity comprised entirely of eligible entities, need
32not have been in existence for three years to be eligible for a license
33pursuant to this section, provided that its members meet all other
34eligibility requirements of this section.
(a) Factors to be considered in evaluating a license
36applicant shall include, but are not limited to, quality, competence,
37experience, past performance, efficiency, reliability, financial
38viability, durability, adaptability, timely performance, integrity,
39security, and the applicant’s subcontractors for core functions.
P16 1(b) (1) A license applicant, and all subcontractors of the
2applicant, shall be a resident of California, or an entity organized
3in California, and subject to state taxation, auditing, and
4enforcement. All facilities, bank accounts, and accounting records
5of the license applicant related to intrastate Internet gambling shall
6be located in California.
7(2) At all times, a license applicant or licensee shall be domiciled
8in California and in good standing with the Secretary of State and
9the Franchise Tax Board.
10(3) All subcontractors of a license applicant or licensee, or
11persons otherwise providing goods or performing services in
12connection with the operation of authorized games for the license
13applicant or licensee, or any of its subcontractors, and any persons
14that have the authority to exercise significant influence over a
15subcontractor shall be subject to this subdivision. If a licensee
16desires to enter into an agreement with a person to provide goods
17or services in connection with the operation of authorized games,
18that person shall be subject to this subdivision and investigation
19and a finding of suitability as set forth in Section 19990.23. The
20commission may establish a registration process and application
21for subcontractors not performing core functions.
22(c) In addition to any other confidentiality protections afforded
23to license applicants, the state and its agencies shall treat the
24proprietary information of any license applicant as confidential to
25protect the license applicant and to protect the security of any
26prospective intrastate Internet gambling Web site. This chapter
27does not prohibit the exchange of confidential information among
28state agencies considering a license application. The confidentiality
29provisions in this chapter exempt proprietary information supplied
30by a license applicant to a state agency from public disclosure
31consistent with subdivision (b) of Section 6253 of the Government
32Code.
33(d) A license applicant that has been deemed eligible shall
34submit to the commission, together with its application, an
35application deposit of no less than one million dollars ($1,000,000),begin delete36 and no greater than five million
dollars ($5,000,000), as determined
37by the department, in consultation with the commission,end delete
38reasonably anticipated costs to complete necessary background
39investigation and evaluate the suitability of the applicant. All
40moneys collected pursuant to this subdivision shall be deposited
P17 1into the Internet Gambling Licensing Fund, as hereby created, to
2be administered by the department. Notwithstanding Section 13340
3of the Government Code, all moneys in the fund are continuously
4appropriated to the department and the commission, without regard
5to fiscal years, in the amounts necessary for the department and
6the commission to perform their duties under this section and
7Section 19990.23. Any funds associated with the license applicant
8that remain after completion of background investigation and the
9finding of suitability shall be refunded to the applicant. If additional
10moneys are needed to complete the investigation of the license
11applicant, the applicant shall pay the funds necessary to complete
12
the investigation.
13(e) An applicant for an intrastate Internet gambling license
14pursuant to this chapter that is a federally recognized Indian tribe
15or an entity that is either wholly owned by a tribe or that consists
16of one or more tribes shall include with its license application an
17express waiver of the applicant’s sovereign immunity solely for
18the purposes of investigating the suitability of the applicant, and
19enforcing this chapter and any regulations promulgated thereunder,
20and with regard to any claim, sanction, or penalty arising therefrom,
21against the applicant as a prospective or actual licensee, and for
22no other purpose.
(a) The department shall review the suitability of
24a license applicant to operate an intrastate Internet gambling Web
25site.
26(b) The department may establish a process to conduct a
27preliminary determination of suitability based on a partial
28investigation of license applicants seeking licensure along with a
29determination of which license applicants may be subject to a
30partial investigation. A partial investigation is intended to screen
31out applicants that do not meet the suitability requirements of this
32chapter. A partial investigation shall include fingerprint-based
33state and federal criminal history checks and clearances, and
34inquiries into various public databases regarding credit history and
35any civil litigation. A partial investigation
shall also include a
36review of the applicant’s financial status, which shall include the
37required submission of a report prepared on behalf of the applicant
38by a department-approved forensic accounting, audit, or
39investigative firm, in a format developed by the department, and
40at the applicant’s expense. The report shall include the financial
P18 1information necessary for the department to make a preliminary
2determination of suitability. The department may specify additional
3requirements regarding the contents of the report and any other
4financial information or documentation required to be submitted
5with the application. A full investigation shall be conducted of
6only those persons that pass the partial investigation and that will
7undergo a full investigation pursuant to subdivision (c). Those
8applicants that do not pass the partial investigation may appeal the
9decision to the commission.
10(c) The department shall conduct a full investigation into
the
11suitability of any license applicant to operate an intrastate Internet
12gambling Web site. The investigation shall include all of the
13following persons:
14(1) The license applicant and all of its subcontractors that
15provide services related to core functions.
16(2) All officers of the license applicant.
17(3) The owner or owners of the following:
18(A) The license applicant.
19(B) Any affiliate of the license applicant.
20(C) Any subcontractors of a license applicant, or other persons
21otherwise providing goods to, or performing services for, the
22license applicant related to core functions.
23(D) Any person deemed by the department to have significant
24influence over the license applicant or its subcontractors or their
25respective operations.
26(d) A full investigation shall include a review and evaluation
27of the license applicant’s qualifications and experience to provide
28the services anticipated of a licensee, which shall include the
29required submission of a report prepared on each applicant by an
30outside firm contracted and supervised by the department, in a
31format developed by the department, and at the applicant’s expense.
32The report shall include information necessary for the department
33to make a determination of suitability, as specified in regulation,
34consisting of, but not limited to, personal history, prior activities
35and associations, credit history, civil litigation, past and present
36financial affairs and standing, and business activities. The
37department may specify
additional requirements regarding the
38contents of the report and other information or documentation
39required to be submitted with the application. The license applicant
P19 1shall also provide compliance certification of its gaming software
2by a department-approved gaming laboratory.
3(e) (1) Both of the following persons are subject to the
4investigation required under subdivision (c):
5(A) A person that directly or indirectly holds a beneficial interest
6or ownership interest of 10 percent or more of a subcontractor or
7player recruiter of the licensee. The commission may require any
8person with a smaller interest to be found suitable in the exercise
9of its discretion where it deems appropriate. If the person is not a
10natural person, the department may determine which officers,
11directors, and owners of the person are significantly involved in
12the management or
control of the person as it relates to core
13functions so as to require an investigation into suitability.
14(B) If the owner is a publicly traded or qualified racing
15association, then each officer, director, and owner, other than an
16institutional investor, of 5 percent or more of the outstanding shares
17of the publicly traded corporation.
18(2) An institutional investor holding more than 10 percent and
19less than 25 percent of the equity securities of a subcontractor’s
20holding or intermediary companies shall be granted a waiver of
21any investigation of suitability or other requirement if all of the
22following apply:
23(A) The securities are those of a corporation, whether publicly
24traded or privately held.
25(B) Holdings of those securities were purchased for
investment
26purposes only.
27(C) The institutional investor annually files a certified statement
28with the department to the effect that it has no intention of
29influencing or affecting the affairs of the issuer, the licensee, or
30subcontractor, as applicable, or its holding or intermediary
31companies.
32(3) Notwithstanding paragraph (2), the institutional investor
33may vote on matters put to the vote of the outstanding security
34holders.
35(4) The certification described in subparagraph (C) of paragraph
36(2) shall include a statement that the institutional investor
37beneficially owns the equity securities of the corporation for
38investment purposes only, and in the ordinary course of business
39as an institutional investor, and not for the purpose of (A) causing,
40directly or indirectly, the election of members of the board of
P20 1
directors, or (B) effecting any change in the corporate charter,
2bylaws, management, policies, or operations of the corporation or
3any of its affiliates. The certification also shall indicate any changes
4to the structure or operations of the institutional investor that could
5affect its classification as an institutional investor, as listed in
6paragraph (7). Additionally, the certification shall state that the
7institutional investor and corporation shall maintain gaming
8compliance policies and procedures to implement and ensure
9compliance with this chapter and regulations promulgated
10thereunder.
11(5) An institutional investor granted a waiver under paragraph
12(2) that subsequently decides to influence or affect the affairs of
13the issuer shall provide not less than 30 days’ notice of that intent
14and shall file with the department a request for determination of
15suitability before taking any action that may influence or affect
16the affairs of the
issuer. However, the institutional investor may
17vote on matters put to the vote of the outstanding security holders.
18If an institutional investor changes its investment intent, or the
19department finds reasonable cause to believe that the institutional
20investor may be found unsuitable, the institutional investor shall
21take no action other than divestiture with respect to its security
22holdings until it has complied with any requirements established
23by the department, which may include the execution of a trust
24agreement. The subcontractor and its relevant holding,
25intermediary, or subsidiary company shall immediately notify the
26department of any information about, or actions of, an institutional
27investor holding its equity securities when that information or
28action may impact upon the eligibility of the institutional investor
29for a waiver pursuant to paragraph (2).
30(6) If at any time the department finds that an institutional
31investor holding any
security of a holding or intermediary company
32of a subcontractor, or, where relevant, of another affiliate or
33subsidiary company of a holding or intermediary company of a
34subcontractor that is related in any way to the financing of the
35subcontractor, fails to comply with the terms of paragraphs (2) to
36(5), inclusive, or if at any time the department finds that, by reason
37of the extent or nature of its holdings, whether of debt or equity
38securities, an institutional investor is in a position to exercise such
39a substantial impact upon the controlling interests of a
40subcontractor that investigation and determination of suitability
P21 1of the institutional investor are necessary to protect the public
2interest, the department may take any necessary action otherwise
3authorized under this chapter to protect the public interest.
4(7) For purposes of this subdivision, an “institutional investor”
5includes all of the following:
6(A) Any retirement fund administered by a public agency for
7the exclusive benefit of federal, state, or local public employees.
8(B) An investment company registered under the federal
9Investment Company Act of 1940 (15 U.S.C. Sec. 80a-1 et seq.).
10(C) A collective investment trust organized by banks under Part
11Nine of the Rules of the Comptroller of the Currency.
12(D) A closed-end investment trust.
13(E) A chartered or licensed life insurance company or property
14and casualty insurance company.
15(F) A federally regulated or state regulated bank, savings and
16loan, or other federally or state regulated lending institution.
17(G) An investment adviser registered under the federal
18Investment Advisers Act of 1940 (15 U.S.C. Sec. 80b-1 et seq.).
19(H) Other persons as the department may determine for reasons
20consistent with the public interest.
21(f) Except as otherwise provided by statute or regulation, every
22person, that, by statute or regulation, is required to hold a license
23shall obtain a license prior to engaging in the activity, or occupying
24the position, with respect to which the license is required. An
25applicant for licensing, or for any approval or consent, shall make
26a full and true disclosure of all information to the department and
27the commission as necessary to carry out the policies of the state
28relating to the licensing and control of gambling. The burden of
29proving a person’s qualifications to receive a license is on the
30
applicant.
31(g) The commission shall issue a finding of suitability for a
32license applicant to operate an intrastate Internet gambling Web
33site only if, based on all of the information and documents
34submitted, the commission is satisfied that each of the persons
35subject to investigation pursuant to this section is both of the
36following:
37(1) A person of good character, honesty, and integrity, or, if an
38entity, in good standing in its jurisdiction of organization and in
39all other jurisdictions in which it is qualified, or should be qualified,
40to do business.
P22 1(2) A person whose prior activities, criminal record, if any,
2reputation, habits, and associations do not pose a threat to the
3public interest of this state, or to the effective regulation and control
4of controlled gambling, or create or enhance the dangers of
5
unsuitable, unfair, or illegal practices, methods, and activities in
6the conduct of controlled gambling or in the carrying on of the
7business and financial arrangements incidental thereto.
8(h) The commission shall issue a finding that a license applicant
9is not suitable to operate an intrastate Internet gambling Web site
10if it finds that any person subject to investigation pursuant to this
11section is described by any of the following:
12(1) Failed to clearly establish eligibility and qualifications in
13accordance with this chapter.
14(2) Failed to timely provide information, documentation, and
15assurances required by this chapter or requested by the department,
16or, with respect to a license applicant, failed to reveal any fact
17material to qualification, or supplied information that is untrue or
18misleading as to a material
fact pertaining to the suitability criteria.
19(3) Been convicted of a felony, including a conviction by a
20federal court or a court in another state or foreign jurisdiction for
21a crime that would constitute a felony if committed in California.
22(4) Been convicted of any misdemeanor, in any jurisdiction,
23involving dishonesty or moral turpitude within the 10-year period
24immediately preceding the submission of the application, unless
25the applicant has been granted relief pursuant to Section 1203.4,
261203.4a, or 1203.45 of the Penal Code. However, the granting of
27relief pursuant to Section 1203.4, 1203.4a, or 1203.45 of the Penal
28Code shall not constitute a limitation on the discretion of the
29department or affect the applicant’s burden.
30(5) Has associated with criminal profiteering activity or
31organized crime, as defined in
Section 186.2 of the Penal Code.
32(6) Has contemptuously defied any legislative investigative
33body, or other official investigative body of any state or of the
34United States or any foreign jurisdiction, when that body is engaged
35in the investigation of crimes relating to gambling, official
36corruption related to gambling activities, or criminal profiteering
37activity or organized crime, as defined in Section 186.2 of the
38Penal Code.
39(7) Is less than 21 years of age.
P23 1(8) Has knowingly and willfully accepted any wager from a
2person in the United States on any form of Internet gaming that
3has not been affirmatively authorized by law in this state or the
4United States after December 31, 2006, or has been the holder of
5a direct or indirect financial interest in a person or entity that has
6accepted such a wager.
7(i) (1) The commission shall reject the license application of
8any applicant found to be ineligible for licensure.
9(2) If denial of the application, or approval of the license with
10restrictions or conditions on the license, is recommended, the
11department shall prepare and file with the commission written
12reasons upon which the recommendation is based. Prior to filing
13its recommendation with the commission, the department shall
14meet with the applicant, or the applicant’s duly authorized
15representative, and inform the applicant generally of the basis for
16any proposed recommendation that the application be denied,
17restricted, or conditioned.
18(3) This section neither requires the department to divulge to
19the applicant any confidential information received from any law
20enforcement agency or any
information received from any person
21with assurances that the information would be maintained
22confidential, nor to divulge any information that might reveal the
23identity of any informant or jeopardize the safety of any person.
24(4) Denial of an application shall be without prejudice to a new
25and different application filed in accordance with any regulations
26adopted by the department with respect to the submission of
27applications.
28(5) A request to withdraw an application for a license may be
29made by the license applicant at any time prior to final action on
30the application by the department by filing a written request with
31the commission to withdraw the application.
(a) A finding of suitability by a state gaming
33agency within the United States with expertise recognized within
34the gaming industry, and that is also recognized as meeting this
35standard by the department, shall be grounds for a state provisional
36finding of suitability with respect to a particular person or entity
37until a permanent suitability finding is issued by the department
38as to that person or entity.
P24 1(b) This section shall remain in effect only until January 1, 2017,
2and as of that date is repealed, unless a later enacted statute, that
3is enacted before January 1, 2017, deletes or extends that date.
In addition to any other data that the department
5shall request from license applicants as a matter of law and to
6ensure that any license applicant is legally, technically, and
7financially qualified to become a licensee, the department shall
8request that any license applicant name, describe, or provide all
9of the following:
10(a) The license applicant’s qualifications and the qualifications
11of its executives and employees to receive an employee work
12permit as set forth in Section 19990.31.
13(b) The license applicant’s experience and qualifications to
14provide the services anticipated of a licensee as set forth in Article
155 (commencing with Section 19990.30).
16(c) The names of all of the license applicant’s owners,
17executives, and employees, as well as sufficient personally
18identifiable information on each of those persons to conduct
19background investigations as required by the department.
20(d) The fingerprints of the owners, directors, managers,
21executives, and employees of the licensee, its affiliates, and
22subcontractors taken using live-scan technology.
23(e) Documentation and information relating to the license
24applicant and its direct and indirect owners, including, but not
25limited to, all of the following:
26(1) With respect to the license applicant and any of its
27subcontractors, proof of formation in California, including, as
28applicable, articles of incorporation, articles of organization,
29bylaws, operating
agreement, partnership agreement, or other
30formation or charter documents.
31(2) Current and historical audited financial and accounting
32records performed in accordance withbegin delete Generally Accepted begin insert generally accepted accounting
33Accounting Principles (GAAP)end delete
34principlesend insert or International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS).
35(3) Any documents relating to legal and regulatory proceedings.
36(4) Any documents relating to the license applicant’s business
37history and structure.
38(5) Any documents relating to the nature and sources of the
39license applicant’s financing, including, but
not limited to,
40operating agreements, partnership agreements, stock purchase
P25 1agreements, loan capital agreements, pro forma cap tables, pro
2forma statements of profits and loss, investor rights agreements,
3voting agreements, and shareholder agreements. These materials
4may be submitted subject to a request for confidentiality.
5(6) Any documentation that demonstrates that the license
6applicant is financially qualified to perform the obligations of a
7licensee as described in this article.
8(7) An independent financial audit report by a certified public
9accountant.
10(f) Documentation and information relating to all proposed
11subcontractors of the license applicant, including, but not limited
12to, all of the following:
13(1) A description of the services to be
provided by each
14subcontractor.
15(2) Information for each subcontractor as set forth in
16subdivisions (b), (c), (d), and (e).
17(3) For subcontractors that are not formed in California, a
18commitment in writing by the subcontractor to create a California
19subsidiary prior to the commencement of authorized games
20provided by the licensee. The commitment required pursuant to
21this paragraph shall be subject to the cure provisions of Section
2219990.61.
23(g) A description of the games and services the license applicant
24proposes to offer to registered players.
25(h) A description of the manner in which the licensee’s facilities
26will accomplish the goals of this chapter, including, but not limited
27to:
28(1) The licensee’s location within the state.
29(2) The licensee’s security systems.
30(i) The license applicant’s proposal for the manner in which it
31will facilitate compliance with all of the standards set forth in this
32chapter and federal law, including, but not limited to, Section
335362(10)(B) of Title 31 of the United States Code, including, but
34not limited to, all of the following:
35(1) Age and location verification requirements reasonably
36designed to block access by minors and persons located out of
37state.
38(2) Appropriate data security standards to prevent unauthorized
39access by any persons whose age and current location have not
P26 1been verified in accordance with this chapter and applicable
2regulations.
3(3) The requirement that the licensee be located in California
4and all bets be initiated and received or otherwise made exclusively
5within California.
6(j) The system requirements that the license applicant plans to
7implement to achieve the state’s goals under this chapter, including,
8but not limited to:
9(1) Connectivity.
10(2) Hardware.
11(3) Software.
12(4) Antifraud systems.
13(5) Virus prevention.
14(6) Data protection.
15(7) Access controls.
16(8) Firewalls.
17(9) Disaster recovery.
18(10) Redundancy.
19(11) Gaming systems, including, but not limited to, hardware
20and software that ensure all of the following:
21(A) The games are legal.
22(B) The games are independent and fair and played by live
23persons.
24(C) Game and betting rules are available to all registered players.
25(D) All data used for the conduct of each game is randomly
26generated and unpredictable.
27(12) Accounting systems,begin delete includingend deletebegin insert
including,end insert but not limited
28to, those for any of the following:
29(A) Registered player accounts.
30(B) Per hand charges.
31(C) Transparency and reporting to all state agencies.
32(D) Distribution of funds, pursuant to the license and this
33chapter, to the state and registered players.
34(E) Ongoing auditing and ongoing internal control and
35compliance reviews.
36(13) Facility security systems to protect the intrastate Internet
37gambling Web site from internal and external threats.
38(k) The license applicant’s proposal to facilitate the statutory
39duties
and responsibilities of the state agencies with jurisdiction
P27 1over aspects of the licensee’s operations, including, but not limited
2to, all of the following:
3(1) The department.
4(2) The commission.
5(3) The Treasurer.
6(4) The Franchise Tax Board.
7(l) An acknowledgment by the license applicant that the fees or
8terms of the license issued by the state may be modified by the
9state after five years, at which point the licensee may either agree
10to be subject to that modification or relinquish the license.
11(m) In addition to demonstrating that the license applicant is
12legally, technically, and financially qualified to become a
licensee,
13a licensee shall also provide compliance certification of its gaming
14software by a department-approved gaming laboratory to ensure
15that it complies with the requirements of this chapter.
(a) A holder of an owner license issued pursuant to
17subdivision (a) of Section 19851, and that is in good standing,
18shall not be deemed unqualified to operate a land-based gambling
19entity by reason of an investment in a license applicant or a
20licensee.
21(b) An official representative of the government of a federally
22recognized California Indian tribe with a tribal-state gaming
23compact with the state shall not be deemed unqualified to operate
24a land-based gambling entity by reason of an investment in a
25license applicant or a licensee.
26(c) (1) A license applicant whose application is denied may
27bring an action to appeal that decision to the Superior Court
ofbegin delete the Sacramentobegin insert Countyend insert. The decision of the Superior Court
28County ofend delete
29ofbegin delete the County ofend delete Sacramentobegin insert Countyend insert is not appealable. No remedy
30other than an injunction is available pursuant to this subdivision.
31(2) The Superior Court ofbegin delete the County ofend delete Sacramentobegin insert Countyend insert
32
shall uphold the decision by the department if there is any
33substantial evidence to support the department’s decision to deny
34the license application.
35(3) If the Superior Court ofbegin delete the County ofend delete Sacramentobegin insert Countyend insert
36 finds for the license applicant, it shall return the application to the
37department for action consistent with the decision of the court.
(a) A licensee shall comply with the terms of this
4chapter.
5(b) In the event of commercial infeasibility created by a change
6in federal law rendering the provision of intrastate Internet
7gambling services illegal, or some other event, a licensee may
8abandon its operations after providing the department with 90
9days’ advance notice of its intent and a statement explaining its
10interpretation that continuing to operate the intrastate Internet
11gambling Web site is commercially infeasible. In response to that
12notice, the state may file an action in the Superior Court ofbegin delete the
Sacramentobegin insert Countyend insert as it deems necessary to protect any
13County ofend delete
14state interests, including, but not limited to, the interests of
15registered players.
16(c) If any dispute arises between the state and the licensee, either
17the department or a licensee may file an action in the superior court
18of any county in which the department has an office for an
19interpretation of the rights and responsibilities of the state and the
20licensee pursuant to this chapter.
(a) Prior to initiating operations and thereafter, a
22licensee shall ensure that each employee has been issued an
23employee work permit by the department, pursuant to standards
24adopted by the department, prior to that person having access to
25the licensee’s facilities. The permit shall be renewed every two
26years.
27(b) An employee work permit shall not be issued unless, based
28on all of the information and documents submitted, the department
29is satisfied that the applicant is, at a minimum, all of the following:
30(1) A person of good character, honesty, and integrity.
31(2) A person whose prior activities, criminal
record, if any,
32reputation, habits, and associations do not pose a threat to the
33public interest of this state, or to the effective regulation and control
34of controlled gambling, or create or enhance the dangers of
35unsuitable, unfair, or illegal practices, methods, and activities in
36the conduct of controlled gambling or in the carrying on of
37incidental business and financial arrangements.
38(3) A person who is in all other respects qualified to hold an
39employee work permit as provided in this chapter.
P29 1(c) An applicant for an employee work permit is disqualified
2for any of the following reasons:
3(1) Failure of the applicant to clearly establish eligibility and
4qualification in accordance with this chapter.
5(2) Failure of the applicant to provide timely
information,
6documentation, and assurances required by this chapter or requested
7by any state official, or failure of the applicant to reveal any fact
8material to the qualification, or the supplying of information that
9is untrue or misleading as to a material fact pertaining to the
10qualification criteria.
11(3) Conviction of a felony, including a conviction by a federal
12court, a court in another state, or a court in another country, for a
13crime that would constitute a felony if committed in California.
14(4) Conviction of the applicant for any misdemeanor involving
15dishonesty or moral turpitude within the 10-year period
16immediately preceding the submission of the application, unless
17the applicant has been granted relief pursuant to Section 1203.4,
181203.4a, or 1203.45 of the Penal Code. However, the granting of
19relief pursuant to Section 1203.4, 1203.4a, or 1203.45 of the Penal
20Code
shall not constitute a limitation on the discretion of the
21department or affect the applicant’s burden under subdivision (b).
22(5) Association of the applicant with criminal profiteering
23activity or organized crime, as defined by Section 186.2 of the
24Penal Code.
25(6) Contemptuous defiance by the applicant of any legislative
26investigative body, or other official investigative body of any state
27or of the United States, when that body is engaged in the
28investigation of crimes relating to gambling, official corruption
29related to gambling activities, or criminal profiteering activity or
30organized crime, as defined by Section 186.2 of the Penal Code.
31(7) The applicant is less than 21 years of age.
32(d) A licensee shall apply for an employee work permit on behalf
33
of each employee.
34(e) An employee work permit shall not be issued unless the
35applicant meets the qualification standards adopted by the
36commission.
37(f) The department shall establish a fee to be paid by a licensee
38for the cost of background investigation on employee work permit
39applications submitted on behalf of that licensee’s employees. The
40department and the commission shall establish processes for the
P30 1revocation or suspension of an intrastate Internet gambling license
2or employee work permit, and to withdraw an application for an
3intrastate Internet gambling license or employee work permit.
4(g) (1) A licensee or subcontractor of a licensee shall not enter
5into, without prior approval of the department, any contract or
6agreement with a person who is denied a gambling license or
7employee
work permit pursuant to Chapter 5 (commencing with
8Section 19800), or whose gambling license or employee work
9permit is suspended or revoked by the department, or with any
10business enterprise under the control of that person, after the date
11of receipt of notice of the department’s action.
12(2) A licensee or subcontractor of a licensee shall not enter into
13any contract or agreement with a person or entity that has
14knowingly and willfully accepted any wager from persons in the
15United States on any form of Internet gaming that has not been
16affirmatively authorized by law in this state or the United States
17after December 31, 2006, or has been the holder of a direct or
18indirect financial interest in a person or entity that has accepted
19such a wager.begin insert The termination of a prosecution of an applicant
20under the criminal laws of any state, the United States, or other
21
jurisdiction in a manner other than with a conviction is notend insert
22begin insert evidence that the applicant’s conduct was unlawful.end insert
23(h) A licensee or subcontractor of a licensee shall not employ,
24without prior approval of the department, any person in any
25capacity for which he or she is required to have an employee work
26permit, if the person has been denied a gambling license or an
27employee work permit pursuant to Chapter 5 (commencing with
28Section 19800), or if his or her gambling license or employee work
29permit has been suspended or revoked after the date of receipt of
30notice of the action by the department. A licensee or subcontractor
31of a licensee shall not enter into a contract or agreement with a
32person whose application for a gambling license or an employee
33work permit has been withdrawn with prejudice, or with any
34business
enterprise under the control of that person, for the period
35of time during which the person is prohibited from filing a new
36application for a gambling license or an employee work permit.
37(i) If an employee who is required to hold an employee work
38permit pursuant to this chapter is denied an employee work permit,
39or has his or her employee work permit revoked by the department,
40the employee shall be terminated immediately in all capacities.
P31 1Upon notifying the licensee of the department’s action, the
2employee shall have no further involvement in the gambling
3operation.
4(1) If an employee who is required to hold an employee work
5permit pursuant to this chapter has his or her employee work permit
6suspended, the employee shall be suspended in all capacities. Upon
7notifying the licensee of the department’s action, the employee
8shall not be permitted to have any involvement in the
gambling
9operation during the period of suspension.
10(2) A licensee or subcontractor of a licensee shall not designate
11another employee to replace the employee whose employment was
12terminated or suspended, unless the other employee has an existing
13work permit.
14(j) A licensee or subcontractor of a licensee shall not pay to a
15person whose employment has been terminated or suspended
16pursuant to subdivision (i) any remuneration for any service
17performed in any capacity in which the person is required to hold
18an employee work permit, except for amounts due for services
19rendered before the date of receipt of notice of the department’s
20action of suspension or termination.
21(k) Except as provided in subdivision (i), a contract or agreement
22for the provision of services or property to a licensee or
23subcontractor or for the
conduct of any activity pertaining to the
24operation of an intrastate Internet gambling Web site, which is to
25be performed by a person required by this chapter or by regulations
26adopted pursuant to this chapter, to hold an employee work permit,
27shall be terminated upon a suspension or revocation of the person’s
28employee work permit.
29(l) In any case in which a contract or agreement for the provision
30of services or property to a licensee or an affiliate thereof, or for
31the conduct of any activity at an intrastate Internet gambling Web
32site, is to be performed by a person required by this chapter or by
33regulations adopted by the department to hold an employee work
34permit, the contract shall be deemed to include a provision for its
35termination without liability on the part of the licensee, affiliate,
36or subcontractor upon a suspension or revocation of the person’s
37employee work permit. In any action brought by the department
38to terminate a contract
pursuant to subdivision (k) or this
39subdivision, it shall not be a defense that the agreement does not
40expressly include the provision described in this subdivision, and
P32 1the lack of express inclusion of the provision in the agreement
2shall not be a basis for enforcement of the contract by a party
3thereto.
4(m) If a licensee does not comply with the requirements of this
5section, the department may impose a civil fine of not more than
6____ dollars ($____) per occurrence. In the event that a licensee
7negligently, willfully, or wantonly fails to comply with these
8requirements, the department may initiate an enforcement action
9and subject a licensee to a civil fine of ____ dollars ($____) and
10may begin proceedings to suspend or revoke the licensee’s license.
The department may enter into agreements with
12one or more tribal gaming regulatory agencies to issue employee
13work permits pursuant to Section 19990.31. The department shall
14only enter into agreements with tribal gaming regulatory agencies
15with demonstrated expertise in evaluating the suitability of
16individuals for licensure in land-based gaming activities. Any
17agreements entered into pursuant to this section shall include
18provisions requiring the tribal gaming regulatory agency to issue
19permits in accordance with all applicable statutory and regulatory
20requirements and shall provide for appeal of adverse permit
21decisions as required by this chapter.
The licensee is responsible for providing current
23and accurate documentation on a timely basis to all state agencies,
24as provided in this chapter.
25(a) In addition to any other confidentiality protections provided
26to persons licensed by the state, the state and its agencies shall
27treat the proprietary information provided by a licensee as
28confidential to protect the licensee and to protect the security of
29the intrastate Internet gambling Web site.
30(b) The confidentiality provisions of this chapter exempt
31proprietary information supplied by a licensee to a state agency
32from public disclosure consistent with subdivision (b) of Section
336253 of the Government Code.
(a) Changes in ownership of the licensee shall be
35approved by the department prior to the closing of any proposed
36transaction.
37(b) The department shall investigate to ensure that any person
38acquiring an interest in a licensee is suitable and otherwise
39financially, technically, and legally qualified to be a licensee
40consistent with this chapter. If an acquiring person is found to be
P33 1unsuitable to be a licensee or otherwise not financially, technically,
2or legally qualified to be a licensee, the licensee or the acquiring
3person may challenge that determination consistent with
4subdivision (c) of Section 19990.25.
All facilities, software, including downloadable
6programs, and any other property, both tangible and intangible,
7used by the licensee in offering authorized games for play on an
8intrastate Internet gambling Web site shall be the property of the
9licensee or its subcontractors, and shall be approved by the
10department.
(a) A licensee shall ensure that registered players
12are eligible to play authorized games and implement appropriate
13data security standards to prevent access by a person whose age
14and location has not been verified in accordance with this chapter.
15(b) A registered player shall be physically located within the
16State of California at the time of gambling.
17(c) A registered player shall not be less than 21 years of age.
18(1) Online games shall not be provided, directly or indirectly,
19to any person under 21 years of age.
20(2) Each licensee shall do all of the following:
21(A) Prior to registering a person as a registered player or
22permitting a person to play an authorized game, the licensee shall
23verify that the person is 21 years of age or older. The licensee or
24seller shall attempt to match the name, address, and date of birth
25provided by the person to information contained in records in a
26database of individuals who have been verified to be 21 years of
27age or older by reference to an appropriate database of government
28records. The licensee also shall verify that the physical billing
29address on the check or credit card offered for payment by the
30person matches the address listed in the database.
31(B) If the licensee is unable to verify that the person is 21 years
32of age or older pursuant to subparagraph (A), the licensee shall
33require the person to submit an age-verification kit consisting of
34an attestation signed by the person that
he or she is 21 years of age
35or older and a copy of a valid form of government identification.
36For the purposes of this section, a valid form of government
37identification includes a driver’s license, state identification card,
38passport, official naturalization or immigration document, such as
39an alien registration receipt card or an immigrant visa, or United
40States military identification. The licensee also shall verify that
P34 1the physical billing address on the check or credit card provided
2by the person matches the address listed in the government
3identification.
4(C) The licensee shall not permit registered players to make
5payments by money order or cash. The licensee shall submit to
6each credit card company with which it has credit card sales,
7information in an appropriate form and format so that the words
8“Internet gambling” may be printed on the purchaser’s credit card
9statement when a payment to a licensee is made by credit card
10
payment.
11(3) If a licensee complies with the requirements of paragraph
12(2), and a person under 21 years of age participates in an authorized
13game provided by the licensee, the licensee is not in violation of
14this section.
15(4) The department may assess civil penalties against a person
16that violates this section, according to the following schedule:
17(A) Not less than one thousand dollars ($1,000) and not more
18than two thousand dollars ($2,000) for the first violation.
19(B) Not less than two thousand five hundred dollars ($2,500)
20and not more than three thousand five hundred dollars ($3,500)
21for the second violation.
22(C) Not less than four thousand dollars ($4,000) and not more
23than five
thousand dollars ($5,000) for the third violation.
24(D) Not less than five thousand five hundred dollars ($5,500)
25and not more than six thousand five hundred dollars ($6,500) for
26the fourth violation.
27(E) Ten thousand dollars ($10,000) for a fifth or subsequent
28violation.
29(d) The department shall, by regulation, provide a process for
30a licensee to exclude from play any person who has filled out an
31online self-exclusion form.
32(1) The department shall develop an online self-exclusion form
33within six months of the operative date of this chapter.
34(2) The department shall deliver the form to each licensee.
35(3) A licensee shall
prominently display a link to the
36department’s Responsible Gambling Internet Web page and the
37online self-exclusion form on the Internet Web page that is
38displayed when either of the following occurs:
39(A) A person registers as a registered player.
P35 1(B) Each time a registered player accesses the intrastate Internet
2gambling Web site prior to playing.
3(4) A licensee shall retain the online self-exclusion form to
4identify persons who want to be excluded from play.
5(5) A licensee that has made commercially reasonable efforts
6to comply with this subdivision shall not be held liable in any way
7if a person who has filled out an online self-exclusion form plays
8despite that person’s request to be excluded.
A licensee shall only offer authorized games and
10process bets in accordance with the specified game and betting
11rules established by the licensee and approved by the department
12pursuant to Sections 19990.14 and 19990.37.
(a) In order to propose a game for play, a licensee
14shall provide the department with both of the following:
15(1) Game rules and betting rules it proposes to offer to
16registered players.
17(2) Documentation relating to development and testing of the
18game’s software.
19(b) The department shall approve the game rules and betting
20rules before a licensee may offer the game to registered players.
(a) A licensee shall ensure that games are fair.
22(b) The gaming system shall display for each game the following
23information:
24(1) The name of the game.
25(2) Any restrictions on play.
26(3) The rules of the game.
27(4) All instructions on how to play.
28(5) The unit and total bets permitted.
29(6) The registered player’s current account balance which shall
30be updated
in real time.
31(7) Any other information that a licensee determines is necessary
32for the registered player to have in real time to compete fairly in
33the game.
34(c) Data used to create game results shall be unpredictable so
35that it is infeasible to predict the next occurrence in a game, given
36complete knowledge of the algorithm or hardware generating the
37sequence and all previously generated numbers.
38(d) A licensee shall deploy controls and technology to minimize
39fraud or cheating through collusion, including external exchange
P36 1of information between different players, robotic play, or any other
2means.
3(1) If a licensee becomes aware that fraud or cheating is taking
4place or has taken place, it shall take steps to stop those activities
5immediately and
inform the department of all relevant facts.
6(2) The department shall not impose liquidated damages against
7a licensee to prevent fraud or cheating if the licensee can
8demonstrate that it acted responsibly to prevent those activities as
9soon as the licensee became aware of them.
10(e) In a per hand game, if the gaming server or software does
11not allow a game to be completed, the game shall be void and all
12funds relating to the incomplete game shall be returned to the
13registered player’s account.
14(f) In a tournament, if the gaming server or software does not
15allow the tournament to be completed, all prize money shall be
16distributed among players in accordance with the procedure
17published by the licensee prior to the commencement of the
18tournament.
(a) A licensee shall register players and establish
20player accounts prior to play.
21(b) A person shall not participate in any game provided by a
22licensee unless the person is a registered player and holds an
23account.
24(c) Accounts shall be established in person, or by United States
25mail, telephone, or any electronic means.
26(d) To register and establish an account, a person shall provide
27the following registration information:
28(1) Full legal name.
29(2) Principal residence address.
30(3) Telephone number.
31(4) Social security number.
32(5) Identification or certification to prove that person is at least
3321 years of age.
34(6) Valid email address.
35(e) A licensee shall provide registered players with the means
36to update the registration information provided to the licensee.
37(f) Nothing in this section shall prevent a licensee from entering
38into a marketing agreement with any third party to recruit people
39to become registered players if the registration process described
40in this section is under the sole control of the licensee.
(a) A licensee shall provide a means for registered
2players to put funds into a registered player account and transfer
3funds out of that account.
4(b) A registered player shall identify the source of funds to be
5used to put money into the account established once the registration
6process is complete, and a licensee shall provide a means for a
7registered player to transfer money into and out of the player’s
8intrastate Internet gambling Web site account.
9(c) At the time of establishing an intrastate Internet gambling
10Web site account, a registered player shall designate the bank
11account into which funds from the registered player’s intrastate
12Internet gambling Web site account
are to be transferred.
13(d) A registered player shall establish only one account on any
14intrastate Internet gambling Web site.
15(e) While playing an authorized game, a licensee shall not permit
16a registered player to increase the amount of money in that
17registered player’s account after that hand has started and before
18its completion.
19(f) A licensee shall maintain records on the balance of each
20registered player’s account.
21(g) A licensee shall not permit a registered player to place a
22wager unless the registered player’s account has sufficient funds
23to cover the amount of the wager.
24(h) A licensee shall not provide credit to a registered player’s
25account or act as agent for a credit provider
to facilitate the
26provision of funds.
27(i) No interest shall be paid by a licensee with respect to
28registered player accounts.
(a) A licensee shall segregate funds it holds in all
30registered player accounts from all of its other assets.
31(b) A licensee shall not commingle funds in the segregated
32account containing funds paid by registered players with any other
33funds held by the licensee, including, but not limited to, operating
34funds of the licensee. Both the accounts of the licensee and its
35segregated registered player accounts shall be held in financial
36institutions located in the state.
37(c) Funds held in a registered player’s account shall only be
38used for the following purposes:
39(1) To pay per hand or tournament charges owed by a
registered
40player to the licensee for play of authorized games.
P38 1(2) To transfer funds from one registered player’s account to
2the account of another registered player to reconcile the result of
3a loss in the play of an authorized game.
4(3) To transfer funds from a registered player’s account to a
5temporary account to be held by a licensee pending the outcome
6of an authorized game.
7(4) To remit tax proceeds due and owing from a registered player
8to the Franchise Tax Board.
9(5) To transfer funds from a registered player’s account with
10the licensee to an account specified by a registered player upon
11that registered player’s request.
Prior to completing the registration process, a
13licensee shall explain to the person who is registering in a
14conspicuous fashion the privacy policies of the intrastate Internet
15gambling Web site, and the person shall assent to the following
16policies:
17(a) No personally identifiable information shall be shared with
18any nongovernment third parties except as provided in subdivision
19(k) of Section 19990.47.
20(b) All personally identifiable information about registered
21players shall be shared with state agencies, including, but not
22limited to, the department, the commission, the Franchise Tax
23Board, and the Department of Child Support Services as necessary
24to assist them in fulfilling their
obligations.
25(c) Personally identifiable information may be shared with
26government agencies only as set forth in subdivision (b) or subject
27to court order as provided in subdivision (j) of Section 19990.47.
A licensee may require that a registered player, or
29a person registering as a player, agree to a Terms of Use Registered
30Player’s Agreement.
A licensee may suspend or revoke the account of a
32registered player for any of the following reasons:
33(a) A person or registered player provided false information to
34the licensee, including, but not limited to, in the registration
35process.
36(b) The registered player has not updated registration
37information to keep it current.
38(c) The registered player has violated the intrastate Internet
39gambling Web site’s Terms of Use Registered Player’s Agreement.
40(d) The person has already been registered.
P39 1(e) The
licensee suspects that the registered player has
2participated in an illegal or unauthorized activity on the intrastate
3Internet gambling Web site.
4(f) The licensee is directed by a state agency to suspend or
5revoke the registered player’s account.
(a) Upon registration, and each time a registered
7player logs into an intrastate Internet gambling Web site, the
8licensee shall permit a registered player to adjust his or her play
9settings to:
10(1) Set a limit on the deposits that can be made per day.
11(2) Set a limit on the aggregate losses in a registered player’s
12account within a specified period of time.
13(b) During play, in order to assist a registered player to decide
14whether to suspend play, the registered player’s screen shall do
15all of the following:
16(1) Once an hour, indicate how long the
player has been playing
17and the current value and change in value of the registered player’s
18total account since the time of last logging in.
19(2) At least once every six hours, require the registered player
20to confirm that the player has read the messages required in
21paragraph (1), and give an option to the player to end the session
22or return to the game.
A licensee shall establish a toll-free telephone
24customer service hotline that shall be available to registered players
2524 hours per day, 365 days a year. All employees shall be
26physically present in the state while in contact with registered
27players. However, the licensee shall have discretion to use the
28expertise of personnel not physically present in the state when
29necessary to protect registered players and state interests, including,
30but not limited to, for the purposes of diagnosing and addressing
31technological problems, investigating fraud and collusion, and
32supervising software and configuration changes. The licensee shall
33give notice to the department when using personnel who are out
34of state.
(a) A licensee shall protect the privacy of registered
36players and their personally identifiable information.
37(b) A licensee shall comply with all state and federal privacy
38and data protection laws.
39(c) At the time of registration with a licensee as a registered
40player, and at least once a year thereafter, a licensee shall provide
P40 1notice in the form of a separate, written statement, delivered via
2United States Postal Service or electronic mail, to the registered
3player that clearly and conspicuously informs the registered player
4of all of the following:
5(1) The nature of personally identifiable information
collected
6or to be collected with respect to the registered player and the
7nature of the use of that information.
8(2) The nature, frequency, and purpose of any disclosure that
9may be made of personally identifiable information, including an
10identification of the types of persons to whom the disclosure may
11be made.
12(3) The period during which personally identifiable information
13will be maintained by the licensee.
14(4) The times and place at which the registered player may have
15access to personally identifiable information in accordance with
16subdivision (h).
17(5) The limitations provided by this section with respect to the
18collection and disclosure of personally identifiable information by
19a licensee and the right of the registered player under subdivision
20
(j) or (k) to enforce those limitations.
21(d) A licensee shall not collect personally identifiable
22information concerning any registered player without the prior
23written or electronic consent of the registered player concerned.
24(e) A licensee may collect personally identifiable information
25in order to do both of the following:
26(1) Obtain information necessary to operate the intrastate
27Internet gambling Web site and offer authorized games to registered
28players pursuant to this chapter.
29(2) Detect unauthorized play, activities contrary to a licensee’s
30Terms of Use Registered Player’s Agreement, or activities contrary
31to state or federal law.
32(f) Except as provided in subdivision (g), a
licensee shall not
33disclose personally identifiable information concerning any
34registered player without the prior written or electronic consent of
35the registered player concerned and shall take actions necessary
36to prevent unauthorized access to that information by a person
37other than the registered player or licensee.
38(g) A licensee may disclose personally identifiable information
39if the disclosure is any of the following:
P41 1(1) Necessary to render, or conduct a legitimate business activity
2related to, the provision of authorized games to the registered
3player by the licensee.
4(2) Subject to subdivision (k), made pursuant to a court order
5authorizing the disclosure, if the registered player is notified of
6the order by the person to whom the order is directed.
7(3) A disclosure of the names and addresses of registered players
8to any tournament third party, if both of the following apply:
9(A) The licensee has provided the registered player the
10opportunity to prohibit or limit the disclosure.
11(B) The disclosure does not reveal, directly or indirectly, the
12nature of any transaction made by the registered player over the
13intrastate Internet gambling Web site.
14(4) To the department to fulfill its obligations under this chapter
15or a state agency as authorized in this chapter.
16(5) To persons found suitable under this chapter if the registered
17player is notified and consents to the information being shared.
18(h) A registered player shall be
provided access to all personally
19identifiable information regarding that registered player that is
20collected and maintained by a licensee. The information shall be
21made available to the registered player at reasonable times and at
22a place designated by the licensee. A registered player shall be
23provided reasonable opportunity to correct any error in the
24information.
25(i) A licensee shall destroy personally identifiable information
26if the information is no longer necessary for the purpose for which
27it was collected, and there are no pending requests or orders for
28access to the information under subdivision (k).
29(j) Any person aggrieved by any act of a licensee in violation
30of this section may bring a civil action in any superior court in
31California. The court may award:
32(1) Actual damages but not less than the rate of
____ a day for
33each day of violation or ____, whichever is higher.
34(2) Punitive damages.
35(3) Reasonable attorney’s fees and other litigation costs
36reasonably incurred.
37(k) Except as provided in subdivision (g), a governmental or
38nongovernmental third party may obtain personally identifiable
39information concerning a registered player pursuant to a court
P42 1order only if, in the court proceeding relevant to the court order,
2both of the following apply:
3(1) The third party offers clear and convincing evidence that
4the subject of the information is reasonably suspected of engaging
5in criminal activity or otherwise relevant to a pending civil action
6and that the information sought would be material evidence in the
7case.
8(2) The registered player about whom the information is
9requested is afforded the opportunity to appear and contest the
10third-party’s claim.
A licensee shall establish a book of accounts and
12regularly audit all of its financial records and reports, which shall,
13at a minimum, include all of the following:
14(a) Monthly auditable and aggregate financial statements of
15gambling transactions.
16(b) Monthly calculation of all amounts payable to the state.
17(c) The identity of registered players.
18(d) The balance on each registered player’s account at the start
19of a session of play, the amount won or lost by each registered
20player during a game, and the balance on the registered player’s
21account.
22(e) The wagers placed on each game, time stamped by the games
23server.
24(f) The result of each game, time stamped by the games server.
25(g) The amount, if any, as determined by the registered player,
26withheld from winnings for federal or state income tax purposes.
(a) A licensee shall make all financial records
28established and maintained pursuant to Section 19990.48,
29including, but not limited to, all books, records, documents,
30financial information, and financial reports, available on an
31electronic basis, as required by the department or other state
32agencies so that those state agencies can fulfill their responsibilities
33under this chapter. A state agency may request specific printed
34hard copies of records for good cause.
35(b) The licensee’s data shall be retained in a manner by which
36it may be accessed by the state agencies online.
37(c) Notwithstanding subdivision (b), data covered by
38subdivisions (d), (e), and (f) of Section 19990.48
shall be accessible
39to the state agencies online for 120 days, and, thereafter, archived
40and retained for one year.
(a) A licensee shall implement technical systems
2that materially aid the department in the protection of registered
3players. Software shall meet, at a minimum, international industry
4standards as verified by a department-approved gaming laboratory.
5(b) A licensee shall define and document its methodology for
6developing software and applications and describe the manner in
7which software protects registered players from fraud and other
8risks in the play of authorized games and in the management of
9registered player accounts.
10(c) A licensee shall meet minimum game server connectivity
11requirements to ensure that registered players are protected from
12losses due to connectivity
problems.
13(d) A licensee shall ensure that all transactions involving
14registered players’ funds shall be recoverable by the system in the
15event of a failure or malfunction.
16(e) All information required for reviewing a game interrupted
17due to loss of connectivity shall be recoverable by the licensee.
18(f) Preventative and detective controls addressing money
19laundering and fraud risks shall be documented and implemented
20by the licensee.
(a) A licensee may charge registered players to play
22in authorized games.
23(b) Per hand charges are permitted.
24(1) A per hand charge shall be designated and conspicuously
25posted on the intrastate Internet gambling Web site.
26(2) A licensee may vary the per hand charges to registered
27players based on betting limits or other factors.
28(c) Tournament charges shall be permitted.
29(1) A tournament charge shall be designated and conspicuously
30posted on the intrastate Internet gambling Web
site.
31(2) A licensee may vary tournament charges based on
32tournament prizes or other factors.
33(d) A licensee shall provide notice to the department of the
34charges to registered players prior to initiating play.
A licensee may enter into an agreement with any
36third party to sponsor or underwrite prizes for a tournament.
A licensee may enter into an agreement to sell
38advertisement space on any Internet Web site it controls.
(a) A licensee may enter into an agreement with
40a third party for marketing, or any other purpose consistent with
P44 1this chapter, including, but not limited to, displaying the name of
2a marketing partner on a screen viewed by a registered player.
3(b) A licensee shall not utilize any brand or business name, trade
4or service mark, software, technology, operational systems,
5customer information, or other data acquired, derived, or developed
6directly or indirectly from any operation that has knowingly and
7willfully accepted any wager from persons in the United States on
8any form of Internet gaming that has not been affirmatively
9authorized by law in this state or the United States after December
1031, 2006. To the extent any business
relationships or financial
11arrangements were utilized or existed to further any such illegal
12Internet gambling, those relationships and arrangements shall be
13discontinued.
A licensee may enable a chat function between
15registered players if it has in place effective controls against
16collusion.
A licensee may post Internet Web links on the
18Internet Web sites it controls to permit registered players to access
19remote Internet Web sites.
A licensee may enter into contractual agreements
21with one or more licensees for the purpose of ensuring adequate
22player liquidity.
A licensee may allow a registered player to
24participate simultaneously in multiple games or tournaments, if
25the licensee has demonstrated to the department that it has technical
26controls that prohibit a registered player from playing multiple
27hands simultaneously in the same game.
(a) Before the collection of a registered player fee,
29wager, or deposit on any authorized game on the licensee’s
30intrastate Internet gambling Web site, the licensee shall remit to
31the Treasurer for deposit in the General Fund a one-time license
32fee in the amount ofbegin delete thirty million dollars ($30,000,000).end deletebegin insert fifteen
33million dollars ($15,000,000)end insertbegin insert.end insert This amount shall be credited against
34fees imposed pursuant to subdivision (b) on the licensee’s gross
35gaming revenue proceeds for the first five years of operation. Upon
36
depletion of the license fee, the department shall notify the licensee
37to commence monthly payments to the state in accordance with
38subdivision (b).
P45 1(b) A licensee shall remit to the Treasurer on a monthly basis
2for deposit in the General Fund, an amount equal to 10 percent of
3its gross revenues.
4(1) Each monthly payment shall be due on the 10th day of the
5following month.
6(2) A licensee shall make all electronic and written financial
7records available to the Treasurer, the commission, and the
8department on an electronic basis.
9(3) For the purposes of determining gross revenues, the licensee
10and the Treasurer shall use generally accepted accounting
11principles.
12(c) Each licensee shall pay a
regulatory fee, to be deposited in
13the Internet Gambling Fund as established by Section 19990.86,
14in an amount to be determined by the department for the actual
15costs of license oversight, consumer protection, state regulation,
16problem gambling programs, and other purposes related to this
17chapter.
(a) The licensee shall facilitate the collection of
19personal income taxes from registered players by the Franchise
20Tax Board.
21(b) The licensee shall withhold 5 percent of tournament winnings
22for state income tax if the winnings less the tournament charge are
23more than six hundred dollars ($600) and are at least 300 times
24the tournament charge.
25(1) The licensee shall transfer that withheld income to the
26Franchise Tax Board.
27(2) Winnings and losses of the registered player from other
28tournaments sponsored by the licensee during the year are not
29taken into account in arriving at the six-hundred-dollar ($600)
30
amount. Required withholding is determined on a
31tournament-by-tournament basis.
32(c) Within six months of the operative date of this chapter, the
33Franchise Tax Board shall publish a form to be used annually by
34a licensee to report information concerning income tax revenues
35from registered players. The Franchise Tax Board shall provide a
36date by which the form is required to be filed. The form shall
37include, but shall not be limited to, the following information:
38(1) The registered player’s first name and surname.
39(2) Social security number.
P46 1(3) The total amount the registered player deposited in his or
2her account during the year.
3(4) The registered player’s total winnings, if any, during
the
4year.
5(5) The registered player’s total losses, if any, during the year.
6(6) The total amount withheld by the licensee, if any, during
7the year for purposes of federal or state income taxes.
8(7) Whether the registered player opened or closed his or her
9account during the year.
10(d) The licensee shall electronically file a copy of the form with
11the Franchise Tax Board for each registered player who held an
12account with the licensee for all, or any portion of, the taxable
13year. The licensee shall electronically provide each registered
14player with a copy of the form.
A security interest in a licensee, other than a security
16interest in financed or leased equipment, shall not be enforced
17except in conformity with regulations adopted by the commission.
18If a licensee contracts to acquire or transfer any assets or property
19in circumstances where the transferor or transferee must be licensed
20or found suitable, then the transaction shall not have a closing date
21prior to the approval or licensing of the other party, except as
22provided in regulations of the commission.
(a) A licensee shall act expeditiously to cure any
24violation of this chapter, or any regulation adopted pursuant to this
25chapter, in the offer or administration of authorized games that
26interferes with its obligations to the state or registered players
27under this chapter.
28(b) If a licensee becomes aware of any violation, it shall notify
29the department immediately and work with the department to
30develop a plan to rectify the violation.
31(c) If the department becomes aware of any violation, or if it
32becomes aware of any activities that might lead to a violation, the
33department shall provide notice of that violation to the licensee
34and a reasonable opportunity to cure the
violation.
35(d) All state agencies with responsibilities under this chapter
36shall report any actual or suspected violation of this chapter, or
37any regulation adopted pursuant to this chapter, or activities that
38may lead to such a violation, to the department immediately so
39that the department can assess whether it needs to commence an
40investigation or enforcement action.
P47 1(e) A licensee shall be afforded a reasonable time period to cure
2any reported violation. The department may assess penalties for
3any violation of this chapter, or any regulation adopted pursuant
4to this chapter.
5(f) The department shall have the subpoena power in an
6investigation of any violation of this chapter, or any regulation
7adopted pursuant to this chapter.
8(g) The department may
revoke or suspend any license or work
9permit under this chapter upon reaching a finding that the licensee
10or employee is in violation of any provision of this chapter, or any
11regulation adopted pursuant to this chapter.
12(h) A licensee may appeal any decision of the department
13pursuant to this section to the superior court. The superior court
14shall hear any appeal de novo.
The department shall protect the rights and assets
16of registered players on an intrastate Internet gambling Web site
17if the licensee’s license pursuant to this chapter is revoked or the
18licensee becomes bankrupt.
(a) A licensee shall at all times indemnify, defend,
20and hold harmless the state and its agencies from and against any
21claims, damages, liabilities, costs, and expenses, including, but
22not limited to, reasonable attorney’s fees and expenses arising out
23of any third-party claim made against the state or any of its
24agencies relating to actions of the licensee and this chapter.
25However, the state shall not enter into a settlement agreement
26related to any of those claims, damages, liabilities, costs, or
27expenses without the prior written approval of the licensee.
28(b) The state and its agencies shall promptly notify a licensee
29of any claim or litigation to which the indemnity set forth in
30subdivision (a) applies.
31(c) At the option of a licensee, it may assume the defense of
32any claim or litigation. If a licensee assumes the defense of any
33claim or litigation, the licensee’s obligation with respect thereto
34shall be limited to the payment of any settlement approved by the
35licensee, or any judgment in connection with that claim or
36litigation.
(a) (1) Within 120 days after the operative date of
4this chapter, the commission, and any other state agency with a
5duty pursuant to this chapter, shall, in order to comply with time
6deadlines, in consultation with the department, adopt regulations
7to implement this chapter, and to facilitate the operation of
8intrastate Internet gambling Web sites and expedite the state’s
9receipt of revenues in compliance with this chapter. The initial
10adoption, amendment, or repeal of a regulation authorized by this
11section is deemed to address an emergency, for purposes of
12Sections 11346.1 and 11349.6 of the Government Code, and the
13commission and those other state agencies are hereby exempted
14for that purpose from the requirements of subdivision (b) of Section
1511346.1 of the Government Code.
After the initial adoption,
16amendment, or repeal of an emergency regulation pursuant to this
17section, the commission and those other state agencies shall not
18request approval from the Office of Administrative Law to readopt
19the regulation as an emergency regulation pursuant to Section
2011346.1 of the Government Code, but shall promulgate permanent
21regulations in accordance with all applicable law.
22(2) The regulations adopted by the commission shall address
23underage gambling and problem gambling.
24(3) The regulations of the commission also shall provide for
25temporary or provisional approvals, licenses, or certificates for
26heirs, executors, receivers, trustees, conservators, key employees,
27and other persons where an approval, license, or certificate is
28required.
29(b) (1) Each state agency with a duty
pursuant to this chapter
30shall identify a contact person at that agency and describe the
31responsibility of the contact with respect to the state agency’s duty.
32(2) Any notice provided by a licensee to a state agency pursuant
33to this chapter shall be addressed to the contact identified by the
34state agency pursuant to paragraph (1).
35(3) Unless otherwise provided by this chapter, notice by a
36licensee to the state shall be deemed effectively given upon
37personal delivery, three days after deposit in the United States mail
38by certified or registered mail, return receipt requested, one
39business day after its deposit with any return receipt express
P49 1courier, prepaid, or one business day after electronically confirmed
2transmission by facsimile.
The Legislature may, by a statute adopted by a
4majority vote of both houses, do either of the following:
5(a) Opt out of, or opt into, any federal framework for Internet
6gambling.
7(b) If the United States Department of Justice notifies the
8department in writing that it is permissible under federal law, enter
9into any agreement with other states or foreign jurisdictions to
10provide Internet gambling.
The department may outsource its regulatory
12functions under this chapter where optimal to provide efficient,
13effective, and robust regulation with access to worldwide expertise
14tested and proven in the gambling industry. This may include, but
15is not limited to, state and international regulatory agencies. To
16expedite the implementation of Internet gambling, contracts
17pursuant to this section shall not be subject to otherwise applicable
18provisions of the Government Code or the Public Contract Code
19and, for those purposes, the department shall not be considered a
20state agency or public entity.
21
A licensee shall use its best efforts to protect
25registered players. Subject to the approval of the department, and
26consistent with uniform standards established by the department
27by regulation, each licensee shall establish administrative
28procedures to resolve registered player complaints.
If a registered player has a complaint against a
30licensee, the exclusive remedy shall be to register the complaint
31with the department, unless an action is brought pursuant to
32subdivision (j) of Section 19990.47.
(a) The department, in consultation with the
34commission, shall establish regulations with respect to registered
35player complaints.
36(b) Under the regulations, the department shall do all of the
37following:
38(1) Investigate registered player complaints to determine if a
39licensee has failed to meet its obligations to a registered player.
P50 1(2) Attempt to resolve complaints by registered players if a
2licensee fails to meet an obligation to a registered player.
3(3) Initiate enforcement actions to require specific performance
4of any obligation that a
licensee has to a registered player and
5payment by the licensee of restitution to a registered player for
6actual losses and interest thereon.
A licensee may appeal any action by the department
8pursuant to this article to the superior court, which shall review
9the appeal de novo.
10
(a) The Treasurer shall transfer all amounts received
14from a licensee pursuant to subdivision (c) of Section 19990.58
15to the Controller for deposit in the Internet Gambling Fund, which
16is created in the State Treasury, to be administered by the
17Controller, subject to annual appropriation by the Legislature.
18These amounts shall not be subject to the formulas established by
19statute directing expenditures from the General Fund.
20(b) The state agencies shall submit revenue needs to fulfill their
21obligations under this chapter for the upcoming fiscal year to the
22Senate Committee on Budget and Fiscal Review and the Assembly
23Committee on Budget, as well as the Senate and Assembly
24Committees on Governmental Organization and the Department
25of
Finance on or before March 31 of the preceding fiscal year. A
26justification of those costs shall be provided with each submission
27of revenue needs.
28(c) The State Department of Alcohol and Drug Programs, Office
29of Problem Gambling, shall submit revenue needs for programs
30to alleviate problem gambling that results from the offering of
31authorized games for the upcoming fiscal year to the Senate
32Committee on Budget and Fiscal Review and the Assembly
33Committee on Budget, as well as the Senate and Assembly
34Committees on Governmental Organization, the Senate and
35Assembly Committees on Human Services, and the Department
36of Finance on or before March 31 of the preceding fiscal year. A
37justification of those costs shall be provided with each submission
38of revenue needs.
P51 1(d) All remaining proceeds not allocated to subdivisions (b) and
2(c) shall remain in the Internet Gambling Fund subject to
3
appropriation by the Legislature.
4
A city, county, or city and county shall not regulate,
8tax, or enter into a contract with respect to any matter related to
9this chapter. This section shall not prohibit or limit the investigation
10and prosecution of any violation of this chapter.
11
Notwithstanding Section 10231.5 of the Government
15Code, within one year of the operative date of this chapter and,
16annually thereafter, the department, in consultation with the
17commission, the Treasurer, and the Franchise Tax Board, shall
18issue a report to the Legislature describing the state’s efforts to
19meet the policy goals articulated in this chapter. The report shall
20be submitted in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government
21Code.
(a) At least four years after the issue date of any
23license pursuant to this chapter, but no later than five years after
24that date, the Bureau of State Audits shall issue a report to the
25Legislature detailing the implementation of this chapter. The State
26Auditor may advise the Legislature on any recommendations
27regarding the terms of licensure, including the consideration paid
28to the state, the economic and operational impacts upon the licensee
29and the state, and any other issues that may be relevant to the state’s
30decision whether to impose modifications on existing licensees’
31fees or terms of licensure. The report may also advise the
32Legislature as to any proposed changes to Article 5 (commencing
33with Section 19990.30) of this chapter.
34(b) A report submitted pursuant to subdivision (a) shall be
35submitted in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government
36Code.
37(c) Pursuant to Section 10231.5 of the Government Code, this
38section is repealed on January 1, 2020.
The Legislature finds and declares that Section 1 of
40this act, which adds Chapter 5.2 (commencing with Section
P52 119990.01) to Division 8 of the Business and Professions Code,
2imposes a limitation on the public’s right of access to the meetings
3of public bodies or the writings of public officials and agencies
4within the meaning of Section 3 of Article I of the California
5Constitution. Pursuant to that constitutional provision, the
6Legislature makes the following findings to demonstrate the interest
7protected by this limitation and the need for protecting that interest:
8The limitations on the people’s rights of access set forth in this
9chapter are necessary to protect the privacy and integrity of
10information submitted by the registered players as well as the
11
proprietary information of the license applicants and licensees.
No reimbursement is required by this act pursuant to
13Section 6 of Article XIII B of the California Constitution because
14the only costs that may be incurred by a local agency or school
15district will be incurred because this act creates a new crime or
16infraction, eliminates a crime or infraction, or changes the penalty
17for a crime or infraction, within the meaning of Section 17556 of
18the Government Code, or changes the definition of a crime within
19the meaning of Section 6 of Article XIII B of the California
20Constitution.
This act is an urgency statute necessary for the
22immediate preservation of the public peace, health, or safety within
23the meaning of Article IV of the Constitution and shall go into
24immediate effect. The facts constituting the necessity are:
25In order to protect the interests of Californians who play online
26gambling games and to ensure that people play fair games, that
27the state realizes the revenues, and that suitable persons operate
28intrastate Internet gambling Web sites, it is necessary that this act
29take effect immediately.
O
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