New York - The founder of what had been
one of the largest online poker websites agreed on Thursday to
confront US charges stemming from a long-running criminal case
targeting internet firms like his operating illegally in the
United States.
Scott Tom, who founded Costa Rica-based Absolute Poker,
pleaded not guilty in Manhattan federal court to charges he
violated a federal internet gambling law and engaged in a
money-laundering conspiracy.
Tom, a citizen of Saint Kitts and Nevis who lived in
Antigua, arrived in the United States voluntarily from Barbados
on Thursday to face the charges, prosecutors said.
He was released on a $500 000 bond following a court
hearing. James Henderson, his lawyer, said in court he expected
a plea deal soon.
"There's going to be a resolution in this case quickly,"
Henderson said.
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Tom, 37, was one of 11 people indicted on April 15, 2011, a
day dubbed "Black Friday" by the industry, in connection with a
U.S. crackdown that targeted online poker companies Full Tilt
Poker, Absolute Poker and PokerStars.
The three companies had become the largest online poker
outfits doing business in the United States after Congress
banned real-money gambling on internet card games in 2006.
Prosecutors also accused the companies of money laundering.
According to prosecutors, the companies tricked banks into
processing billions of dollars of illegal internet gambling
proceeds through shell companies that appeared legitimate.
Before its shutdown in 2011 in connection with the case,
Absolute Poker was the number 3 internet poker operator doing
business in the United States and had taken in about $500
million from U.S. residents, prosecutors said.
Twelve people overall were charged in the case, including
Tom's stepbrother, Brent Beckley, who oversaw payment processing
at Absolute Poker. He was sentenced in 2012 to 14 months in
prison after pleading guilty.