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Supreme Court indicates it might allow sports betting

The Supreme Court is indicating a willingness to side with New Jersey's effort to permit sports gambling in a case being closely watched by states interested in allowing betting on sports

By JESSICA GRESKO, Associated Press
Published: December 4, 2017, 7:35pm
6 Photos
New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, left, and New Jersey state Sen. Raymond Lesniak talk after a news conference Monday at the Supreme Court, where a case on sports betting was being heard.
New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, left, and New Jersey state Sen. Raymond Lesniak talk after a news conference Monday at the Supreme Court, where a case on sports betting was being heard. Jacquelyn Martin/Associated Press Photo Gallery

WASHINGTON — In a case being closely watched by states interested in allowing betting on sports, the Supreme Court indicated a willingness Monday to side with New Jersey’s effort to permit sports gambling.

The justices heard arguments in a case where New Jersey is challenging a federal law that bars gambling on football, basketball, baseball and other sports in most states. If the justices strike down the law, 32 states would likely offer sports betting within five years, according to a report by a California research firm.

Courts, citing the federal law, have blocked New Jersey’s repeated attempts to allow sports betting at its racetracks and casinos. Republican Gov. Chris Christie, who will leave office in January, sat in the front row of the courtroom during arguments at the high court Monday and said afterward that if justices side with the state, bets could be “taken in New Jersey within two weeks of a decision by the court.”

More than a dozen states are supporting New Jersey, which argues that Congress exceeded its authority when it passed the 1992 Professional and Amateur Sports Protection Act, barring states from authorizing sports betting. New Jersey says the Constitution allows Congress to pass laws barring wagering on sports, but Congress can’t require states to keep sports gambling prohibitions in place.

Anthony Kennedy was among the justices who implied during arguments that he will side with New Jersey. Kennedy said that as a result of the federal law, “citizens of the state of New Jersey are bound to obey a law that the state doesn’t want but that the federal government compels the state to have.”

Like Kennedy, Justice Stephen Breyer suggested that Congress was impermissibly “telling states what to do.”

All four major U.S. professional sports leagues, the NCAA and the federal government are urging the court to keep the law. In court, the NBA, NFL, NHL and Major League Baseball have argued that New Jersey’s gambling expansion would hurt the integrity of their games. Outside court, however, leaders of all but the NFL have shown varying degrees of openness to legalized sports gambling.

The stakes are high. The American Gaming Association estimates that Americans illegally wager about $150 billion on sports each year.

Not all the justices indicated they were on New Jersey’s side, though. Justices Elena Kagan and Sonia Sotomayor seemed willing to say that Congress’ action was permissible and side with Paul Clement, who was arguing on behalf of the sports leagues.

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