Compliance Updates
Michigan Gaming Control Board order allows online and mobile wagering on horse races

Horse racing third-party facilitators seeking a license to offer advance deposit wagering (ADW) in Michigan must comply with terms and conditions established by Michigan Gaming Control Board Executive Director Richard S. Kalm in an order issued last week.
“The order should enable the state’s horse racing industry to gain new followers through ADW and maintain protection for citizens who wish to place wagers on live and simulcast pari-mutuel racing in Michigan using their mobile phones,” Kalm said. “Before ADW can go live in Michigan, the race meeting licensee and the certified horsemen’s organizations also must agree to a contract with a provider.”
In December 2019, Michigan’s Horse Racing Law of 1995 was amended to allow a race meeting licensee to use contracted third-party firms to facilitate wagering on live and simulcast pari-mutuel racing. A bettor creates an account with the third-party facilitator and can use a mobile device or computer to place wagers on pari-mutuel races using the money on deposit.
The order requires third-party facilitators to:
Apply for a license
Provide a proposed plan of operation
Submit any proposed system operation plan changes to the MGCB executive director for preapproval
Pay a $1,000 application fee and a $500 license renewal fee to the MGCB to cover costs of background investigations
Use and communicate pari-mutuel wagers to a pari-mutuel system that meets all Michigan requirements
The facilitator may not sell or share an applicant or account holder’s confidential information or use confidential information for any purpose not related to authorized account wagering without the applicant or account holder’s authorization.
Currently, live and simulcast pari-mutuel wagering is authorized at Northville Downs racetrack, which offers standardbred racing. The track was ordered to remain closed through 11:59 p.m. on Thursday, May 28, under Gov. Gretchen Whitmer’s Executive Order 2020-69 due to the COVID-19 health emergency.
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Compliance Updates
TaDa Gaming Secures UK Gambling Commission Licence

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TaDa Gaming has added the UK Gambling Commission (UKGC) licence to its business operations alongside its Malta Gaming Authority (MGA) Hellenic, Romanian ONJN and Swedish Spelinspektionen ones.
Following a successful conclusion to its application to the Gambling Commission, players across the UK â and other international jurisdictions â will now be able to play TaDaâs industry changing fishing-shooting games, immersive slots, crash and bingo releases.
As an established brand with over 30 yearsâ industry experience, TaDa Gaming has been making a name for itself in Europe, Latin American, Africa and, most recently, North America. The valuable UK market has been in TaDaâs sights for some time and the new licence will enable access to this exciting operator and player base.
Andy Huang, CEO of TaDa Gaming, said: âWhilst all gaming authorities rightly insist on rigorous standards and strict adherence to the rules, the UKGC has the reputation for being the most demanding. We are delighted to have had our game protocols and commitment to the highest standards of fair play verified in this way, allowing us to expand our presence, increase our trust levels and deliver ever more safe, reliable and innovative gaming experiences to players in the UK and beyond.â
The post TaDa Gaming Secures UK Gambling Commission Licence appeared first on European Gaming Industry News.
Australia
RWA Expresses Concern Over Govtâs Decision to Double Tax Cap on Licensed Online WSPs

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Responsible Wagering Australia (RWA) has expressed serious concern over the Northern Territory Governmentâs decision to double the annual bookmaker and betting exchange tax cap on licensed online Wagering Service Providers (WSPs), warning that the move is economically reckless and risks undermining the Territoryâs reputation as a stable and competitive licensing jurisdiction.
The doubling of the cap, announced in the Northern Territory Budget, comes without any industry consultation and, perplexingly, before the final report of the Northern Territory Governmentâs own Racing Industry Review â a review explicitly commissioned to inform long-term sustainability settings for the wagering and racing sectors.
Responsible Wagering Australia CEO Kai Cantwell said the decision had blindsided the industry and would put investment from WSPs â who are some of the NTâs biggest employers â at risk.
âRWA have participated meaningfully in the review and eagerly anticipated a new strategic vision for racing in the Territory. This decision, made before the Review has had a chance to lay that strategic vision, has blindsided WSPs and materially undermines any outcome of the Review,â Mr Cantwell said.
âRWA members have proudly supported the Territory for years, investing in people, infrastructure, and long-term economic growth.
âWe will continue to advocate for a licensing environment in the Northern Territory that upholds the highest standards of consumer protection while also incentivising business to invest in the local economy.
âRWA members are all licensed in the Northern Territory, directly employing around 600 Territorians in high-skilled roles across technology, customer service, and compliance â a figure that rises to over 1,000 when including all wagering service providers licensed in the Territory.â
In FY23 alone, the Australian licensed online wagering industry contributed more than $150 million to the Northern Territory economy, including:
⢠$47.7 million in taxes and levies
⢠$2.5 million in product fees to the NT racing industry â directly supporting prize money, operations and promotional activities
⢠$46 million in wages paid to local staff
âThe NT Government was elected on a platform of driving economic growth, delivering a competitive tax and investment environment and attracting private investment, with Chief Minister Lia Finocchiaro stating the Territory is âopen for businessâ and passing legislation to âstrengthen our ability to deliver economic growth and attract investmentâ â yet this policy decision directly contradicts that commitment and risks undermining investor confidence in the Territory,â Mr Cantwell said.
RWA questioned the timing of the announcement, noting that it comes before the outcomes of the Governmentâs ongoing Racing Industry Review have been released.
âThis tax hike preempts the outcome of the Review, a process that was meant to guide long-term, evidence-based and sensible reform,â Mr Cantwell said.
âIt sends a message that consultation, process and industry sustainability have taken a back seat to short-term revenue grabs.
âA financially sustainable and well-regulated racing and wagering industry is critical to ensuring its long-term viability and the significant economic and employment benefits it delivers to Territorians.
âRather than imposing blunt tax increases, the Government should be working with industry to identify growth opportunities that will ensure the Territoryâs continued leadership as a licensing jurisdiction.
âWe are calling on the Treasurer and Chief Minister to reconsider this decision and to engage in genuine consultation with the industry before moving forward.â
The post RWA Expresses Concern Over Govtâs Decision to Double Tax Cap on Licensed Online WSPs appeared first on European Gaming Industry News.
Australia
AUSTRAC Announces Expansion of Fintel Alliance

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AUSTRAC has announced that it will expand its intelligence partnership, Fintel Alliance.
Fintel Alliance is a world leading public-private partnership where members and law enforcement work together and share data in real time to target serious crime.
AUSTRAC CEO Brendan Thomas said the Intelligence Divisionâs Fintel Alliance has been so productive that the agency will now make its collaborative data analytics hub a central function going forward.
âTogether, we are able to do much more than any of us could do alone. Fintel Alliance members are working in partnership to fight financial crime â pooling data, sharing insights, and targeting major threats to strengthen financial systems and law enforcement action,â Mr Thomas said.
âThis has generated real intelligence across a range of serious crimes including money laundering, child sexual exploitation, domestic violence, tax evasion, fraud and illegal phoenixing.
âFor example, late last year we worked with our partners using the collaborative data analytics hub. We obtained all cash deposit transaction data under $10,000 from the four largest banks and jointly looked for criminal patterns. We had more than 50 million data points.
âUsing the combined datasets, new software, and with our analysts and bank analysts working together in the same room, we were able to see things that were not visible before. In just a few days we identified major criminal networks now subject to law enforcement action. This shows the power of intelligence partnerships and collective effort.â
Fintel Alliance, first established in 2017, connects experts from major banks, remittance service providers and gambling operators, with law enforcement and security agencies in Australia and overseas.
AUSTRAC is building out the collaborative data analytics hub, a platform for data sharing which has helped identify criminal patterns and trends across the financial sector
This expansion also includes increasing its capacity with additional staff so that Fintel Alliance can contribute to more intelligence innovations and lay the groundwork for partnerships with tranche 2 entities. As part of the expansion, a seconded senior manager from ANZ Bank will help co-lead and build new pairings with industry and government members.
Last year Fintel Alliance produced a threat alert on money muling behaviour and identified an increase in micro-laundering, a process where funds are co-mingled with legitimate and illicit sources and moved at volume through low-value digital transfers.
Fintel Alliance also recently launched a campaign on âscamblingâ, a practice where unlicensed online gambling platforms advertise on social media and trick people to visit a scam website to participate in gambling.
Regional and remote Aboriginal communities are being targeted in this scam and Fintel Alliance is working with police, banks and other industry partners to raise awareness of âscamblingâ, to minimise harm to vulnerable Australians.
Fintel Alliance member and NAB Chief Financial Crime Risk Officer, Paul Jevtovic, said practical warnings for customers targeted by criminals is just one of many constructive outcomes achieved through Fintel collaboration.
âThe nature of scambling â frequent small transactions â means it isnât traditionally captured by mandatory reporting,â Mr Jevtovic said.
âHowever, combining data from multiple sources about cash transactions less than $10,000 allowed Fintel Alliance to more rapidly understand the nature and extent of criminality resulting in timely dissemination amongst members.
âIâve seen this partnership and capability evolve since 2017 and its expansion is a modern approach not only to intelligence gathering, but more responsive regulation.â
Fintel Alliance Executive Board co-chair and ANZ Group Head of Financial Crime Risk, Cassandra Hewett, said ANZ is proud to have been actively involved in Fintel Alliance since its inception.
âThe breadth of industry involvement reflects the value the financial industry sees from the public-private partnership,â Ms Hewett said.
âAll members of Fintel Alliance continue to prioritise fighting financial crime and have strengthened our contribution to the collective effort â to prevent our businesses being infiltrated by organised crime, to protect our customers from being exploited, and to drive crime out of our communities.
âCriminals are adept at finding the weak points. By working together to develop and use new tools, technologies and fresh approaches to combat crime we can strengthen the ecosystem we all operate in.
âThe collaborative data analytics hub allows Fintel Alliance members to connect our data in ways that werenât previously possible, providing real time responses to criminal behaviour on already more than one occasion. We are excited to continue to develop these tools and drive real time responses, together.â
Fintel Alliance Executive Board co-chair and AUSTRAC Deputy CEO Intelligence John Moss, said Fintel Alliance expansion is key to AUSTRACâs ability to disrupt criminal activity above and beyond the existing intelligence efforts and regulatory reach.
âBuilding even stronger partnerships is going to extend our ability to weed out criminal abuse of the financial system and hit organised crime where it hurts,â Dr Moss said.
âAs AUSTRAC prepares to welcome tranche 2 industries to our regulated population, the expansion will no doubt continue to play an even bigger part in disrupting criminal activity.â
The post AUSTRAC Announces Expansion of Fintel Alliance appeared first on European Gaming Industry News.
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