Alabama City Whose Funds Were Frozen in Gambling Squabble Can Pay Employees

Alabama City Whose Funds Were Frozen in Gambling Squabble Can Pay Employees.

Costfoto / NurPhoto / Getty Images

Key Takeaways

The City of Lipscomb, Ala. will be able to pay its employees this week after Alabama’s Attorney General’s Office agreed to release $107K from city accounts over illegal gambling.

Alabama AG Steve Marshall, above, dislikes electronic bingo machines so much he froze an entire city’s finances because of them. (Image: Steve Marshall/Facebook) Alabama AG Steve Marshall, above, dislikes electronic bingo machines so much he froze an entire city’s finances because of them. (Image: Steve Marshall/Facebook)

The move came after the city council met on Monday to repeal the controversial bingo ordinance that has incurred the wrath of State Attorney General Steve Marshall.

However, a temporary restraining order on the accounts was extended for seven more days pending the finalization of litigation.

‘Menace to Morals’

Marshall accused the city of licensing , an electronic bingo parlor, and claims it continues to receive “illegal funding” from “illegal gambling.” Marshall has called electronic bingo “a menace to public health, morals, safety, and welfare.”

After the Alabama Supreme Court ruled in October 2022 that only traditional bingo games were legal in the state, Marshall began energetically enforcing the prohibition.

The AG’s Office raided Jay’s Charity Bingo in late August. Inside, they found dozens of stolen machines that had been impounded by the state from another illegal bingo parlor 80 miles away. The machines still had their “state evidence” stickers on them, according to the AG’s Office.

Five individuals connected to the business were later arrested and charged with third-degree burglary. Marshall’s Office raided the premises again in late November because Jay’s had reopened. This time Marshall sued the city, accusing it of complicity in the operation.

‘Proceeds of Crime’

While the council has now repealed its local bingo laws, Deputy Attorney General John Kachelman said in court this week that the city transferred more than $200K from the bingo account to the general fund last month. These funds were the proceeds of crime and should be seized by the state, he added.

Some city councilors blamed Lipscomb Mayor Tonja Baldwin for authorizing Jay’s to continue operating without consulting the council, AL.com reported last month.

Baldwin told the news site that the Lipscomb needed the money. The city of just over 2,000 inhabitants is struggling financially, with many storefronts along its main commercial drag boarded up.

“The taxes that come through the city and the council are not enough to keep them operating,” Jefferson County Commissioner Sheila Tyson told AL.com. “Where are they going to get the money from without the bingo money? All of that is going to be dead in the water because there are not enough residents there to pay the bills.”

Article Sources
Nevada Casino Revenue Reaches New High in May as Players Lose $1.32B editorial policy.
  1. Macau to Benefit in 2022 as Mass Market Revenue Is Onshored, Says Morgan Stanley

Compare Accounts
×
Rivers Casino Des Plaines Hit With Class-Action Lawsuit Over August Data Breach
Provider
Name
Description
Sports Betting Platform Provider BtoBet Joins Pariplay’s Content Aggregator  Double Murderer ‘Losing Streak Lois’ Arrested in Texas After Hitting Casino Jackpot  Filipino Lotteries Under Fire Following Recent Assassination  Surprising Sports Could Power Future of Wagering, Survey Says  Red Rock Eyes Bigger Casino, More Parking in Durango Expansion  Britney Spears Gets Smacked at Las Vegas Casino Resort  Casinos Feel Brunt of Hotel Industry ‘Collapse’ Caused by COVID-19  Star Entertainment Facing New Class-Action Lawsuit Over Failed Operations  Macau Satellite Casinos for SJM Holdings, Melco Shutting Down  US Virgin Islands Casino Commission Worker Sentenced for Embezzlement