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Pepperdine | Caruso School of Law

Maureen Weston moderates AALS Section on Law and Sports panel

January 13, 2017 | By Kylie Larkin -- Professor Maureen Weston moderated an Association of American Law Schools (AALS) Section on Law and Sports panel discussion on "Hedging Their Bets: Can Fantasy Sports and Sports Gambling 'Play' the Feds, the States, and the Leagues?"  The AALS 111th Annual Meeting, titled "Why Law Matters,"  was held on January 3-7 in San Francisco.

From the AALS program schedule:


Federal law generally prohibits gambling on sports, with exceptions in four states and for certain "games of skill." The state of New Jersey has challenged the limit on its authority to legalize sports betting. In the past year, sports betting websites exploded upon the airways in multi-million dollar television advertising campaigns led by daily fantasy sports (DFS) companies inviting fans "to pay an entry fee, pick their own teams in daily leagues, and win real money, with over millions paid out in these online contests." Big winners of these contests were revealed to be employees and professional gamblers. Big investors in DFS companies are the professional leagues and networks as partners. States and Congress are threatening to shut down these lucrative ventures. Rival companies who control nearly 95% of the DFS market propose to merge. Our panel of experts will debate whether Congress or state regulation protects consumers or stifles them and innovation in the wildly popular world of virtual sports.

Moderator: Maureen A. Weston, Pepperdine University School of Law
Speakers:
Jodi S. Balsam, Brooklyn Law School
Jeffrey A. Standen, Northern Kentucky University, Salmon P. Chase College of Law
Daniel Wallach, Attorney, Becker & Poliakoff
Alfred C. Yen, Boston College Law School


The complete program may be found at www.aals.org