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Gambling Addiction - case or no case?


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Here´s the deal:

 

A player created an account with one of the brands I worked with. During the first six weeks, he managed to deposit and lose €77.000. After four months, after he´d deposited and lost €280.000, he came on chat and informed us - the casino - that he had lost control of his gambling. Management decided not to exclude as "GA" based on the fact he did not mention specifically "Gambling addiction" or "Gambling problem", instead the player was informed he should take a break of two weeks.

 

After two weeks, when the break was expired, he continued to deposit and play for a further €190.000, until he finally informed us - after thirteen months - that gambling had ruined his life, his family and his business and he had a stack of bills to pay. That is when the management decided that the account should be closed based on "GA".

 

So; the player in question filed a complaint to the casino and outlined that all deposits made after he initially informed the casino about gambling problems, as in "lost control of his gambling", should be returned to him (€190.000). The casino declined with the reasoning that the player had received outstanding service and a lot of bonuses(?!) and that the player had been happy with the way he´d been treated as a VIP.

 

The case in now with MGA as a formal complaint.

 

"Case or no case"? Is the player entitled to refund of €190.000? What do you think?

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I think it's a very tricky situation. The authorities seem to be telling casinos to more of a front role in the identification of gambling addicts - eg. I know one casino that SE one person for coming on 'begging' for bonus offers/reloads and telling them he was spending too much. That casino took that as an admission of a gambling issue. Some may say that's drawing the line between too many dots but in the current climate it probably translates into 'better safe than sorry'

 

Are the statement of wealth requests not linked to responsible gambling? Requiring casinos to make a judgement call as to whether the person can afford it?

 

My personal opinion is that, taking the authorities increased view that casinos should be more proactive in this, that the mere fact he didn't mention 'I am an addict' may not cut it. He, if indeed i'm interpreting it rightly, stated he'd lost control which could/should have led to a firmer action by the casino. That conversation itself should have flagged him as high risk. To me knowledge he doesn't need to utter the exact words. 

 

Eg under the UKGC the person should have been offered the chance to talk to someone about self exclusion. 

 

If anything, it should have initiated a review of the individuals gambling which, per your own procedures, may have/should have resulted in the removal of their account. If you can't show that this was done, and if you don't have a clear procedure in place for this, this you may find they have a case. 

 

If it was simply a case of 'take a break mate' then i don't think it'll be looked at in your favour if I'm honest.

 

My other opinion, regulations aside, is that all this may lead to casinos being over zealous and applying a subjective view of gambling patterns. Leading to random account closures and moving away from the fact of 'personal responsibility' in terms of the player. 

 

The fact remains is that large parts of the society/media have casinos in their view now (to be honest you guys have had pretty much free rein to do what you've wanted for a long time so maybe some of it has merit) and the increased emphasis on social responsibility mean that you need to be in front of it now. Do i agree? Not entirely.

 

Just my 2 cents. 

 

And i don't think quoting the bonus he has received etc is relevant in the slightest in defending anything. 'Big deal' I imagine will be the response of many a regulator. 

 

The fact he was also a VIP should have led to increased monitoring/actions - this is clear certainly in the UKGC code. Why? Because VIP may mean big deposits and/or big losses. Quoting that in the defence would probably do more harm to you than good IMO. 

 

I'd say, given what you've said, he probably has a case. Not saying it's strong, but IMO definitely a case. Deciding not to exclude as he didn't say the magical words is quite weak, unless you can show it was scrutinised/reviewed by a trained high level member of staff and you came to that conclusion based on all the facts. 

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FWIW - the above doesn't necessarily represent my own views. I think there's a real danger of pushing the responsibility for your own gambling over from the individual to the casino. That's dangerous for many things - firstly it leads to an addict having the view of 'the casino didn't stop me it's all their fault'. This abdication of personal responsibility is the reason we have a cultural issue of pushing the blame onto others, and that's not a healthy development. It also leads to a nannying. Coco may not agree with me (well i know  :p ) but it leads to regulators contemplating banning certain deposit methods like credit cards - why can the individual determine this themselves? It leads to people, having had a bad run, innocently asking the casino for a deposit bonus to help them play more, being categorised as problem gamblers or at least seen as high risk.

 

Don't know the Malta view but definitely in the UK there's an agenda of social responsibility being lampooned onto casinos. Some of it good, some of it overstated. 

 

In the UK, if the regulators really cared about SR they'd have gone further in the FOBT's regulations. But they didn't. 

 

When back in my home town (a seaside town) i was playing the old B3 games on 20p's in the arcade (ah, the days). The guy in the amusement thing came over to me and said 'i have to inform you that you've been playing for an hour'. I politely explained that i was in a possession of a watch. 

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When back in my home town (a seaside town) i was playing the old B3 games on 20p's in the arcade (ah, the days). The guy in the amusement thing came over to me and said 'i have to inform you that you've been playing for an hour'. I politely explained that i was in a possession of a watch. 

 

Oh geees! The arcade guy actually walked up to you and told you "you've been playing for an hour"???  :huh:

 

Back in my times, when I was getting into this mad fruit machine mania, I could be playing in my regular amusement arcade for hours on end...and never had anyone telling me such thing! The place would usually be busy with players, so no supervisor could keep watch over the time spent by each player. They wouldn't be bothered anyway...as long as the players are dishing out money to them, why stop them, right?

 

Flashback to present times...the truth is, casinos are more concerned about getting money in than trying to push away problemed gamblers! If there wasn't any 'responsible gambling' ruling, they'd probably wouldn't even bother to intervene or take notice of addicts! If gamblers don't look after themselves first, then they'd get into real problems, and only then would casinos intervene...because the gamblers have no more money to put in!  :p

 

The same thing is happening with opiod addiction, especially in the US. Drugs are there to ease any pain, but if the users themselves cannot control its use, then addiction sets in. Blame it all on the pharmaceutical companies that produce these drugs? Not entirely! They produce drugs to help ease the pain, but they do not always clearly state that frequent use would cause addiction! The revenues are more important to pharmaceutical companies than actually trying to help the sick! So it's a catch 22 situation really!  :p

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Oh geees! The arcade guy actually walked up to you and told you "you've been playing for an hour"???  :huh:

 

Back in my times, when I was getting into this mad fruit machine mania, I could be playing in my regular amusement arcade for hours on end...and never had anyone telling me such thing! The place would usually be busy with players, so no supervisor could keep watch over the time spent by each player. They wouldn't be bothered anyway...as long as the players are dishing out money to them, why stop them, right?

 

Flashback to present times...the truth is, casinos are more concerned about getting money in than trying to push away problemed gamblers! If there wasn't any 'responsible gambling' ruling, they'd probably wouldn't even bother to intervene or take notice of addicts! If gamblers don't look after themselves first, then they'd get into real problems, and only then would casinos intervene...because the gamblers have no more money to put in!  :p

 

The same thing is happening with opiod addiction, especially in the US. Drugs are there to ease any pain, but if the users themselves cannot control its use, then addiction sets in. Blame it all on the pharmaceutical companies that produce these drugs? Not entirely! They produce drugs to help ease the pain, but they do not always clearly state that frequent use would cause addiction! The revenues are more important to pharmaceutical companies than actually trying to help the sick! So it's a catch 22 situation really!  :p

Yep...then offered me a cup of tea! (Portrush is stuck in the 1960's :p )

 

To be fair to the casinos they're caught in the situation whereby they will close peoples accounts to avoid any accusation of not complying, increasing the number of complaints with cries of 'Casino closed my account!' to the complaints teams or if not, hit in the face and told they need to do more....

 

I've a feeling casinos will be beefing up their compliance teams!

 

PS - i'm happy to change career for a relocation package to Malta incase any are reading ^_^

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Yep...then offered me a cup of tea! (Portrush is stuck in the 1960's :p )

 

To be fair to the casinos they're caught in the situation whereby they will close peoples accounts to avoid any accusation of not complying, increasing the number of complaints with cries of 'Casino closed my account!' to the complaints teams or if not, hit in the face and told they need to do more....

 

I've a feeling casinos will be beefing up their compliance teams!

 

PS - i'm happy to change career for a relocation package to Malta incase any are reading ^_^

 

Exactly mate! In the end, it becomes 'who can submit more convincing evidences' that would win the case! It certainly can go either way...win or lose...and no one can be very certain of any outcome either.

 

But one fact shall always remain...casinos exist simply for making lots of money from gamblers...and no law is ever going to change that...except banning all casinos!  :p   

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Here´s the deal:

 

...

 

Well, to be honest, I think there will be no deal in this situation and MGA will most probably rule against you. For a simple reason and that is with declaring "Lost control of his gambling" player clearly indicated one of the most common signs of Gambling Addiction. Cannot imagine a serious online gambling business who wouldn't restrict player's access immediately after such a concerning player's statement OR at least do as MGA advice in this particular situation and make sure to take all the relevant measures to identify the extend of the obviously expressed player's addiction. 

 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Problem_gambling

 

Still, I believe there most probably some serious amounts of emails, chats, etc going back and forth between the casino and the player in the meantime and sometimes, it may happen that player is deliberately playing a very perfidious game which I use to call "Win-Win-SE-Scenario". :( 

 

In both situations, there is no way we could be of best assistance without knowing all the details. 

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What concerned me as well from the casinos response is the pointing to bonus offers and VIP status as if that somehow made it all ok?

 

Maybe I’m being harsh but I’m pretty sure as Valdes said you’d need to see all the background information.

 

I’d not hold out much hope and possibly brace yourself for an expensive lessons learned process.

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Yep...then offered me a cup of tea! (Portrush is stuck in the 1960's :p )

 

To be fair to the casinos they're caught in the situation whereby they will close peoples accounts to avoid any accusation of not complying, increasing the number of complaints with cries of 'Casino closed my account!' to the complaints teams or if not, hit in the face and told they need to do more....

 

I've a feeling casinos will be beefing up their compliance teams!

 

PS - i'm happy to change career for a relocation package to Malta incase any are reading ^_^

You can literally find a job in Malta in the gambling industry in a couple of days if you're serious about that :)

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First off I have to say that now I play more in the local casino than online. The reasons are numerous from the payouts changing completely, to no loyalty bonuses at my regular casinos and simply sinking too much money when I play online. What I have on Neteller at the moment is the deposit limit :D

 

But more to this topic. I closed my accounts in several casinos which just got on my nerves. A simple please close my account here permanently on live chat, Done, Thank You, Bye. After a few months all it took to reopen my accounts was going to live chat ask and voila got my account back. No questions asked. 

 

My point is no one asked why I closed my account or asked me anything when I asked to reopen it. So bottom line is they don't care as long as they keep receiving deposits from you. The gambling addiction part is shown on every casino but nobody cares. In the end this is a business and it's their business to take money from you. If you can't control your gambling, well my friend You're S..t out of Luck :D

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Yep...then offered me a cup of tea! (Portrush is stuck in the 1960's :p )

 

To be fair to the casinos they're caught in the situation whereby they will close peoples accounts to avoid any accusation of not complying, increasing the number of complaints with cries of 'Casino closed my account!' to the complaints teams or if not, hit in the face and told they need to do more....

 

I've a feeling casinos will be beefing up their compliance teams!

 

PS - i'm happy to change career for a relocation package to Malta incase any are reading ^_^

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Slightly off topic but Portrush eh I was up there last weekend and put Fiver in a poker machine and got a five of a kind thinking I had won £100 until the guy sitting beside me told me the good news that it was actually £1000 for a 20p bet .

I got the feeling that the natives weren't to happy but hey hoo I do have a pic but one has still not managed to work out how to up load pics on here.

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... I do have a pic but one has still not managed to work out how to up load pics on here.

 

Not to worry Piper...help is here for you...

 

A slight mistake there in my screenshot...the 'More Reply Option' is actually at the bottom right, not left!  :p

 

post-61309-0-72537200-1524580785_thumb.jpg

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Slightly off topic but Portrush eh I was up there last weekend and put Fiver in a poker machine and got a five of a kind thinking I had won £100 until the guy sitting beside me told me the good news that it was actually £1000 for a 20p bet .

I got the feeling that the natives weren't to happy but hey hoo I do have a pic but one has still not managed to work out how to up load pics on here.

Ah...Sportsland....Goldrush....Flutters etc - all wasted youth! Don't get a fish and chips from a place called Rudi's - my dad said it's the only battered fish you could kick all the way to Belfast and it wouldn't have a dent in it  :p

 

We used to call that 'sniping' - holiday season was a great time. We'd wait until summer when all the people came down from Belfast etc, pumping money into the machines and then wait....I'll not lie and say I never received a few punches for doing do in 5 or so years  :wacko:  :ph34r:

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  • 2 years later...

Why People Get Addicted to Gambling?


Numerous factors can stimulate addiction. In most cases, there is a set of reasons that lead to a growing obsession with casino games and an urge to win. Sometimes the outside factors provoke excessive playing, but mostly the internal factors are the reason in the first place. Anyway, I discovered some aspects that in one way or another can influence a person’s gambling issues.

  • Psychological factors.
  • Desire to showcase the leadership and dominance above other gamblers;
  • Urgent need of a feeling of satisfaction when life is full of problems and disappointments;
  • Low self-esteem;
  • Depression and similar states;
  • Childhood issues and fears.
  • Economic factors.
  •  Inability to reach financial independence and stability in traditional ways;
  • Getting fired of downsizing due to economic crisis;
  • Desire to get money fast and effortlessly.
  • Other factors.
  • Pandemic and lockdown issues;
  • Legal status and availability of gambling facilities;
  • Constant advertising of casinos and betting in mass media.
     
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