
New Jersey fails in latest bid to allow sports betting

 Appeals court rules the stateâs decriminalization laws are illegal under PASPA
New Jerseyâs latest attempt to allow sports betting in the stateâs race tracks and casinos has been struck down by a panel of 12 judges from the Third US Circuit Court of Appeals.
The judges voted 10-2 that New Jerseyâs 2014 law to decriminalize sports wagering was equivalent to authorizing it and thus illegal under the federal Professional and Amateur Sports Protection Act (PASPA).
PASPA prohibits a state from âauthorizing by lawâ sports betting.
The NCAA, one of the athletic governing bodies which lobbied against New Jersey, said in a statement: “We are pleased the court has denied New Jersey’s latest attempt to allow sports wagering in the state.
âAs other courts have acknowledged, federal law does not permit New Jersey’s actions. The NCAA continues to believe that PASPA is an important law that appropriately protects the integrity of sport in America.”
Of the two dissenting judges, Julio Fuentes, argued there was a meaningful legal difference between authorizing and repealing and that New Jerseyâs proposed law was a âself-executing deregulatory measure.â
Judge Thomas Vanaskie was more strident, declaring PASPA to be unconstitutional. He wrote in his dissent: âThis shifting line approach to a Stateâs exercise of its sovereign authority is untenable.
âThe bedrock principle of federalism that Congress may not compel the States to require or prohibit certain activities cannot be evaded by the false assertion that PASPA affords the States some undefined options when it comes to sports wagering.â
New Jersey Senator Ray Lesniak told ESPN the state would appeal the decision in the Supreme Court, although he admitted it was a âlongshotâ.
Geoff Freeman, chief executive of the American Gaming Association, commented: âWashington has a responsibility to fix a failed law that it created nearly 25 years ago. A federal government prohibition has driven an illegal, and occasionally dangerous, sports betting market of at least $150bn annually.
âLaw enforcement, mayors, leaders in sports, fans and many others agree that itâs time for a regulated sports betting marketplace that protects consumers, communities and the integrity of sports we enjoy.â