Mirapex Class Action (may increase risk of developing problem gambling)

“Mirapex Victims Allowed to Claim Punitive Damages in the United States
On November 26, 2007, a US Court allowed various Mirapex claimants to claim punitive damages against the drug manufacturers of the dopamine agonist called Mirapex… At pages 10 - 18 of the decision, the US Court summarizes in great detail the facts relied on by the Mirapex claimants.”

The other link here should open the finding by the court.

http://www.thomsonr ogers.com/ Mirapex_Products _Liability_ Class_Action_ 071128_Punitives _Mdl_order. pdf

Posted: December 4, 2007 Comments (0)

US - “A son’s plea for gambling addicts”

from http://www.responsiblegambling.org/staffsearch/latest_news_articles_details.cfm?intID=10369

Author: Peterson, Eric
Source: Chicago Daily Herald
Published: Jun 27, 07

Full Document:
ILLINOIS — A Schaumburg man whose mother suffered a relapse of her gambling addiction asked the Illinois Gaming Board Tuesday for greater monitoring at casinos to make the state’s self-exclusion program for addicts truly work.
Todd Ruder had testified in front of the board before about his mother’s success in beating her addiction.

But after earning her one-year pin from Gambler’s Anonymous in May, the 67-year-old woman went to the Hollywood Casino in Aurora again on Father’s Day.

“She is so disgusted with herself, like I’ve never seen before,” Ruder said.

This time, all his mother lost was a couple hundred dollars from her income tax refund. But in the past couple years, she’s drained about $160,000, most of it at Joliet’s Empress Casino, he said.

He’s asking the state to require the same ID check for all casino patrons that it already uses for people who appear to be under 30.

Only then, he believes, will the self-exclusion program be effective in helping addicts of all ages help themselves.

Self-exclusion works by threatening those who sign up for it with forfeiture of all money won if they’re caught gambling. Trespassing charges can also be filed against those who violate the self-exclusion program.

It’s supposed to remove all motivation to gamble, but an addict’s mind doesn’t operate so logically, said Ruder, who is a teacher at Maine West High School in Des Plaines.

Illinois Gaming Board member Eugene Winkler was responsive and sympathetic to the request, saying that it’s seniors who need more help with compulsive gambling.

For many addicts, the problem first shows up between the ages of 45 and 65, Winkler said.

But as other members of the board agreed, its recommendations aren’t often followed in Springfield.

Anita Bedell, executive director of the Springfield-based Illinois Church Action on Alcohol and Addiction, agreed that more pressure needs to be put on lawmakers to recognize the true nature of compulsive gaming.

“Legislators always want to expand gambling, but they never address the impact it has on families,” Bedell said.

Ruder said his mother’s road to addiction in the past couple of years was unexpected and largely invisible to the rest of the family until it was too late.

He believes her attempt to retire from nursing, coupled with her anxiety over watching her own parents decline in a nursing home in their 90s, fueled the addiction.

Before that, his mother, whom he asked not to be identified, never even bought lottery tickets or gambled while in a Las Vegas casino, Ruder said.

He and his family thought it funny when she first expressed an interest in joining them at the riverboats.

Then she was less than forthright with them about her reasons for wanting to sell her house and move in with her daughter in Hinsdale.

What she was really doing, Ruder said, was assembling all the cash she was going to throw into the casinos.

Now she’s had to get a job again and give up retirement, working at night and relinquishing all access to her money and financial decisions to the daughter she lives with, Ruder said.

Posted: July 7, 2007 Comments (0)

“Gambler’s self-ban system ‘built on quicksand’ “

Gambler’s self-ban system ‘built on quicksand’

Author:
Source: CBC News
Published: Jun 01, 07

Full Document:
ONTARIO, CANADA — Thousands of gambling addicts have signed agreements with Ontario’s gaming agency asking to be barred from casinos and slot parlours, but critics say the system is full of holes that let addicts easily slip back into the gaming sites.
The photos of 10,000 problem gamblers who have signed up for the Ontario Lottery and Gaming Corp.’s so-called “self-exclusion” program fill 22 binders.

Security guards at the province’s gambling facilities are expected to commit each face to memory, then charge those gamblers with trespassing if they’re found in the facility.

But security guards say it’s an impossible task and lawyers for clients who have sued the agency call it a “system based on quicksand.”

Under the self-exclusion program, addicts who realize they have a problem sign an agreement asking to be banned from entering Ontario gaming sites. But the detailed form also includes a section releasing the OLG from any responsibility and future lawsuits.

Some security staff members, who asked to not be named, said they have documented the problems for years and even written to superiors complaining the current system is failing and that it’s impossible to remember all the faces.

OLG argues it’s ultimately the responsibility of the individual to stay away from the gambling facilities, pointing out the agreement is voluntary.

“The onus is on you on a voluntary basis to stay out of our casino,” said OLG spokesman Jim Cronin.

That hasn’t stopped nine people, including Joseph Treyes, from suing the OLG in the past 10 years.

Treyes, a 61-year-old Mississauga man suffering from Parkinson’s disease, sought out therapy, counselling and even went off medication he said was contributing to his addiction before he finally gave in and signed a self-exclusion agreement.

Treyes said he was well-known to the staff at Woodbine Racetrack and easily identifiable because of his walker. Yet, in hundreds of visits between September 2000, when he signed the self-exclusion agreement, and February 2007, he claimed staff only stopped him once.

“They knew me because I was always there, every day,” Treyes told the CBC a number of months ago. “It was easy to go back. Nobody stopped me.”

Ontario’s casinos use facial recognition technology to alert them to cheaters, but have chosen not to use it with the self-exclusion program.

Treyes’s lawyer, Hassan Fancy questioned the use of such a flawed memory-based system. “That’s a system that is based on quicksand,” he said. “That’s a system you can’t expect to work.”

Treyes was handed a settlement about a month ago. The OLG has settled all nine cases, for a total of $1.5 million. It wouldn’t comment on the amount in Treyes case, citing a strict confidentiality agreement the two sides signed. Treyes and Fancy spoke to the CBC some months before signing the settlement and confidentiality deal.

In fact, a lawyer hired by Ontario’s Problem Gambling Research Centre to study the OLG’s legal obligations said the settlements raise the question of whether the gaming agency is trying to keep the courts from establishing a consistent rule as to the agency’s responsibilities.

“By acknowledging you have a problem and putting the casino on notice that you have such a problem … certainly some of the responsibility would appear to fall on the shoulders on the gaming facility and by extension the OLG,” said Jasminka Kalajdzic.

Posted: June 9, 2007 Comments (0)

BC - “BC Lotteries board should be fired too, Enforcement branch is also in need of a cleanout”

Michael Smyth, The Province

Published: Sunday, June 03, 2007

The people who run the government’s $2-billion gambling business became aware five years ago that lottery players might be getting ripped off by dishonest ticket sellers.

You might be wondering: Why on earth didn’t they do something about it? After all, the whole scandalous episode cost the top gambling guy his $442,000-a-year job last week.

But, hey, let’s cut them some slack. After all, this hard-bitten vice-squad had bigger fish to fry.

Who cares about a few crooked retailers swiping lottery jackpots when the gamblin’ grannies of Galiano Island were on the loose?

In 2005, the B.C. Gaming and Enforcement Branch were tipped off to an illicit gambling den operating on the idyllic Gulf island.

About a dozen little old ladies were gathering once a week at McKechnie’s Grand Central Emporium to drink tea, eat homemade pie and play bingo — without the $1.50 licence!

The government’s flying squad swept into action.

Four undercover agents were dispatched to the island, where they booked into a five-star waterfront B&B locally renowned for its luxurious down quilts and gazebo hot tub.

Cleverly posing as visiting real-estate buyers, they penetrated the tea shop and watched the elderly degenerates feed their filthy unlicensed bingo habit.

The next day, after a delicious organic breakfast, they confronted the owner of the emporium, reduced her to tears and slapped her with a $288 fine.

Rich Coleman, then the solicitor-general, was asked whether the four-man sting operation was an insane example of bureaucratic overkill and an unbelieveable waste of taxpayers’ money.

“The law is the law,” the grim-faced top cop replied.

Beware, you gambling grannies. Lottery retailers might be stealing your winning tickets from under your noses, but try to play bingo without a licence in this province and they’ll come down on you like Miami Vice.

I remind you of this bizarre little episode to illustrate the government’s total dysfunction when it comes to policing gambling.

The B.C. Gaming and Enforcement Branch is the same outfit that issued a misleading, error-riddled report last fall saying everything was fine with the province’s lottery-retailing system.

That didn’t satisfy B.C. Ombudsman Kim Carter, who issued last week’s devastating report revealing that the system is wide open to theft and fraud by unscrupulous ticket sellers.

The bottom line: Firing lottery chief Vic Poleschuk was the correct move — though at first defending him and then letting him twist in the wind all week shows just how dazed and confused these people are.

To restore confidence, more heads must roll. The B.C. Lotteries board should be fired, too, and then the granny-hunting enforcement branch should be cleaned out and overhauled.

Anything less would show the government cares more about its own soaring gambling profits than protecting players being fleeced of their winnings.

And even my own bingo-loving granny would say that’s just not right.

Listen to Nightline B.C. with Michael Smyth every weeknight at 7 p.m. on CKNW, AM 980 E-mail: msmyth@direct.ca

© The Vancouver Province 2007

© 2007 CanWest Interactive, a division of CanWest MediaWorks Publications Inc.

Posted: June 3, 2007 Comments (0)

older adults and problem gambling resource

at http://net.unl.edu/swi/pers/senior_gambling.html

Posted: June 1, 2007 Comments (0)

“RCMP probe US senior scams”

Toronto link alleged in use of database lists to plunder cash from frail hands

May 21, 2007 04:30 AM, CHARLES DUHIGG, New York Times

The thieves operated from small offices in Toronto and hangar-size rooms in India. Every night, working from lists, they called World War II veterans, retired teachers and thousands of other elderly Americans and posed as government and insurance workers updating their files.

Then, the criminals emptied their victims’ bank accounts.

Richard Guthrie, a 92-year-old U.S. Army veteran, was one of those victims. He ended up on scam artists’ lists because his name, like millions of others, was sold by large companies to telemarketing criminals, who then turned to major banks to steal his life’s savings.

The Iowa resident had entered a few sweepstakes that caused his name to be added to a database advertised by InfoUSA, a major compiler of consumer information. InfoUSA sold data on elderly Americans to known lawbreakers, regulators say.

InfoUSA advertised lists of “Elderly Opportunity Seekers,” 3.3 million elders “looking for ways to make money,” and “Suffering Seniors,” 4.7 million people with cancer or Alzheimer’s disease. “Oldies but Goodies” contained 500,000 gamblers over 55, for 8.5 cents apiece. One list said: “These people are gullible. They want to believe that their luck can change.”

As Guthrie sat home alone - surrounded by his Purple Heart medal, photos of eight children and mementos of a wife buried nine years earlier - the telephone rang day and night.

“I loved getting those calls,” he said in an interview. “Since my wife passed away, I don’t have many people to talk with. I didn’t even know they were stealing from me until everything was gone.”

Telemarketing fraud, once limited to small-time thieves, has become a global enterprise preying upon millions every year, authorities say. Vast databases sold to thieves have put almost anyone within reach of fraudulent telemarketers. And major banks have made it possible for criminals to dip into victims’ accounts without authorization, say court records.

“Only one kind of customer wants to buy lists of seniors interested in lotteries and sweepstakes: criminals,” RCMP Sgt. Yves Leblanc said.

“If someone advertises a list by saying it contains gullible or elderly people, it’s like putting out a sign saying `Thieves welcome here.’”

Two teams of Mounties have been posted to Toronto to investigate this case and other commercial crimes.

The elderly are particularly vulnerable to the thieves who build a relationship and end up tapping their bank accounts and trust funds,” Sgt. Michele Paradis said yesterday.

“The elderly get less social interaction, so if someone will build up a relationship with them, they will gain their trust.”

Scam artists stole more than $100,000 from Guthrie, his family says. How they took much of it is unclear, because Guthrie’s memory is faulty and many financial records are incomplete.

His bank, Wachovia, said in a statement that it had honoured all requests for refunds and was co-operating with authorities.

Guthrie, however, says thieves should never have gained access to his funds in the first place.

“I can’t understand why they were allowed inside my account,” he said.”I just chatted with this woman for a few minutes, and the next thing I knew, they took everything I had.”

Investigators suspect Guthrie’s name first appeared on a scam list around 2002, after he filled out a few contest entries that asked about his buying habits and other personal information.

The retired farmer had lived alone since his wife died, confined to home by painful arthritis. He spent mornings organizing the mail, filling out sweepstakes entries and listening to big-band albums as he chatted with telemarketers.

InfoUSA maintains records on 210 million Americans, according to its website. In 2006, it collected more than $430 million from clients like Reader’s Digest, Publishers Clearinghouse and Condé Nast.

But InfoUSA has also sold lists to a variety of marketers with more dubious intentions, including World Marketing Service, a company that a U.S. judge shut down in 2003 for running a lottery scam.

With files from Philip Mascoll

© Copyright Toronto Star

Posted: May 21, 2007 Comments (0)

NS - “VLT addiction ends in prison sentence”

Last Updated: Wednesday, May 16, 2007 | 1:35 PM AT, CBC News

A woman whose addiction to VLTs cost her hundreds of thousands of dollars and her freedom hopes her story will be a cautionary tale for gamblers.

Margaret Alice Baldwin, 62, a former military nurse currently serving a five-year sentence for robbing a bank, told CBC News her problem started innocently enough in 1994 when she put a loonie in a video lottery terminal in a northern New Brunswick bar.

At the beginning, gambling gave Baldwin a high. And not even a bartender’s snide comment could dampen her spirits the day she won $300.

“‘I don’t know why you are so excited, you lost over $3,000 before you won that $300,’” she recalls being told.

As Baldwin’s addiction spiralled out of control, she lost friends and was unable to pay her bills, despite a substantial pension cheque from the military.

“I had a $500 watch on me and I would sell it for $25,” she said. “I would take it just to keep playing the machines.”

Fearing there was no way out, Baldwin held up a fast-food restaurant in 1999 with a toy gun she stole from a department store, hoping to be shot and killed by police.

She received counselling in prison but succumbed to the sparkle of the VLTs soon after her release. Numerous suicide attempts followed.

In September 2006, Baldwin robbed the Scotiabank in Amherst. She told the teller she had a bomb and demanded $100,000.

Throughout the entire incident one thought kept playing over and over in her head: “You’re going to be shot very shortly and this will be over,” she recalls.

Baldwin barely made it out the door when the police nabbed her, again without firing a shot.

Baldwin says she doesn’t want sympathy, she simply hopes her story can help others realize how deadly a video gambling addiction can be.

Copyright © CBC 2007

Posted: May 20, 2007 Comments (0)

AB/QC - “A run of ill luck, ‘I would go to the casino crying. Once there, I’d become a different person’”

By VALERIE DUFOUR, Calgary SUN MEDIA, Sat, March 17, 2007.

Gambler wants VLT ban, Clotilde Berube is a compulsive gambler. She has unsuccessfully tried to get Quebec’s casinos shut down, and now seeks to rid the province of VLTs.

Clotilde Berube is sick, but not with an illness that stops her from going out. The 58-year-old woman is a compulsive gambler and that compulsion led her to burn through more than $1 million at the Casino du Lac-Leamy.

“In the beginning, it was a game, but I eventually lost control. I never thought I would become a slave to it,” Berube told Sun Media in French.

The compulsive gambler decided to speak about her experience in casinos after the release of a tell-all book by a former croupier named Eleonore Mainguy.

HUSBAND DIED

It was the death of Berube’s husband in 1996 that sent the lawyer’s life off course.

Overcome with grief, she sought refuge in diversions, including going to the Casino du Lac-Leamy daily.

“I would go to the casino crying. Once there, I’d become a different person. I’d forget everything,” she said.

She said she’d leave for the casino at around 11 a.m. and spend the afternoon there before picking up her daughter around 5 p.m. She’d eat dinner and return to the casino at around 8 p.m.

Berube said she followed that routine every day for five years.

“I didn’t think you could become sick from gambling, but the casino was a crutch,” she said.

At the time, Berube had the money to make big bets. The professional success she and her husband had enjoyed allowed them to live in an upscale Ottawa neighbourhood and to buy eight other properties in the capital region.

“There comes a moment when you stop looking at money the same way,” Berube said.

She said she took home some big winnings, but the money didn’t matter to her.

“All I wanted was to keep playing,” she said.

Berube said she would always bring $20,000 to $25,000 cash in her bag and once made a $10,000 bet playing baccarat.

Pathological gambling is worse than alcoholism, she said. When you drink you crash after drinking 40 ounces, but gambling is more deceitful. Nothing can stop you and your body keeps going like a machine, she said.

BIG STAKES ROOM

Her gambling habits also evolved over time. She went from card games to the slot machines. And because she was a good customer, she had access to the big stakes rooms and received special treatment.

“I was a VIP client,” said Berube, who added that all her meals were paid for and she was given several weekend ski trips to Mont Tremblant as gifts. She said Loto-Quebec also paid to celebrate her kids’ birthday on a boat with all their friends.

Berube has been through therapy three or four times.

“It’s like a drug. What I’ve found as a compromise is I go to the U.S. once every two months and spend $500 and play poker. I hate myself for doing it, but I need to.”

Posted: March 17, 2007 Comments (0)

“EXAMINING THE IMPACT OF GAMBLING ON ELDERLY WOMEN”

C. Rose, R. Williams & G. Nixion University of Lethbridge

———————————————————————
Adapted from the Summary:

Senior women were interviewed in focus groups to gain an
in-depth understanding of their lived experiences with
problem and pathological gambling. In addition they were asked
about their experiences, if any, with treatment for their
problem gambling. The aim was to help design an effective
group intervention for problem/pathological senior women
gamblers.

What They Found:

Several focus groups were held at two senior�s
facilities, as well as two treatment facilities. All of the
participants were 55+ years old. All of the women self-identified as
problem gamblers. Similar to what has been found in
previous research by others, these older women with gambling
problems were identifying that that they felt marginalized, they
had a sense of financial disenfranchisement, and they had
lots of spare time on their hands.

In addition, all the women identified that in addition to
having a problem gambling and they also had another
addiction (in other words, comorbidity).

Their identified addictions were: smoking cigarettes,
alcohol, misuse of prescription medications, and illicit
substances (marijuana, cocaine). Also of significance was that the
majority identified histories of childhood trauma (sexual,
physical and emotional).

In terms of implications for group treatment, all the
women felt that being in women-only groups was of benefit.
Otherwise they would often feel the need to “care take” of
the guys or would be overwhelmed by male participants in
co-ed recovery groups.

The women also identified they needed to learn
self-monitoring skills to avoid the pitfalls of succumbing to resuming
gambling. Of most significant import was the unanimous
request for treatment groups that helped these senior women
resolve their historical trauma.

An article entitled “The At Risk Gambler: Older Adults
Opinions, Perceptions, and Beliefs About Gambling” based on
thevstudy has been submitted to a peer-reviewed journal.

http://www.abgaminginstitute.ualberta.ca/s2.cfm

Posted: March 14, 2007 Comments (0)

Philly - Gamblers (especially oldsters) press their luck as Pa.’s first casino opens

  Gamblers press their luck as Pa.’s first casino opens
  Author:  
  Source: USA Today
  Published: Nov 14, 06
  Full Document:
  WILKES-BARRE, P.A. – Hundreds of gamblers, mostly senior citizens who had been waiting hours, poured into Pennsylvania’s first slot-machine parlor Tuesday, more than two years after lawmakers authorized gambling to raise money for property-tax relief. Eager to try their luck, gamblers occupied most of the casino’s thousand-plus machines in less than 10 minutes, hoping to win big at Wheel of Fortune, Double Diamond and dozens of other games.

Wilkes-Barre car dealership manager Vince Esposito was one of the first to play at Mohegan Sun at Pocono Downs, putting a $20 bill into a Double Powerball machine.

"That’s entertainment," he said as he pushed the button. Beside him, Sharon Chapman of Summit Hill put in $20 and hit for $50 within two minutes.

The Mohegan Indian tribe of Connecticut, owner of the Pocono Downs harness-racing complex outside Wilkes-Barre, spent $70 million on a slots parlor that includes two gambling floors with nearly 1,100 machines, a bar, and a food court with three restaurants.

While the building can’t measure up to the glitz of Las Vegas or Atlantic City, it doesn’t have to. Hundreds showed up early Tuesday, lured by the novelty and convenience of all-hours legalized gambling in Pennsylvania.

"I’m blown away," said Bruce "Two Dogs" Bozsum, chairman of the Mohegan Indian tribal council, which operates the slots parlor, as he surveyed the buzzing casino floor. "Unbelievable."

Many players said they liked the convenience of Mohegan Sun and would go there instead of trekking to New Jersey, New York or Delaware.

Pennsylvania became the 36th state featuring some form of legalized electronic gaming device, including slot machines, video poker and bingo. Florida is scheduled to join the list as early as this week.

Although Gov. Ed Rendell hailed the casino opening as an important first step in delivering property-tax relief, opponents predicted an increase in crime and other social ills.

"I have story after story after story of real people who would not have done the things they did, but gambling became very convenient for them," said Dianne Berlin, head of CasinoFreePa, an anti-gambling group. "Convenience gambling is the worst gambling."

The Pennsylvania Gaming Control Board gave Mohegan Sun permission to open after two successful dry runs on Friday and Sunday nights. The test nights, with an invitation-only crowd, brought in a total of $95,049.

Of that amount, 34%, or $32,317, was set aside for property-tax relief, as prescribed by state law.

The tribe, which operates a gigantic casino in Connecticut and paid $280 million for Pocono Downs in 2004, plans a second phase of development that will nearly double the number of slot machines and add retail shops, a nightclub and other amenities.

When fully operational with 2,000 machines, the slots parlor projects it will gross $230 per machine, per day, for total annual revenues of $167.9 million.

The state plans to use gambling revenues to cut taxes for homeowners and workers who pay Philadelphia’s wage tax, fatten horse-racing purses, and support a rent rebate program for senior citizens.

"We have a brand-new industry in Pennsylvania," said gubernatorial spokeswoman Kate Philips, "and the value of it will be exceedingly evident over the coming months as people begin to get jobs in the gaming industry and over the coming years as they begin to see their property taxes reduced dramatically."

Posted: November 18, 2006 Comments (0)