Pennsylvania Skill said a Beaver County venue operates as a mini-casino with luck-based slots

Pennsylvania gaming company requests crackdown on alleged illegal gambling

Former U.S. Attorney Tom Marino is now vice president of government affairs for Pace-O-Matic’s Pennsylvania Skill. The company is asking lawmakers to pass legislation declaring the skill games legal under state law. 
2020-09-25
Reading time 2:25 min
Pace-O-Matic’s Pennsylvania Skill officials urged police to shut down “illegal mini-casinos” in the state at a news conference Tuesday. They sent Beaver County District Attorney David Lozier a memo detailing allegedly illegal slots found inside the Hopewell Shopping Center. Lozier said it was not a sincere request for a criminal investigation, and that it’s rare his office hears complaints of illegal gambling.

Pennsylvania Skill leadership urged police to crack down on illegal gambling at a Beaver County news conference Tuesday, but local authorities say unlawful gaming operations are “rare” in the county.

Former U.S. Attorney Tom Marino, now vice president of government affairs for Pace-O-Matic’s Pennsylvania Skill, said 777 Video Skill Slots and Keno in the Hopewell Shopping Center operates as a “mini-casino,” earning revenue from “luck-based” slot machines rather than “skill-based” gaming devices, Beaver County Times reports.

“We know it’s illegal because we’ve been inside,” Marino said. "These are slot machines, and slot machines can only be legally operated in casinos sanctioned and licensed by the state. There are hundreds of these illegal machines throughout the region, and thousands in Pennsylvania.”

Pennsylvania Skill’s compliance team, made up of former Pennsylvania State Police troopers and other law enforcement, sent Beaver County District Attorney David Lozier a memo detailing allegedly illegal slots found inside the establishment.

Lozier, though, said he was given just a few hours' notice of the conference. He believes the event was a publicity stunt and not a sincere request for a criminal investigation, noting the Hopewell business is a potential Pennsylvania Skill competitor. State police and the Pennsylvania Gaming Control Board were not aware of the conference, either, according to Lozier. He said determining if a gaming machine is legal can be nuanced and determined by case law. 

“It’s not an easy question,” Lozier said. “I need more than a few hours' notice to investigate a crime. Rather than notifying the investigative agencies, this corporation scheduled a press conference. If they wanted me, or state police, to investigate the crime, they would tell us in advance so we could go in."

Still, Lozier said he is working with investigating agencies to determine whether a crime has been committed at the business. It’s rare his office hears complaints of illegal gambling, he said. The last big Beaver County raid involving illegal gaming was in 2018. 

Pace-O-Matic develops the software for Pennsylvania Skill games often seen in convenience stores and bars. A 2014 Beaver County case ruled Pennsylvania Skill games legal — winning depends more on skill than chance, according to the ruling. A Commonwealth Court decision further reinforced that decision, although Pace-O-Matic is asking lawmakers to pass legislation declaring the skill games legal under state law. 

What separates Pennsylvania Skill games from traditional gambling, according to the company, is the mental progression players must follow before payout. “If you have the patience and the skill, you can win on our machines many times,” said Rick Goodling, compliance supervisor for Pace-O-Matic. “On the illegal games, the game already dictates whether you’re going to win or lose before you even press that button.”

State police have periodically seized Pennsylvania Skill games from taverns, veterans clubs and other businesses as legal ambiguity remains until legislative action is taken. It’s unclear how many traditional slot machines are in use illegally statewide. Pennsylvania Skill leadership is frustrated police are singling out presumably legal gaming at places like fraternal clubs rather than unlicensed “mini-casinos.”

Businesses hosting Pennsylvania Skill games report receiving substantial revenue from the machines, although the Pennsylvania Lottery and state’s casino industry considers the games to be an unfair competitor that uses loopholes to avoid gambling taxes. The difference between traditional slot machines and skill games is sometimes just one tap of the screen, they argue. 

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