Calif. Democrat criticizes lottery's 'weak case'

Jul 8, 2005, 2:51 pm (12 comments)

Mega Millions

The state lottery said Thursday it would continue selling Mega Millions tickets as it fights an anti-gambling group's lawsuit that seeks an immediate shutdown on the grounds the multi-state game is unconstitutional in California.

But a state senator said an uphill legal battle ultimately could cost schools hundreds of millions of dollars and permanently damage the lottery's reputation.

"The lottery is going into court with a fairly weak case," said state Sen. Dean Florez, a Bakersfield-area Democrat who held an emergency hearing to try to head off the June 22 launch of Mega Millions.

"Rather than seeking the statutory authority needed to enter into a multi-state game like the 11 other Mega Millions participating states, the lottery commissioners and acting director took a big gamble, although the overwhelming evidence demonstrated it was illegal," Florez said.

The voter-approved state Lottery Act of 1984 was written by a scratch-off ticket maker in lotto's infancy and before multi-state lotteries. The Legislature's attorneys say the constitutional amendment authorizes games only within California's borders. The state attorney general ruled otherwise.

Nicholas Roxborough, an attorney for the California Coalition Against Gambling Expansion that sued for

an injunction in a Sacramento court Wednesday, said California voters "should have the right to determine whether or not participation in this multi-state venture serves the interests of California's education system and citizens."

The Lottery Act also can be amended by a two-thirds vote of the Legislature. Officials, who launched the game to boost sales and contributions to schools, said they were prepared to deal with the lawsuit as they continue Mega Millions sales. "It's business as usual," said lottery spokeswoman Rosa Escutia.

The coalition's lawsuit also alleges lottery officials rushed approval of the game in California, without proper scrutiny. Lottery officials deny that.

In Mega Millions, players pay $1 to pick six numbers from 1 to 52 to match those drawn twice weekly. Bets in California are pooled with the 11 existing Mega Millions states.

Alameda Times-Star

Comments

LOTTOMIKE's avatarLOTTOMIKE

they already have a lottery in california so why are all these anti- gambling groups so worried about mega millions for.even if mega millions isn't there those people still have plenty of other games to choose from.....

qutgnt

CANT WE USE COMMON SENSE IN THIS WORLD? ?  Red tape this and red tape that.  The Democrats are the ones who will waste the taxpayers money with this lawsuit and cost the schools the millions in the end.

CASH Only

CA belongs in Mega Millions.

LOTTOMIKE's avatarLOTTOMIKE

I Agree!

CASH Only

I Agree! I Agree!

Just6ntlc

I disagree and hope CA wins the lawsuit and not have Mega Millions anymore.

mrmst's avatarmrmst

Just6ntic - you are listed as from Concord, CA - I would be interested in knowing why you disagree and would like to see Mega Millions stop selling in CA.

Todd's avatarTodd

My guess would be that Just6ntlc is either a Democrat who is supporting his party's wacko position on this, or is just trolling the forums (one who posts something just to be argumentative and pick fights).

My reasoning is that Just6ntlc has previously posted very positive messages about Mega Millions, so this is not consistent with those previous messages:

 

mrmst's avatarmrmst


Todd - After checking the previous messages I see what you mean.  Does sound like the wacko democratic position.

LOTTOMIKE's avatarLOTTOMIKE

I Agree!

CASH Only

I Agree! I Agree!

LOTTOMIKE's avatarLOTTOMIKE

do you think arnold is doing a good job?

End of comments
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