Let’s talk gambling…in Alabama

By Bob Howell – WSFA 12 News Anchor – Montgomery, AL

Here in the WSFA 12 Newsroom, we got the first hint that something was up at Victoryland/Quincy’s 777 early on the evening of Thursday January 29th.  A raid on the state’s largest bingo operation?  Nah.  The Illegal Gambling Task Force had its Supreme Court test case in Lowndes County without taking on Milton McGregor and his attorneys….and a carefully crafted local constitutional amendment saying his bingo is legal.  But the Task Force also had a new, aggressive, hard-nosed, veteran prosecutor – John Tyson.

In the words of Gomer Pyle: “Surprise, surprise, surprise!”

Dozens of State Trooper cars arrived en masse in the middle of the night, ordering patrons to cash out and get out.  But that’s about as far as the raid got.  McGregor was a step ahead of the Task Force.  He was armed with a restraining order which stopped the Troopers dead in their tracks…for now.  Back to Macon County in a moment.

About 120 miles to the south in Houston County, agents moved in on the Country Crossing entertainment center and it’s new bingo pavilion.  They were turned away there, too.  Not by a court order, but some logging chain and a few padlocks around the entrances to the building.  The owners new the Task Force was coming and shut down before the cops could rush the place.  Ronnie Gilley’s lawyers told him it would take a search warrant for the agents to go inside…and they didn’t have one.  Foiled again.

But not so fast.

Within hours of being turned away at the door, Task Force Commander John Tyson was back before the Alabama Supreme Court asking for them to dissolve the restraining order and let the raid begin.  But by midday and into the afternoon, no word from the Court.  Then late in the day, word that the Court had told McGregor’s lawyers to give them all the reasons why the Task Force shouldn’t raid the place…no later than 5 p.m. Monday, February 1st. The Court gave the Task Force until 5 p.m. on Tuesday, February 2nd to answer Victoryland’s filing. 

The Court is expected to have its decision as early as Wednesday, February 3rd. 

So what are the odds the nine justices will turn away the raid?  If you base your answer on their recent decisions regarding electronic bingo, my money’s on the Task Force.  The key element here is the Cornerstone case….the company that built the bingo operation in Whitehall in Lowndes County. State agents shut Whitehall down last year.  The Task Force had the element of surprise on its side back then.  Employees were caught completely off guard as the agents hurriedly ran into the building.  Many of the officers had their weapons drawn….leaving unsuspecting custodians, office workers and security people to do little more than raise their hands and do as they were told.

It was the Cornerstone case that resulted in the Court defining bingo in Alabama.  The justices decided the game is played on a car with a grid of five rows intersecting with five columns…numbers are called one at a time…just like the game you played as a kid. 

The likelihood of a raid at Victoryland increased with a new Alabama Supreme Court ruling released the day of the aborted raids.  In that case, the Court ruled that electronic bingo approved by the Asheville City Council in 2008 violated state law.  The sheriff in St. Clair County had resisted efforts to open bingo operations and had called the governor for help in defeating the plan.  Today, the Court put another legal stake in the heart of electronic bingo with this decision.

What makes you think it will be any different in Macon County?

Before we back the moving vans up to Victoryland’s front door and start loading up the bingo machines, it should be noted that the local constitutional amendment that authorized electronic bingo in Macon County is believed to be more finely crafted than some of the others.  At least one lawyer we talked with says that may be a factor.

Meanwhile in Montgomery…

With the attempted raid, the icy relations between Governor Bob Riley and his one-time friend Attorney General Troy King took a turn for the worse.  The AG politely send a written warning to the governor to consider the consequences of his actions.  The governor fired back that King appeared to be more concerned about the gambling bosses and changing the law…than enforcing what’s on the books. (You can read both their epistles on wsfa.com)

So what’s next?

Anybody’s bet! But right now, I think the money in Vegas would be on the Task Force….but don’t ever count out anybody like Milton McGregor who has hundreds of millions of dollars on the line.

Who is your money on? 

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