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Article published Oct 29, 2003
Think tank: Tribe can offer video gambling
machines
PAMELA HAMILTON
Associated
Press
COLUMBIA -- There is no current state law barring the
Catawba Indian Nation from operating video gambling machines on reservation
land, according to an attorney hired by a conservative think tank.Some elected
officials in South Carolina say a state law that banned the games three years
ago covers the Catawbas.But a new report by the South Carolina Policy Council
finds that only a change in state law can prohibit the tribe from operating
video gambling machines on federally regulated lands.A 1993 settlement agreement
reached with the state allows the Catawbas to operate video gambling machines
even in counties where it is prohibited, Greenville attorney Wallace K. Lightsey
wrote in an analysis prepared last month for the group."There would be a
substantThe Policy Council asked Lightsey, who it described as "a noted legal
scholar," to look at the issue after an attorney for the Catawbas said the tribe
could bring video gambling to its Rock Hill bingo hall, said Policy Council
President Ed McMullen.Lightsey's analysis does not carry the force of law, but
it does show that video gambling poses an imminent threat, McMullen said.Even if
Lightsey's analysis is on target, the Catawbas operating video gambling on the
reservation in Rock Hill is still not nearly as threatening as the tribe
locating a "huge casino operation" in Orangeburg County, said state Sen. Wes
Hayes, R-Rock Hill."I don't think we should allow the Catawbas to have a huge
casino operation down in Santee in return for an agreement by them not to have
video poker on the reservation in York County," Hayes said. He also said the
1993 agreement with the Catawbas require them to operate any video gambling in
compliance with state law.The Catawbas are seeking to build a bingo hall in
Santee off I-95 where the tribe could offer unlimited jackpots, employ as many
as 1,000 people and operate 24 hours a day, seven days a week.The tribe has run
into opposition from some elected officials and residents who worry the hall
could pave the way to casino gambling.Jay Bender, an attorney for the tribe, has
said the Catawbas could pursue video gambling operations to make up revenue lost
since the state began operating a lottery and relaxed rules for other bingo
halls, undercutting the competitive advantage guaranteed to the tribe a decade
ago.Catawba Chief Gilbert Blue did not immediately return phone calls seeking
comment Tuesday.Hayes and Republican Gov. Mark Sanford are unconvinced that the
law permits video gambling on reservation land. The 1993 settlement permits
video gambling only "to the same extent that the devices are authorized by state
law.""As far as the governor's concerned, it's not a question of what one lawyer
says versus another," Sanford spokesman Will Folks said. "It's a question of
what the law says. Clearly, the law says video poker's illegal in South
Carolina."Lightsey calls arguments based on that part of the settlement
"superficial." Nothing in the law banning video gambling specifically repeals
the video gambling authority granted to the Catawbas in the 1993 agreement,
Lightsey writes.Keeping the Catawbas from operating video gambling machines may
not be as simple as modifying the agreement. The state might be held legally
liable even for making changes to the agreement, said Rep. James Smith,
D-Columbia, who said the state should get an official opinion from the state
attorney general's office.