The NCAA and all four major sports leagues on Monday asked a federal judge to stop New Jersey's sports betting plan in its tracks.
The leagues said the state’s quest to bring sports betting to casinos and racetracks despite a federal ban is a “blatant violation” of a prior court order.
Earlier this month Gov. Chris Christie's office said that as far as state law is concerned, New Jersey casinos and racetracks are free to take sports bets.
The statement came as the state's top attorney told police and prosecutors in a formal directive that sports betting in New Jersey casinos and racetracks is generally legal under state law. People involved in the practice should not be arrested or prosecuted, acting state Attorney General John Hoffman said.
That announcement came after years of grinding court battles between the state -- which hopes sports betting will revive flagging gambling halls -- and the nation's major sports leagues, which say the practice violates a federal ban and taints honest competition by stoking suspicion among fans that bets are affecting games.
The Professional and Amateur Sports Protection Act effectively bans sports betting outside Nevada, Delaware, Montana and Oregon, which received exemptions to maintain sports betting operations in place before Congress enacted the law in 1992.
This story is developing. Check back for details.
Reuben Kramer
The leagues said the state’s quest to bring sports betting to casinos and racetracks despite a federal ban is a “blatant violation” of a prior court order.
Earlier this month Gov. Chris Christie's office said that as far as state law is concerned, New Jersey casinos and racetracks are free to take sports bets.
The statement came as the state's top attorney told police and prosecutors in a formal directive that sports betting in New Jersey casinos and racetracks is generally legal under state law. People involved in the practice should not be arrested or prosecuted, acting state Attorney General John Hoffman said.
That announcement came after years of grinding court battles between the state -- which hopes sports betting will revive flagging gambling halls -- and the nation's major sports leagues, which say the practice violates a federal ban and taints honest competition by stoking suspicion among fans that bets are affecting games.
The Professional and Amateur Sports Protection Act effectively bans sports betting outside Nevada, Delaware, Montana and Oregon, which received exemptions to maintain sports betting operations in place before Congress enacted the law in 1992.
This story is developing. Check back for details.
Reuben Kramer