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... always been prosecuted as if they were illegal in the United States. Notwithstanding state and fe... UIGEA, the Illegal Gambling Business Act of 1970 ('IGBA'), 18 U.S.C. § 1955,"22 or any of the othe...
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... groups: E.g., §1955(b) defines an illegal gambling business as one that involves five or mor... part of the Organized Crime Control Act of 1970, 84 Stat. 922, defines an illegal gambling busines...
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..., the Thirteenth Amendment (making slavery illegal), the Fourteenth Amendment (defining and granting ... a single corporation to engage in the business of slaughtering cattle. In determining whether thi... legislation suppressing prostitution or gambling will be upheld by the Court as within the police ..., Burden of Proof, and Presumptions .-In 1970, the Court held in In re Winship that the due pr...
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...'illegal in all instances under [U.S.] Law.'" (31) The new ... technology to or establishing a business in a country known to violate intellectual propert...), and the Illegal Gambling Business Act of 1970, 18 U.S.C. [section] 1955 (2008) [hereinafter Ille...
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This monograph is a case study of newspaper competition in New Hampshire between the province's official newspaper and an upstart Whig challenger in the period marked by contention over the Stamp Act (1765-1766) and over the tight oligarchical reign of the Wentworth family. The case study is grounded in the civic republican tradition articulated by Bernard Bailyn and Gordon Wood as well as the revisionist scholarship since the 1960s that takes the role of the "little people" seriously. It maintains that the competition between the two newspapers contributed to, and opened up, the public spaces in Portsmouth, New Hampshire, to a wider compass than might have been predicted if one follows the standard Habermasian argument for the develop of a bourgeois public sphere. In part, these more d...
...Jere Danieli (1970, 53-54), the foremost historian of the New Hampshi... where he had once run an export-import business, Wentworth secured loans from British merchants un... mores, Langdon had long believed that gambling, dancing, and inter- est in the theater among the ... than by one's assembly unconstitutional, illegal, and unjust. Their publication emboldened other as...
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... . In an illegal lottery run by respondent Santos, runners took com... JUSTICE STEVENS concluded that revenue a gambling business uses to pay essential operating expenses ... . I . From the 1970's until 1994, respondent Santos operated a lottery...
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... based on the reason the conduct is made illegal. Moreover, §48 applies to any depicti...Respondent Robert J. Stevens ran a business, “Dogs of Velvet and Steel,” and an associated... American dogfights from the 1960’s and 1970’s. 2 A third video, Catch Dogs and Country Living, ... of the videos themselves, but from the gambling revenue they take in from the fights; the videos ...
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... VIII of the Organized Crime Control Act of 1970. 18 U.S.C. Secs. 1511, 1955 (1971); Act of October... prohibits conspiracies to facilitate an illegal gambling business by means of the obstruction of t...
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...And, of course, illegal gambling persisted. Bennett Liebman, a leading aut... York to finance public works, private business initiatives, and even church construction and repa... York City was passed in the legislature in 1970 after decades of advocacy by city leaders. (92) Ch...
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...The gambling games are open to the public and are played predom... 280 or by the Organized Crime Control Act of 1970 (OCCA). Pp. 207-214. (a) In Pub. L. 280, the prim... standard is simply whether the gambling business is being operated in "violation of the law of a St..., directs, or owns all or part of an illegal gambling business shall be fined not more that $20...