Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Gold Medal Sports Article

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Gold Medal Sports Article

    Scamdicapper Jeff Allen gets Stung

    A Wisconsin man and a Nevada resident pleaded guilty Monday to gambling
    charges stemming from their offshore sports bookmaking operation, which took
    in $402.7 million in illegal wagers by phone and through the Internet.
    Federal prosecutors said they have prosecuted similar gambling cases in St.
    Louis and New York City, but "not of this magnitude." Duane Pede, 53, of
    Amherst Junction, and Jeffrey D'Ambrosia (Jeff Allen), 43, of Henderson,
    Nev., told U.S. District Judge Barbara Crabb they owned Gold Medal Sports,
    which was incorporated on the island of Curacao in the Dutch Netherland
    Antilles in August 1996. The gambling operation lasted to April 2000. "I was
    the owner of an international sports book, the purpose of which was
    accepting betting information from customers in the United States," Pede
    told Crabb. "They would call our office in Curacao and their winnings would
    be sent back to the United States." Said D'Ambrosia, "We started an offshore
    gaming company in Curacao and accepted wagers from U.S. citizens."

    Gold Medal Sports, their corporation, pleaded guilty Monday to racketeering
    and agreed to forfeit more than $3.3 million in illegal earnings, while Pede
    and D'Ambrosia, who also is known as Jeff Allen, will pay more than $1.4
    million in back taxes. Gold Medal Sports also must publish a disclaimer in
    USA Today newspaper, disavowing claims of inside information in its sports
    handicapping services. "Sports gambling is illegal everywhere in the United
    States except Las Vegas, whether it's on the Internet, at your neighborhood
    tavern or an offshore book," Assistant U.S. Attorney Tim O'Shea said after
    the hearing. "That's one of the biggest reasons this case was brought, to
    drive that point home." O'Shea added, "Internet sports gaming sites say,
    'legal, legal, legal.' The point of this case is to say it's not legal. It's
    a crime." Pede and D'Ambrosia's customers came from all over the United
    States, O'Shea said.

    Pede and D'Ambrosia were released on their own recognizance. They will be
    sentenced Feb. 26.

    Pede and D'Ambrosia pleaded guilty to violating the Wire Wagering Act, for
    which they face a maximum penalty of two years in prison, a $250,000 fine
    and a one-year term of supervised release. Each man also pleaded guilty to
    filing a false 1998 federal income tax return, for which they face up to
    three years in prison, a $250,000 fine and three years of supervised
    release. As part of their plea agreement, Pede and D'Ambrosia will cooperate
    with authorities in any other gambling cases, pay the maximum fine and pay
    $1,429,565 in back taxes.

    O'Shea and lead prosecutor Dan Graber said that through Gold Medal Sports
    the men mailed brochures to U.S. residents advertising the corporation's
    sports book services and soliciting wagers to be made via calls to Curacao.
    The brochures were published by a company owned by Pede and D'Ambrosia. The
    brochures often went out in tandem with mailings from Stevens Point for one
    of four handicapper services: Jeff Allen Sports, Mike Wynn Sports, Razor
    Sharp Sports and Dan Pastorini Sports, also owned by Pede and D'Ambrosia.
    But Mike Wynn and Sam Sharp were fictitious people, and the "picks"
    attributed to them actually were made by the defendants, the government said
    in a criminal information.

    Former NFL quarterback Dan Pastorini, who played for the then-Los Angeles
    Raiders and the Houston Oilers, was paid by one of the defendants' companies
    to pose for pictures and make some radio appearances but was never involved
    in any sports handicapping, it said. "They falsely depicted Dan Pastorini as
    a source of information for winning picks because of his network of contacts
    in the NFL and sporting world," it said.

    Their sports-betting empire began to totter on Oct. 27, 1999, when an
    Internal Revenue Service agent placed a sports wager over the phone from
    Beloit to Curacao for $1,000. The agent bet that the Green Bay Packers would
    beat the Seattle Seahawks by more than five points on Nov. 1, 1999. Under
    the Wire Wagering Act, it is a felony to operate a gambling business and
    accept sports wagers over the phone or Internet from U.S. customers. The
    criminal information against Gold Medal Sports alleged that Pede and
    D'Ambrosia owned another company, Sports Spectrum, which had offices in Las
    Vegas, where D'Ambrosia worked, and in Nelsonville, Wis., where Pede worked.
    For a fee, Sports Spectrum allegedly provided up-to-the-minute betting lines
    for sporting events over the phone and sold guaranteed winning picks on
    events over the phone using one of the four handicapper services. It also
    allegedly offered sports betting and online casino gambling through Gold
    Medal Sports and yet another company, called Seven Palms Casino. Sports
    Spectrum allegedly supplied Internet access through still another company,
    Sports Spectrum Internet Services. "Bettors need to know it is against the
    law to place sports bets with offshore sports books," U.S. Attorney Grant
    Johnson said.

  • #2
    The old paradise casino was owned by super tout Jack Price and went through similiar problems........

    Comment


    • #3
      I hear they turned over the customer list. I'm glad I never played at Gold Medal! They ask every book busted to turn over the customer lists. I wonder how many have? Paradise, as Jeff mentioned, ESB, Gold Medal, 21st Century, plus all the ones from 1998 with Jay Cohen. Makes you think.

      Comment


      • #4
        These guys had it coming to them. After all the guys they scammed over the years, I won't shed any tears.

        Comment


        • #5
          Does anybody know what paper or website this story is from?

          Comment


          • #6
            It was on the wires so it has appeared in many different newspapers. This is actually a case that many knew was ongoing for a couple of years now. Here's one of the links to a news paper article out of Wisconsin:

            http://www.jsonline.com/news/state/dec01/gamble04120301a.asp

            Comment


            • #7
              and the article.....

              2 plead guilty to U.S. charges over Internet sports betting

              By MEG JONES
              of the Journal Sentinel staff
              Last Updated: Dec. 3, 2001

              A Wisconsin man and a Nevada man who operated an Internet sports betting site from a Caribbean island that handled as much as $400 million in bets over four years pleaded guilty Monday in federal court in Madison to gambling and tax charges.

              It's the first Internet gambling case in federal court in Wisconsin to end in convictions.

              The pair ran Gold Medal Sports, which took bets by phone and the Internet from August 1996 to April 2000 and was based on Curacao in the Netherlands Antilles.

              Gold Medal Sports advertising brochures mailed from Stevens Point to would-be customers included information about four sports handicapping services. But it turned out that two of the people advertised as handicappers, Mike Wynn and Steve Sharp, didn't exist, according to documents filed in U.S. District Court.

              Duane Pede, 52, of Amherst Junction and Jeff D'Ambrosia, 42, of Henderson, Nev., agreed to pay more than $1.4 million in back taxes. Gold Medal Sports is to forfeit $3.3 million in earnings.

              Sentencing was scheduled for Feb. 26.

              Just how many people gambled on sports games and lost money by getting advice from non-existent handicappers through services run by Pede and D'Ambrosia is unknown, U.S. Attorney Grant Johnson said.

              It's a lot of money wagered, "but you don't know how much of that money was based on false statements," Johnson said. "It's all illegal. Part of the indictments were them making false statements on the strength of their knowledge."

              The case was part of a three-year investigation into illegal offshore sports bookmaking and sports handicapping telemarketing services, according to authorities. An undercover agent from the Internal Revenue Service in Beloit called Gold Medal Sports in Curacao to place a $1,000 bet on the Green Bay Packers to beat the Seattle Seahawks by more than five points on Nov. 1, 1999.

              This was a violation of the federal Wire Wagering Act, which makes it a felony to operate a gambling business and accept sports wagers over the phone or the Internet from customers in the United States, according to authorities. The undercover agent lost his wager; the Seahawks won that Monday night, 27-7.

              Although it might sound unusual for someone in the small central Wisconsin community of Amherst Junction, 15 miles southeast of Stevens Point, to be involved in such a case, a sports gambling business is relatively easy to operate. All that's needed is an Internet server, authorities said.

              "Once you get the server, you can send and receive messages. You can be anywhere," Johnson said.

              Attorney General James Doyle, former chairman of a national committee on Internet gaming, said the case spotlights the problems of gambling in cyberspace.

              "Over the Internet, you have no idea who you're dealing with on the other side of the Web site," Doyle said. "You have somebody claiming they're giving you accurate information when they're just making up the picks."

              Johnson said authorities will continue investigating Gold Medal Sports with the hope of filing indictments against others involved in the business.

              Stephen Morgan of Madison, attorney for Gold Medal Sports, declined to comment on the case. Pede's attorney, Steve Hurley of Madison, did not return a phone message for comment. Neither did D'Ambrosia's attorney, Richard Wright of Las Vegas.

              Pede and D'Ambrosia pleaded guilty to violating the Wire Wagering Act and filing a false federal income tax return because they failed to let the IRS know that they had foreign bank accounts.

              Gold Medal Sports, whose majority stockholders are Pede and D'Ambrosia, pleaded guilty to racketeering and criminal asset forfeiture. As part of the plea agreement, Gold Medal Sports agreed to publish a disclaimer in USA Today saying it has no inside information in its sports handicapping services.

              According to the indictment, Pede and D'Ambrosia solicited customers through false advertising to call one of their four handicapper services for guaranteed winning picks on sports events. Once someone called one of the handicapping services, sales representatives tried to sell weekly or monthly winning-pick packages to customers.

              Two of the handicappers were fictitious and were actually Pede and D'Ambrosia, picking the outcomes of games, the indictment says. One of the handicapping services was called Dan Pastorini Sports, but the former National Football League quarterback did not handicap games and was paid only to pose for pictures and make radio appearances, according to court records.

              According to authorities, the false advertising was from Pede and D'Ambrosia, who claimed that Pastorini and the two fictitious handicappers had "contacts at the stadium," "confirmed unpublished injury information" and "privileged team information" that guaranteed winning picks.

              Comment


              • #8
                Move It on Up

                Comment


                • #9
                  I was doing some research on Pastorini's involvment awhile back for an article on ex-NFL players turned sports touts. I found a press release on the Department of Justice website concerning the case. Do a search on any of the relevant parties on the major search engines and you'll find all kinds of coverage.

                  JRM
                  THE PROPHET
                  www.netprophetsports.com
                  Affordable, successful and honest handicapping of all major sports and most minor sports.

                  www.netprophetsports.com

                  Comment

                  Working...
                  X