W.Va. Set for Sports Betting After SCOTUS Decision, But Integrity Fee Has No Traction in Legislature

Following a U.S. Supreme Court decision today, West Virginia is set to have legal sports betting. State lawmakers passed a bill earlier this year in anticipation of the court’s ruling on a case from New Jersey.

 

Gov. Jim Justice announced last week that he’d reached a deal for casinos to pay a fee to professional sports leagues to help them protect the integrity of their games. Casino operators, however, said the meeting with Justice ended without a deal, and they continue to oppose the fee.

 

A special legislative session is expected to coincide with interim committee meetings this weekend. But Senate President Mitch Carmichael says there’s no interest in the Legislature to address the integrity fee.

 

“We do not see — speaking from the Senate’s perspective — any path towards the state injecting themselves into this private negotiation,” Carmichael said.

 

During the regular legislative session earlier this year, leagues had lobbied unsuccessfully for the fee to be part of the law.

NJ Man Pleads No Contest in WVU Frat Hazing

A Thursday sentencing is set for a New Jersey man who pleaded no contest to hazing at a West Virginia University fraternity.

Michael Sousa entered the plea Tuesday in Monongalia County Magistrate Court.

Prosecutors are recommending a six-month suspended sentence, 48 hours in jail and community service. The defense is asking that Sousa be fined.
 
The 21-year-old from Point Pleasant Beach, New Jersey, was one of three people charged in connection with an incident at the Phi Kappa Psi fraternity on Nov. 15, 2013. Police said a 19-year-old man was physically assaulted and injured while participating in an initiation.
 
Co-defendants Andrew Nemes of Huntington Beach, Calif., and Christopher Lazzell of Morgantown are scheduled to appear in magistrate court on June 23.
 

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