New York Times
(8.23.07).
With long blond hair reaching his shoulders and dozens of cloth
bracelets peeking out from under his sleeves, Mark E. Mendel hardly conjures up
the image of a typical lawyer.
But then there is nothing run-of-the-mill about the case that Mr.
Mendel, a Texan who was born and raised in Southern California, has been waging
against his own government before the World Trade Organization, the body in
The dispute stretches back to 2003, when Mr. Mendel first persuaded
officials in Antigua and Barbuda, a tiny nation in the
Caribbean with a population of around 70,000, to instigate a trade complaint
against the United States, claiming its ban against Americans gambling over the
Internet violated Antigua and Barbuda’s rights as a member of the W.T.O.
Antigua is best known to Americans for its pristine beaches and
tourist attractions like historic
More than a few people in
But a W.T.O. panel ruled against the
That has placed the
Complying with the W.T.O. ruling, Professor Jackson said, would
require Congress and the Bush administration either to reverse course and
permit Americans to place bets online legally with offshore casinos or, equally
unlikely, impose an across-the-board ban on all forms of Internet gambling —
including the online purchase of lottery tickets, participation in Web-based
pro sports fantasy leagues and off-track wagering on horse racing.
But not complying with the decision presents big problems of its own
for
For the W.T.O. itself, the decision is equally fraught with peril. It
cannot back down because that would undermine its credibility with the rest of
the world. But if it actually carries out the penalties, it risks a political
backlash in the
“Think of this from the W.T.O.’s point of view,” said Charles R.
Nesson, a professor at
In April 2005, the trade body gave the United States one year to
comply with its ruling, but that deadline passed with little more than a
statement from Washington that it had reviewed its laws and decided it has been
in compliance all along. The case is now before an arbitration body charged
with assessing damages.
“The stakes here are enormous,” Professor Nesson said.
If anything, the Bush administration raised those stakes in May when
it announced it was removing gambling services from existing trade agreements.
John K. Veroneau, a deputy trade representative, said that the federal
government was only “clarifying our view” that it had never meant to include
online gambling in any free trade agreements.
“It is truly untenable to think that we would knowingly bargain away
something that has been illegal for decade upon decade in this country,” Mr.
Veroneau said, adding that
The W.T.O. allowed that
“
One reason for all the interest is the David-and-Goliath aspect of the
case. Another is that the dispute, as the trade organization’s first to deal
with the Internet, is likely to serve as a major precedent in establishing
rules of commerce in an online age and dealing with such prickly issues as
China’s attempts to block online content it finds offensive.
Yet another reason the fraternity of trade lawyers and experts are so
closely watching the case, Mr. Van Den Hende said, is “that the
“One day they’re out there saying how scandalous it is that
It’s not clear that Mr. Mendel knew just how much of a hornet’s nest
he would stir up with this case. But he certainly seems to be enjoying the
attention.
In 2002, Mr. Mendel — who does not gamble and knew little about
international trade — was little more than a corporate lawyer in El Paso
specializing in securities law. His law partner, though, was friends with Jay
Cohen, an operator of an offshore sports betting operation in
“I had not done any trade law whatsoever, but for whatever reason this
issue really struck my curiosity,” Mr. Mendel said. Beyond the intellectual
challenge, the case also offered the prospect of a set of deep-pocketed clients
— the online casinos doing business out of
So Mr. Mendel, 51, who recently moved his family and his practice to
Washington responded to Antigua’s complaint by claiming it was within
its rights to seek to block online gambling on moral grounds, just as any
Muslim country would be within its rights under international trade agreements
to ban the import of alcoholic beverages. The W.T.O. rejected this argument as
inconsistent with American policy.
The general rule in the world of international trade agreements is
that a country must treat foreign goods and services in the same manner as it
treats domestic ones. The United States, the trade body found, permits online wagering
through sites like Youbet.com, a
publicly traded company that allows visitors to place bets at horse racing
tracks around the globe.
And, of course, some form of casino gambling is legal in more than 30
states, and even local governments advertise gambling services when states
encourage people to buy a lottery ticket.
“This isn’t a case of forcing gambling on a population that has
decided they don’t like it,” Mr. Mendel said. “This is the world’s biggest
consumer and exporter of gambling services trying to prohibit a small country
from developing its economy by offering these same services. And we find that
deeply hypocritical.”
Indeed, despite all the obstacles Washington has imposed, including
making it a crime for banks and credit card companies to handle Internet
gambling payments, millions of Americans still manage to play poker and place
sports bets online. Many more would certainly do so if the obstacles were
removed.
The
“Compensation is not a check in the mail,” Professor Jackson of
To get around that limitation,
Only once has the trade organization done so, with
“This is all new territory,” said Simon Lester, who worked in the
appeals unit of the W.T.O. before helping to found WorldTradeLaw.net,
which provides legal analysis of trade law disputes.
Mr. Lester expects Hollywood, the music industry and software makers
like Microsoft
to press
“But the question,” he said, “is whether that would be enough to make
Congress do something.”