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Phil Ivey loses $12,400,000 lawsuit against Crockfords Casino

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Garfed   Malta. Oct 08 2014 18:00. Posts 4818

Well, it didn't take long for the judge to rule on the case: the verdict was expected next week at earlier, and we already know today that Phil Ivey lost the case against Crockfords Casino for £7.7 million($12.4mln).

High Court Judge Mr Justice Mitting ruled against the poker pro, despite calling him a "truthful witness", after he admitted to using a technique called "edge sorting".

Judge explained the reasoning behind his decision: "He gave himself an advantage which the game precludes," Mitting said, according to Bloomberg Businessweek. “This is in my view cheating.”

Ivey commented: "I am pleased that the judge acknowledged in court that I was a truthful witness. I believe that what we did was a legitimate strategy and we did nothing more than exploit Crockfords' failures to take proper steps to protect themselves against a player of my ability. Clearly today the judge did not agree."

A spokesman for the casino said: "Crockfords is pleased with the judgment of the High Court today supporting its defence of a claim by Mr Ivey. It is our policy not to discuss our clients' affairs in public and we very much regret that proceedings were brought against us."

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 Last edit: 08/10/2014 18:00

asdf2000   United States. Oct 08 2014 18:32. Posts 7690

I think I am the only person on this site that agrees with the judge. Not that I would feel bad for the casino if they lost.

Grindin so hard, Im smashin pussies left and right. 

K40Cheddar   United States. Oct 08 2014 18:48. Posts 2202

Still think the casino is responsible for how the game is dealt and the cards they use and should never even allow that to happen.

GG 

RaiNKhAN    United States. Oct 08 2014 19:11. Posts 4080

iveys pr guy comment: "I am pleased that the judge acknowledged in court that I was a truthful witness. I believe that what we did was a legitimate strategy and we did nothing more than exploit Crockfords' failures to take proper steps to protect themselves against a player of my ability. Clearly today the judge did not agree."

iveys comment: + Show Spoiler +

The biggest Rockets, Sixers, and Grizzlies fan you will ever meet! 

NewbSaibot   United States. Oct 08 2014 23:53. Posts 4943

So players arent allowed to have an edge at the casino, got it.

bye now 

awesomeguy   Finland. Oct 09 2014 00:54. Posts 61

Agreed with the judge. Just because youre Phil Ivey doesnt mean you are allowed to cheat.


Baalim   Mexico. Oct 09 2014 02:42. Posts 34246


  On October 08 2014 17:32 asdf2000 wrote:
I think I am the only person on this site that agrees with the judge. Not that I would feel bad for the casino if they lost.



Yes you are, and for a reason.

The casino offers a wager and they are the ones responsible to make sure they arent being taken advantage of, if you have a shitty roulette you dont confiscate peoples winnings just because it wasnt as random as you thought it was, thats pretty much their only fucking job, basically you are saying that they can offer any wager and if their games have any wholes they simply can take their losses back for fucks sake.

Ex-PokerStars Team Pro Online 

austrian oak   Belgium. Oct 09 2014 07:43. Posts 520

The house always wins

Valor pleases you, Crom... so grant me one request. Grant me revenge! And if you do not listen, then to HELL with you! 

devon06atX   Canada. Oct 09 2014 10:02. Posts 5458


  On October 08 2014 22:53 NewbSaibot wrote:
So players arent allowed to have an edge at the casino, got it.

And you're only realising this now? I mean.. c'mon.

Does it also surprise you that government-run lotto's also always have the edge?

edit - didn't mean to sound dickish, just legitimately curious how/why you (or anyone) find this odd.

 Last edit: 09/10/2014 10:09

NMcNasty    United States. Oct 09 2014 10:35. Posts 2039


  On October 09 2014 09:02 devon06atX wrote:
edit - didn't mean to sound dickish, just legitimately curious how/why you (or anyone) find this odd.



Because you legally are allowed to have an edge at a casino. There have been several court cases brought up that determined that card counting in blackjack is perfectly legal, although the casino also has the right to bar you from playing there (but they don't have the right to withhold winnings).

So IMO, the question becomes "What did Ivey do that is so different than card counting?" The answer given is that he manipulated the deck by deceiving the dealer into thinking that the cards were turned around due to superstition. So basically, Ivey "cheated" without using any sort of cheating device or physically manipulating the cards in any way. He merely made requests that the casino willingly granted. So yeah, given that all his requests are legal in themselves, and given that its not illegal in itself to have an edge on the casino, I'm having trouble finding how Ivey broke the law here. And if he didn't break the law, how is the casino allowed to withhold his funds.


NMcNasty    United States. Oct 09 2014 10:49. Posts 2039


  On October 09 2014 09:44 RaSZi wrote:
If they rule this people who get thrown out for counting cards in blackjack should be able to sue casinos lol



If they don't get their money back they can.

Edit: at least in the US anyway, admittedly its possible British law works differently.

 Last edit: 09/10/2014 10:51

fira   United States. Oct 09 2014 11:17. Posts 6345

"He gave himself an advantage which the game precludes,"
preclude: verb (used with object) to prevent the presence, existence, or occurrence of; make impossible

clearly it wasn't impossible if ivey pulled it off, so what the fuck does that even mean?


asdf2000   United States. Oct 09 2014 11:21. Posts 7690


  On October 09 2014 01:42 Baalim wrote:
Show nested quote +



Yes you are, and for a reason.

The casino offers a wager and they are the ones responsible to make sure they arent being taken advantage of, if you have a shitty roulette you dont confiscate peoples winnings just because it wasnt as random as you thought it was, thats pretty much their only fucking job, basically you are saying that they can offer any wager and if their games have any wholes they simply can take their losses back for fucks sake.


Your example is off. Them having a shitty roulette requires no extra actions on your part to win. If you spin and win because their roulette table was off you are still playing within the spirit of the rules.

I think everyone here can agree that Ivey was cheating. At least, I hope so.

You come into a casino knowing you are playing by their rules. So complaining about the casino always having an edge is funny to me. Ivey tried to cheat and got caught. I don't see how anything else in the case matters other than that.

If their games have holes that you have to cheat to win at then yeah, they should be able to get that money back, because you cheated.

Grindin so hard, Im smashin pussies left and right. 

asdf2000   United States. Oct 09 2014 11:24. Posts 7690


  On October 09 2014 09:35 NMcNasty wrote:
Show nested quote +



Because you legally are allowed to have an edge at a casino. There have been several court cases brought up that determined that card counting in blackjack is perfectly legal, although the casino also has the right to bar you from playing there (but they don't have the right to withhold winnings).

So IMO, the question becomes "What did Ivey do that is so different than card counting?" The answer given is that he manipulated the deck by deceiving the dealer into thinking that the cards were turned around due to superstition. So basically, Ivey "cheated" without using any sort of cheating device or physically manipulating the cards in any way. He merely made requests that the casino willingly granted. So yeah, given that all his requests are legal in themselves, and given that its not illegal in itself to have an edge on the casino, I'm having trouble finding how Ivey broke the law here. And if he didn't break the law, how is the casino allowed to withhold his funds.


What Ivey did is go outside of the intended boundaries of the game, imo. Card counting isn't cheating - it's just being really fucking good.

Your argument is a very good one though, and I have trouble disagreeing with it if I was the judge. But I do think that morally Ivey is in the wrong, not the right.

Grindin so hard, Im smashin pussies left and right.Last edit: 09/10/2014 11:28

NMcNasty    United States. Oct 09 2014 11:40. Posts 2039


  On October 09 2014 10:24 asdf2000 wrote:
What Ivey did is go outside of the intended boundaries of the game, imo. Card counting isn't cheating - it's just being really fucking good.



Card-counting isn't within an "intended boundary of the game" either though. Its not like there's a singular person dreaming up games and how they're intended to be played. These are just traditional games casinos offer and governments sign off on. Cheating, in a court of law, at least in my mind, should be very simple. Its when you break the rules. Not imaginary possible rules that might or might not exist under an invisible "honourable contract", but hard rules that are easily identified with written law.


NMcNasty    United States. Oct 09 2014 11:48. Posts 2039


  On October 09 2014 10:24 asdf2000 wrote:
But I do think that morally Ivey is in the wrong, not the right.



I'm not really going to disagree with you there, but I feel this is different than being legally wrong or in the right. IMO on the legal scale there should be only two levels of cheating:

not cheating
cheating

But on the moral scale there's more like 3 or more levels:

1. perfectly legal moral play
2. angle shooting
3. cheating

I feel like its pretty easy for 1,2, and 3 to be blurred here. IMO Ivey falls into category 2. In 2 you can be playing outside the "spirit" or "contract" of the game but still be playing legally.


NMcNasty    United States. Oct 09 2014 12:05. Posts 2039

All of this ties in well with this thread: http://www.liquidpoker.net/poker-forum/1116574/civil_asset_forfeiture.html


Nitewin   United States. Oct 09 2014 12:10. Posts 1539

+1 on the intellect of LP'ers.

I agree with NMcNasty.


asdf2000   United States. Oct 09 2014 12:15. Posts 7690

yeah I do have to agree with everything he has said. I think that it's really an interesting case.

Grindin so hard, Im smashin pussies left and right. 

Santafairy   Korea (South). Oct 09 2014 13:16. Posts 2225


  On October 09 2014 10:21 asdf2000 wrote:
Show nested quote +



Your example is off. Them having a shitty roulette requires no extra actions on your part to win. If you spin and win because their roulette table was off you are still playing within the spirit of the rules.

I think everyone here can agree that Ivey was cheating. At least, I hope so.

You come into a casino knowing you are playing by their rules. So complaining about the casino always having an edge is funny to me. Ivey tried to cheat and got caught. I don't see how anything else in the case matters other than that.

If their games have holes that you have to cheat to win at then yeah, they should be able to get that money back, because you cheated.


what if you had actively tracked the biases of the roulette wheels?

It seems to be not very profitable in the long run to play those kind of hands. - Gus Hansen 

 
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