Florida Resident Arrested for Serving as Online Poker Payment Processor

A German national residing in Naples, Florida was arrested last month for running online gambling payment processing businesses out of his home. According to the criminal complaint filed in the United States District Court for the Middle District of Florida, 29-year old Michael Olaf Schuett “did knowingly conduct, control, manage, supervise, direct and own an unlicensed money transmitting business.”

In fact, Schuett owns hundreds of business, nine of which are tied to payment processing. Those nine are MCM Capital Management Corp, MI Global Inc., South Naples Escrow Co., Southwest Florida Payroll Co., Woodhouse Systems, Mathew’s Trade Corp., and Internet Payment Services Group Inc. Schuett would receive wire transfers from two companies – the British Bluetool Ltd. and the German International Payment Systems – and would then send cashier’s checks, personal checks, or wires to customers located in the United States and Canada. While the exact composition of Schuett’s customer base is not exactly known, it is presumed that most, if not all, of his customers are online gamblers. UB.com and Absolute Poker are both known to use MCM Capital Management as a payment processor and UB.com was mentioned (as Ultimatebet.com) in the criminal complaint.

It was the suspicion of shipping companies and bank employees that eventually led to Scheutt’s arrest. Examples of activities that raised red flags included:

  • Schuett’s shipping of over 150 FedEx parcels from his home every week. FedEx employees opened some of the packages and discovered that each contained a check.
  • Unusually high volume of wire transfers going in and out of Scheutt’s bank accounts, all with overseas companies.
  • Some bank customers who attempted to cash checks written from an MCM Capital account told bank officials, when asked, that the checks were proceeds from playing online poker.
  • Schuett told employees at one bank he used, Shamrock Bank, that his new account was to assist German nationals in purchasing real estate in Florida. The account’s activity was not consistent with what would normally be associated with real estate transactions.

All told, Schuett filtered millions upon millions of dollars from online gambling companies, through his companies and bank accounts, to customers in North America. An example of the sheer dollar volume involved can be seen with his Bank of America accounts. Since November 1st, 2007, Schuett opened approximately 40 accounts at the large national bank and transferred approximately $70 million in and out of them to about 23,000 customers.

Schuett is specifically charged with violating United States Code Title 18, Section 1960, which in part states, “whoever knowingly conducts, controls, manages, supervises, directs, or owns all or part of an unlicensed money transmitting business, shall be fined in accordance with this title or imprisoned not more than 5 years, or both.”

He is currently being held without bond in Lee County jail. Judge Sheri Polster Chappell denied bond because she believed Schuett could be a flight risk, as his visa expires in April, he is a German citizen, he has no employment in the United States, and one of the few things that might keep someone in the country, a spouse, may not be significant in this case. Schuett has only been married to his wife, 28-year old Jennifer Sherman, for one month and has only known her for nine months.

Naturally, concerns have been raised within the online poker community about what this means for players looking to receive funds from poker rooms. In the long run, many speculate that there will be no negative effect. Other poker rooms have experienced troubles with their payment processors, and while it does create payout delays in the short term, they always find other processors, making things fine in the long term. Perhaps most interesting is the idea that many payment processors that poker players imagine to be “legitimate” companies could really just be individual people receiving money from poker rooms and just mailing checks to players from their own private residences.

Read more >>

Wed, March 10th, 2010

Related Poker News:

Poker lexicon:

  • DOYLE BRUNSON - In Hold'em, 10-2 in the hole. So named because Doyle Brunson won two straight WSOPs (q.v.) in 1975 and 1976 with 10-2 on the last hand. (Suited (spades) in 1975, unsuited in 1976).
  • PAY OFF - Calling a bet with little expectation of winning, unless the opponent is bluffing.
  • STUCK - Down a nontrivial amount of money, as in "he's stuck $800".
  • TIGHT - [1] A style of play that entails playing fewer hands than average. Antonym: LOOSE. [2] A FULL HOUSE.
  • MUCK - [1] A collection of face-down cards near the dealer composed of discards, i.e., folded hands, burns and discards for drawing purposes. [2] To throw one's cards into the muck, thus folding.
  • WORLD SERIES OF POKER - A series of several different poker games with relatively large buy-ins, culminating in a $10,000 buy-in no-limit Hold'em tournament, the winner of which is crowned the World Poker Champion. Sponsored by Binion's Horseshoe Club in Las Vegas.
Archives:
2012
Feb   Jan  
2011
Dec   Nov   Oct   Sep   Aug   Jul   Jun   May   Apr   Mar   Feb   Jan  
2010
Dec   Nov   Oct   Sep   Aug   Jul   Jun   May   Apr   Mar   Feb   Jan  
2009
Dec   Nov   Oct   Sep   Aug   Jul   Jun   May   Apr   Mar   Feb   Jan  
2008
Dec   Nov   Oct   Sep   Aug   Jul   Jun   May   Apr   Mar   Feb   Jan  
2007
Dec   Nov   Oct   Sep   Aug   Jul   Jun   May   Apr   Mar   Feb   Jan  
2006
Dec   Nov   Oct   Sep   Aug   Jul   Jun   May   Apr   Mar   Feb   Jan  
2005
Dec   Nov   Oct   Jan  
Subscribe:
Add our RSS 2.0 Feed to My Yahoo!
Add our RSS 2.0 Feed to Google!
Add our RSS 2.0 Feed to My MSN!
Add our RSS 2.0 Feed to Bloglines!

Search

to Top!
Copyright 2005 - 2012 © PokerNewsHub.com. The information at this site is for entertainment and news purposes only. Poker News Hub.com will not be held for any personal loss of wagers or damages you may incur. Please read the full disclaimer.
For any questions contact us.
Valid XHTML and CSS