U.S. DoJ Releases Funds from One PokerStars Account
In a “Stipulation and Order” document filed this past Friday, September 2nd, in the United States District Court of the Southern District of New York, the U.S. Department of Justice (DoJ), has agreed to release an unspecified amount of previously seized funds back to PokerStars.
The funds were seized as part of the $3 billion civil case against PokerStars, Full Tilt Poker, and Absolute Poker stemming from the indictments of those companies’ principals and payment processors on April 15th, now known in the poker community as “Black Friday.” The money released is from an account numbered 272010 in Bank Hapoalim (Suisse) SA, located in Luxembourg, listed on page 2, Schedule A of the original civil complaint as being in the name of Sphene International, a PokerStars payment processor. PokerStars has been given the green light to use all of the funds in the account except for $5.5 million which was earned from United States customers. As stated in the document:
“WHEREAS, the Government and PokerStars have reached an agreement pursuant to which PokerStars consents to the restraint of $5.5 million in the Account for the pendency of the above captioned case, and the Government agrees that it does not object to PokerStars’ use of the remaining funds in that account;”
The agreement will remain in place until the civil case ends or a “Superseding Order” is handed down, instructing otherwise.
This is not the only Sphene account held at Bank Hapoalim. The civil case refers to “all accounts held at Bank Hapoalim…” which would lead one to believe that there were multiple accounts at that institution. No reason has been given for the return of the funds to PokerStars, though it couldn’t hurt that PokerStars has been cooperative with the DoJ since Black Friday. Unlike Full Tilt Poker, which has not refunded a single penny of its former customers’ money, PokerStars has accommodated U.S. players, allowing them to withdraw their deposited funds. It helps that PokerStars is still operational, whereas Full Tilt had its online gaming license suspended by the Alderney Gambling Control Commission and has been out of business since late June.
PokerStars still ranks as the world’s largest online poker room or network for cash games, according to PokerScout.com. With a seven day average of 24,600 cash game players, it dwarfs the next largest entity, Playtech’s iPoker Network, which boasts 4,150 cash game players. Both PokerStars.it and PokerStars.fr, PokerStars’ Italian and French-facing rooms, respectively, also rank in the top ten. PokerStars.it is fourth with a seven day average of 2,300 cash game players, while PokerStars.fr ranks seventh with 1,800.
Related Online Poker News:
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- PokerStars Announces LAPT Mexico Completion Plans
- Forbes: $24 Million in Bodog Funds Seized - Bodog Responds
- Neteller signs agreement on US player funds with DoJ
- PokerStars Organizes China Earthquake Relief Fund
- NETeller Confirms Funds Seized by FBI
- The Future of U.S.-Facing Poker Sites & the Safety of Funds
- Neteller confirms funds seizures
- Net-betting crackdown freezes funds
- The Nightly Turbo: Funds Confiscated in Bahamas, Ladbrokes Makes Big Purchase, and More
- NETeller’s Frozen Funds Returned to Online Poker Players
- NETeller Announces US Distribution Plan For Frozen Funds
Poker talk:
- ACTION - Money that is being bet. "NO ACTION" means a hand or game has few bettors and fewer raisers. "Gimme some action" is ostensibly a plea for calls and raises.
- STUCK - Down a nontrivial amount of money, as in "he's stuck $800".
- REPRESENT - Implying, by one's betting style, that one has a particular hand.
- QUARTER - [1] Twenty-five dollars, often symbolized by a green casino chip. [2] To divide half a pot between two tying hands. In split pot games, a player who "ties" another player for their half of the pot is said to be "quartered". One might say "I didn't bet my A-2 because I figured I'd get quartered".
- READ - To determine whether an opponent has a good, medium or bad hand by observing his personal behavior. An inexact science.
- MITES AND LICE - A hand consisting of two pair, threes over twos.

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