10 charged with cheating at new Columbus casino

Copyright 2012 Scripps Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Advertisement

Posted: 11/28/2012

 

Ohio authorities said Wednesday that 10 people have been charged with cheating at the new Columbus casino, including some defendants who continued after they were warned to stop and one who admitted he was cheating and told investigators, "So what?"
 
   More charges involving the casino are coming, including a woman who tried to use counterfeit $100 bills and a man who tried to re-enter with a gun after he was ejected.
 
   The counts outlined Wednesday involve suspects who tried to increase or decrease their bets after the results of a game were known.
 
   One type of cheating, "capping" a bet, involves players who see that they've won and try to secretly increase their bet. A related type, "pinching," involves players who try to reduce their bet after they see that they've lost.
 
   The charges allege cheating at table games including blackjack, craps, roulette and baccarat.
 
   Charges were filed against repeat offenders, not against individuals who might have tried once after getting carried away or having too much to drink, said Franklin County Prosecutor Ron O'Brien. One defendant was charged with 10 counts but was observed 23 times, he said.
 
   O'Brien said one man ignored investigators even after he was warned.
 
   "It was kind of like, well, `So what? I'm entitled to cheat to try to beat the game,"' O'Brien said.
 
   But the opposite is true, said O'Brien, a Republican who's prosecuting the cases even though he opposed the 2009 initiative that allowed casinos in the state.
 
   "Whether it's marbles when you're 7 years old or whether it's on the sports field in high school, everybody knows that cheating's wrong," O'Brien said. "People shouldn't have any kind of attitude that cheating's OK merely because it's at a casino."
 
   Revenue from casinos goes to cities, counties and schools in Ohio, added Karen Huey, director of enforcement for the Ohio Casino Control Commission.
 
   "If a person comes in and steals from the casino, they're stealing from the state of Ohio," she said.
 
   If convicted the defendants face up to a year in prison and a $2,500 fine.
 
   More than 60 people have been charged with cheating at casinos statewide.

Copyright 2012 Scripps Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

  • Comments

 

 


 

Advertisement

Special Reports


  1. SPECIAL REPORT | Day care inspections

    SPECIAL REPORT | Day care inspections

    SPECIAL REPORT | Thousands of child care center inspections reports are NOW AVAILABLE. Find out what inspectors founds inside day care centers across the state.

    • Inside a Criminal Mind | Jason Scott

      Inside a Criminal Mind | Jason Scott

      SPECIAL REPORT | When it's out of your hands, when your life is at the mercy of an armed, masked man staring down at you from the barrel of a gun in your own home, you grasp at whatever it is you can control; breathing, composure, or faith.

    • SPECIAL REPORT | Bad Medicine

      SPECIAL REPORT | Bad Medicine

      SPECIAL REPORT | ABC2 Investigator Joce Sterman has reviewed thousands of pages of documents for her Bad Medicine report.

       
      • Stay Connected