Massachusetts

Mobile Sports Betting Application Launched in Rhode Island

The state revenue department said there were no major issues with the application launched at Twin River Casino in Lincoln and there are plans to add another casino next week

Rhode Island launched mobile sports betting at one casino and plans to add it to a second casino next week.

The mobile application launched Wednesday at Twin River Casino in Lincoln, according to the state revenue department. The department said Thursday there were no major issues, although some gamblers found the casino application slow to load.

Paul Grimaldi, spokesman for the revenue department, said that from the state's perspective, things went well.

"This is a milestone for us," he said Thursday. "We promised to get this done by the start of the NFL season and we've accomplished that."

Several hundred people signed up, Grimaldi said, and he'd "bet" that a lot of gamblers will create accounts on Sunday before the New England Patriots take on the Pittsburgh Steelers in the regular-season opener Sunday night.

Gamblers have to activate their mobile accounts in person in Lincoln so the casino can verify they're at least 18 years old and that they and aren't banned from the property for a past violation. Then, they can place wagers from anywhere in Rhode Island.

The state's goal is to launch mobile betting next week at the other Rhode Island casino offering sports betting, Twin River's Tiverton Casino Hotel, after testing is complete. The casino is in Tiverton, Rhode Island, near the Massachusetts border.

The app is being tested this week near the Massachusetts and Connecticut borders to ensure bets can't be placed across states lines, as required by law, and that the service is available from as many locations within the state as possible, Grimaldi said. Rhode Island is the only New England state currently offering sports betting.

Since the late November launch of sports betting, gamblers have wagered nearly $136 million in Rhode Island and about $128 million was paid out on winning bets, according to the state lottery. The state gets 51% of the $7.7 million profit after expenses are subtracted.

Republican activist Daniel Harrop sued over sports betting in May , arguing that the state should have sought voter approval before legalizing and launching sports betting. Lawyers for the state lottery and Twin River argue that Harrop isn't hurt by sports betting and lacks standing to sue. The town of Tiverton requested a quick ruling last week.

Legal bets on the game can be placed in 13 U.S. states: Arkansas, Delaware, Indiana, Iowa, Mississippi, Nevada, New Mexico, New Jersey, New York, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island and West Virginia. This time last year, it was only legal in five states.

Sports betting has been approved through laws or regulations but is not yet running in five additional states: Illinois, Montana, New Hampshire, North Carolina and Tennessee, as well as the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico. Colorado voters will decide in a November ballot question whether to allow sports betting there.

Copyright AP - Associated Press
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