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Seminole Tribe leaders have announced a plan to roll out sports betting at their casinos in December — a first step in what could be a major expansion of gambling in Florida after approval from the U.S. Supreme Court.
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Owners of two pari-mutuel facilities argue that a deal giving the Seminole Tribe of Florida control of sports betting throughout the state violates federal law.
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A federal appeals court has overturned a ruling that blocked a deal giving the Seminole Tribe control over sports betting throughout the state.
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This year, the courts will take up abortion, big tech, elections, gambling, race relations, gender and sexual orientation, guns, race, redistricting and the case of Andrew Gillum.
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The Biden administration and the Seminole Tribe of Florida on Wednesday urged a federal appeals court to overturn a ruling that blocked a deal that would give the tribe control over sports betting in the state.
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After no one picked all six digits in the Nov. 5 drawing, the estimated jackpot total is near $2 billion for the Nov. 7 drawing.
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Pointing to “enormous economic benefits,” the state has urged a federal appeals court to overturn a ruling that blocked a gambling deal between Florida and the Seminole Tribe.
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The Biden administration is urging an appeals court to reinstate a deal that gave the Seminole Tribe control of sports betting throughout Florida.
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It’s been almost two months since backers of an effort to bring Las Vegas-style casino gambling to North Florida failed to submit enough signatures in time to make it onto the November ballot, but legal jousting over the proposal hasn’t abated.
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Florida Attorney General Ashley Moody wants the state Supreme Court to issue an opinion about the validity of a proposed constitutional amendment that would expand gambling, even though he measure has not qualified for the November ballot.