Apparently these guys were taking green $1 chips from the roulette table, and cashed them in at another gaming table in the casino as $25 chips.
Seattle Times story here
Seattle Times story here
I'm stunned that they were able to get away with $11k before getting caught! They should have gotten the black ones!don said:Apparently these guys were taking green $1 chips from the roulette table, and cashed them in at another gaming table in the casino as $25 chips.
Seattle Times story here
I've seen many casinos that use the same roulette chips at every table. From what I've seen the chips themselves don’t usually have a set denomination. You might have several people at the same table playing with the same chips (different colors of course) with different monetary values. Typically a casino pays much closer attention to their chip inventory in order to avoid this type of scam, but you would be surprised how many casinos don’t know how to operate properly. I can only imagine what other games might be vulnerable to legal techniques.HarryKuntz said:I can't believe the casino's were that stupid to be using the same roulette chips on different tables.
That is a more clever approach to the same scam. As usual, criminals are not always that clever.HarryKuntz said:I have heard of this scam many times before, usally it's done by pocketing cheaply bought chips then returning at a different time/day after the table limts & chip values have increased. The same table is used, so the chips match the tableset and the total amount of chips is correct for that table, should the casino suspect and decide to do a stock check.
lol thats only the ones that we hear of though...HarryKuntz said:I can't believe the casino's were that stupid to be using the same roulette chips on different tables.
I have heard of this scam many times before, usally it's done by pocketing cheaply bought chips (Many casino's will have quiet times when table limits and chip values are lower to attact punters) then returning at a different time/day after the table limts & chip values have increased. The same table is used, so the chips match the tableset and the total amount of chips is correct for that table, should the casino suspect and decide to do a stock check. The chips are then usally wagered rather than redeemed, on various and many multible combination bets that provide the lowest risk. This is done to make it as differicult as possible for the casino to keep track of how many chips the scammer has. Winning chips are then redeemed.
Some people have gotten away with this for long periods of time making thousands but eventually they all end up in jail.
Well, this brings to mind another question - is this a criminal matter or a civil matter?Brock Windsor said:Is it against the rules to remove chips from a roulette table?
Would you consider it a criminal law "grey area" if they had used counterfeit chips that they manufactured at home and brought into the casino?callipygian said:But is this a criminal act? Is there a law against this, and if so, are the laws applicable to a casino on tribal land?
Yes, but does the law view their schemes as criminal? Counterfeiting chips is specifically prohibited by law. Is taking chips from one table and bringing them to another?Cherry7Up said:I would view their scheme as criminally equivalent to just such a counterfeit chips (or counterfeit money used to buy chips) scheme--fraud.
I just meant to say that passing off these $1 roulette chips as $25 standard table chips seems likely to fall under a broadly worded statute prohibiting chip counterfeitig and similar frauds.callipygian said:Yes, but does the law view their schemes as criminal? Counterfeiting chips is specifically prohibited by law. Is taking chips from one table and bringing them to another?
You're right that this scheme should be illegal. And given enough abuse (like computers and video cameras in the 1980's) there's no doubt in my mind that it will quickly become illegal by the powers passing a law against it. The question is whether it is currently illegal.
How can you put this scam under counterfeiting a chip from home? It is by far not the same thing. It's the casinos fault for the mistake, not the players. I'd like to know how this one plays out in court.Cherry7Up said:I just meant to say that passing off these $1 roulette chips as $25 standard table chips seems likely to fall under a broadly worded statute prohibiting chip counterfeitig and similar frauds.
You are right of course that if the current counterfeiting / fraud statutes are written narrowly, then maybe this would not qualify and would require modification to the current law(s).