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Updated 7:11 p.m.As House members were preparing to adjourn, Republican Majority Floor Leader Jon Echols announced that he had just been notified by the…
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UPDATED: 11:14 p.m.A revenue package that included several tax increases passed the Oklahoma House of Representatives Monday night, the first time a tax…
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Cash-starved states may prevail in nullifying a 1992 federal law prohibiting sports betting after Monday's arguments.
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A former NBA player who became a New Jersey senator sponsored a federal law banning sports gambling that New Jersey now says is unconstitutional.
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The websites will stop accepting money bets ahead of an appellate hearing this fall. The deal comes as the companies are lobbying state lawmakers to pass legislation that would legalize the industry.
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Research shows that bettors are drawn to certain games not because of financial motives but because they get enjoyment out of them.
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A panel of judges extended the ruling issued last month that allows the daily fantasy sports betting sites to continue operations in the state while they appeal a lower court's order that they stop.
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ESPN wants to cater to its entire audience — casual and hard-core fans, fantasy players and people who've got a wager on the game. Now it's more open about a topic leagues and networks have avoided.
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After years of denial, baseball's all-time hits leader admitted in 2004 that he bet on games, but only while he was manager. But ESPN obtained documents that show the betting began in 1986.
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Breaking with other major pro sports leagues, Adam Silver says the world is changing and that Congress should allow sports betting that is legal and regulated.