Judges: GREG ABBOTT, Attorney General of Texas
Filed Date: 12/27/2005
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 7/6/2016
The Honorable Kurt Sistrunk Galveston County Criminal District Attorney 722 Moody, Suite 300 Galveston, Texas 77550
Re: Whether a nonprofit organization that sponsors a "poker run" violates gambling statutes (RQ-0357-GA).
Dear Mr. Sistrunk:
You ask whether a nonprofit organization that sponsors a "poker run" violates gambling statutes.1 We gather from material submitted with your letter that participants meet at a starting location and contribute donations to the nonprofit organization's cause. See Request Letter, supra note 1, at 1. "The number of stops along the run may vary but participants check in at each location and have to be at the last stop by a certain time."Id. For each $10 donation, a participant is entitled to receive a five-card hand at the last stop. Id. The best, second best, and worst hands win money. See id. (and attached flier indicating that the best hand would win $700, the second best hand would win $200, and the worst hand would win $100).2
You also ask us to consider that the following are true:
1. The donation is clearly just that, a donation going to the cause whatever it may be and it is given and accepted with the clear understanding that the participant has absolutely no chance to get his or her donation back. The number of "hands" you are allowed to draw at the last stop is dependent on the amount of your donation.
2. The winning prize money amount is established and in place in advance of the Poker Run and has absolutely nothing to do with the total amount of monies donated at the beginning of the Poker Run. In other words, even if only three (3) people show up and donate $30.00 and have the opportunity to play their hand at the last stop, the total established winning monies are still going to be distributed. In contrast to what was stated and referenced in Opinion
GA-0335 , the prize money does not include any part of the money that the participant has paid. The question being has a participant made a "bet" when the tendered money is not at risk but acknowledged as that which is never going to be returned.3. There are no chips given out after the donation is received. You merely sign up, make your donation that goes to the cause, check in at the other stops along the way and at the end you draw your cards and check your hand against the current best hand. If at the end of the night your hand is still the best then you win the set prize for best hand and the benefactor receives all the monies that were given up front at registration.
Id. at 1-2.
You ask whether the sponsoring nonprofit organization "is in violation of the law, particularly the gambling statutes" set forth in chapter 47 of the Penal Code. Id. at 1. With respect to gambling promotion, section
(a) A person commits an offense if he intentionally or knowingly does any of the following acts:
. . .
(3) for gain, becomes a custodian of anything of value bet or offered to be bet . . . or
. . .
(5) for gain, sets up or promotes any lottery or sells or offers to sell or knowingly possesses for transfer, or transfers any card, stub, ticket, check, or other device designed to serve as evidence of participation in any lottery.
Tex. Pen. Code Ann. §
Under the Penal Code, the term "person" "means an individual, corporation, or association," see id. § 1.07(38), and thus includes an individual or an organization. The phrase "for gain" means for "profit" or "excess of receipts over expenditures." Tex. Att'y Gen. Op. No.
In addition, a nonprofit organization sponsoring the poker run you describe sets up or promotes a lottery within the meaning of section 47.03(a)(5). See Tex. Pen. Code Ann. §
any scheme or procedure whereby one or more prizes are distributed by chance among persons who have paid or promised consideration for a chance to win anything of value, whether such scheme or procedure is called a pool, lottery, raffle, gift, gift enterprise, sale, policy game, or some other name.
Id. § 47.01(7). In the poker run at issue, we gather that participants randomly draw a five-card hand and that prizes are awarded on the basis of the randomly drawn hands. It appears that prizes are distributed by chance among persons who have paid consideration, a $10 contribution to a charitable cause, for a five-card hand, which is a chance to win a monetary prize. Thus, a person who sets up or promotes such a scheme violates section 47.03(a)(5).
Section 47.03(a)(3) provides that a person commits an offense if he "for gain, becomes a custodian of anything of value bet or offered to be bet." Id. § 47.03(a)(3).3 You ask whether a poker run participant makes a bet, see Request Letter,supra note 1, at 2 ("Is it a bet or consideration?"), and suggest that because the participant makes a donation to a charity, which the participant will not get back, and the sponsoring organization will not pay the prizes from the donations, the donations are not bets, see id. at 1.
Under chapter 47, "bet" means "an agreement to win or lose something of value solely or partially by chance." Tex. Pen. Code Ann. §
The fact that the conduct is for a charitable purpose is pertinent only to whether it may fall within one of the narrowly drawn defenses to chapter 47 gambling offenses. Section
Very truly yours,
GREG ABBOTT Attorney General of Texas
BARRY MCBEE First Assistant Attorney General
NANCY S. FULLER Chair, Opinion Committee
Mary R. Crouter Assistant Attorney General, Opinion Committee