Gambling Commission wins Greene King appeal

The Upper Tribunal has found that the Gambling Commission acted within its powers when it refused to grant Greene King a bingo operating licence to provide commercial bingo in its pubs.

At a hearing in London, Greene King’s lawyers argued that the Commission had exceeded its powers when it refused to grant a licence enabling Greene King to offer bingo as well as high stakes B3 and B4 gaming machines in some of its pubs. Both of these type of machines allow customers to gamble up to £2 a time, with B3s having a £500 jackpot and B4s having a top prize of £400.  The argument was that the Commission’s refusal trespassed on the territory of licensing authorities carrying out their premises licensing function.

Judge Howard Levenson rejected those arguments.  Instead he found that the Commission has the legal power to refuse an application for an operating licence if it considers granting the application would not be reasonably consistent with the licensing objectives. As such he ordered the case to be sent back to the First-tier Tribunal for reconsideration.

Helen Venn, Gambling Commission

Helen Venn, Gambling Commission

Helen Venn, Commission Programme Director, said: “We welcome the Upper Tribunal’s decision, which clarifies the Commission’s powers.”

She added: “In our view commercial betting, gaming and bingo and any associated high stakes and prize machines, should only be provided in separate premises licensed for that specific purpose – premises that adults make a deliberate choice to visit in order to gamble.”


Source: SBC News

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