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Gambler loses $1m in 20 years

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Xing Cai

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Gambler loses $1m in 20 years <!-- TITLE : end-->
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He borrowed almost all of it and has repaid about $700,000. -TNP --> </td> </tr> <tr></tr><tr> <td colspan="2" align="left" valign="top" width="550"> <table> <tbody><tr> <td> <table> <tbody><tr><td>
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</td> </tr> <tr><td class="content_subtitle" align="left"> Wed, Feb 10, 2010
The New Paper
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</td></tr> </tbody></table> </td> </tr> <tr><td colspan="3" class="bodytext_10pt"> <!-- CONTENT : start --> By Larry Haverkamp


HERE'S a sad story about a pathological gambler I interviewed at the Institute of Mental Health.
Now 37, Mike (not his real name) figures he has lost around a million dollars over the past 20 years. He borrowed almost all of it and has repaid about $700,000. The balance of $300,000 is money he was unable to repay the loan sharks, relatives and friends.

Mike says: 'In a way, it is better that I couldn't pay. 'Gamblers use money to pay off debts, which only improves their credit standing with loan sharks and junkets who lend them more. It leads to more losses which perpetuates the cycle.' Mike said his immediate family helped the most. 'My wife has a steady job and helped me. A low point was when my brother sold his HDB flat for $300,000, which I used to pay gambling debts.

'I once even sold my supplier's equipment for more than $200,000 and used the money to gamble. I lost it and left the country. 'That was in June 2007. I returned in January 2008 and was arrested at the airport.' After six months in prison, Mike was released in June 2008 and - you guessed it - he headed straight for the cruise ship casinos. From June to December 2008, he lost another $100,000 at his game of choice: Baccarat.

Last March, his wife took him to the Institute of Mental Health and checked him in. Since then, Mike hasn't gambled. He even took a self-exclusion order, barring him from the new casinos at Marina Bay and Sentosa. He knows it's necessary. 'Everyone takes advantage when they see you gambling big. Loan sharks are happy to help with loans of $8,000 to repay $10,000 in two weeks. 'But in two weeks, the money would be gone. I typically bet $500 per hand and could win big amounts like $30,000 or $40,000. But then bigger losses followed.'

High roller

Cruise ships considered Mike a high roller, which made him feel proud. He says: 'I got free drinks, food and respect. It was a luxury life although I spent most of it staring at card tables. I once spent three days and nights on a baccarat betting binge. 'Like many gamblers, I was superstitious. I didn't let anyone touch me when I gambled as it would drain away my luck, or so I thought. I also didn't allow anyone to stand in front of me since that would block my luck.

'Casinos accept these quirks and even encourage them. They know a gambler with 'un-blocked luck' thinks he can win. 'Casinos never explain probabilities and the certainty of losing. I learned it the hard way by paying $1million over 20 years - and I begged, borrowed and stole to do it.'


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po2wq

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
... HERE'S a sad story about a pathological gambler I interviewed at the Institute of Mental Health.

Now 37, Mike (not his real name) figures he has lost around a million dollars over the past 20 years. He borrowed almost all of it and has repaid about $700,000. ...
tis is nothing ...

there exists a happy story ... happy bcos ze fella involved was smiling, given award n said no regrets ...

ze fella lost even mor ... billions, in fact ... n wifin a much shorter time frame ... n all ze time using other ppl's moni ...


u shud go n interview dat fella ... :smile:
 

streetcry

Alfrescian
Loyal
Gambler loses case against Australian casino
Tue, Dec 08, 2009
AFP





MELBOURNE - A compulsive gambler who wagered close to 1.4 billion US dollars (S$1.946 billion) during a 16-month betting spree lost his lawsuit against Australia's largest casino Tuesday when a judge ruled he was not exploited.

High-flying property developer Harry Kakavas claimed Melbourne's Crown Casino facilitated his pathological betting, despite knowing he had a problem that was so severe he had already been banned from one establishment.

Kakavas, 42, who police had barred from entering Sydney's Star City casino, had sued Crown, claiming it "lured" him with gifts and free flights on a private jet to bring him to Melbourne.

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But judge David Harper ruled the casino had not preyed on the baccarat-loving Kakavas and ordered him to repay one million dollars (S$1.269 million) in debts.

"He was not a person so helplessly entrapped by his love of cards that he found it impossible to resist Crown's attentions," Harper told the Victorian Supreme Court.

"He was the highest of this country's high rollers," added the judge.

"He enjoyed some spectacular wins. In the end, however, he lost all he won, and more."

Harper said Kakavas never suggested he was incapable of maintaining his high-roller status and had been unable to produce evidence that the casino had conspired to exploit him.

"Crown had no conception of Mr Kakavas as suffering from any kind of relevant disadvantage," the judge said.

Kakavas was a prolific gambler who had tried his luck in Las Vegas, Hong Kong, Macau and the Bahamas, the judge said.

His lawyers had argued the Sydney exclusion order should have been enforced Australia-wide by casino authorities, including Crown.

Instead, his defence said, the Melbourne casino knowingly offered to fly him to the city on at least 14 occasions and left him gift boxes of 50,000 (S$63,520) dollars in "lucky money" on the private jet to help him gamble.

During a period of 16 months in 2005 and 2006 Kakavas allegedly turned over 1.5 billion dollars (1.37 billion US), and was allowed to bet single hands of 300,000 dollars (S$381,120).

He was eventually banned from Crown after blowing more than two million dollars (S$2.54 million) on the card tables in just 43 minutes in August 2006.

Kakavas lost a total of 30 million dollars (S$38.11 million), and sued Crown and its executives for about 20.5 million (S$26.04 million).
 

streetcry

Alfrescian
Loyal
Akio Kashiwagi

This Japanese property developer was once described as “the world’s biggest gambler”. He won big, and lost big as well. He owns the dubious distinction of having incurred the biggest loss at a baccarat table in casino history: he lost close to $10 million in six days at the Trump Plaza in 1992. The following year, he lost a lot more than that: he was stabbed to death in his home at the foot of Mount Fuji.
 
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