state of michigan
100th Legislature
Regular session of 2019
Introduced by Rep. Iden
ENROLLED HOUSE BILL No. 4916
AN ACT to create
the lawful sports betting act; to require licensing of persons to engage in
sports betting via the internet, including through mobile applications; to
impose requirements for such sports betting; to impose tax and other payment
obligations on the conduct of licensed sports betting; to create the internet
sports betting fund; to prohibit certain acts in relation to sports betting and
to prescribe penalties for those violations; to require the promulgation of
rules; and to provide remedies.
The People of
the State of Michigan enact:
Sec. 1. This act shall be known and may be
cited as the “lawful sports betting act”.
Sec. 2. The
legislature finds and declares all of the following:
(a) Operating, conducting, and offering for play sports betting on the
internet, including through mobile application, involves gaming activity that
already occurs in this state illegally.
(b) This act
is consistent and complies with the unlawful internet gambling enforcement act
of 2006, 31 USC 5361 to 5367, and with 18 USC 1084, and permits the
use of the internet, including through mobile application, to place, receive,
or otherwise knowingly transmit a sports bet or wager if that use complies with
this act and rules promulgated under this act.
(c) This act
is consistent and complies with the state constitution of 1963 by ensuring that
internet sports betting may only be offered by licensed sports betting
operators who are lawfully operating casinos in this state.
(d) In order
to protect residents of this state who wager on sports through the internet,
including through mobile application, and to capture revenues generated from
such sports betting, it is in the best interest of this state and its citizens
to regulate this activity establishing a secure, responsible, fair, and legal
system of internet sports betting.
Sec. 3. As
used in this act:
(a) “Adjusted
gross sports betting receipts” means gross sports betting receipts less a
deduction for the monetary value of free play wagered by authorized
participants as an incentive to place or as a result of their having placed
internet sports betting wagers.
(b)
“Affiliate” means a person that, directly or indirectly, through 1 or more
intermediaries, controls or is controlled by a sports betting operator.
(c) “Applicant” means a person that applies for a license or for
registration under this act. Unless otherwise prescribed by the board, as used
in sections 6(2), 8, and 19 applicant includes an affiliate, director, or
managerial employee of the applicant that performs the function of principal
executive officer, principal operations officer, or principal accounting
officer, or a person who holds more than 5% ownership interest in the
applicant. As used in this subdivision, affiliate does not include a
partnership, a joint venture, a co-shareholder of a corporation, a
co-member of a limited liability company, or a co-partner in a limited
liability partnership that has 5% or less ownership interest in the applicant
and is not involved in the internet sports betting operation.
(d) “Athletic
event” means a sports activity that involves the athletic skill of 1 or more
players or participants. Athletic event does not include any of the following:
(i) Horse racing if sports betting on that race
is pari-mutuel.
(ii) Any sport or athletic event played by individuals that are at the high
school level or below unless the majority of participants in the sport or
athletic event are 18 years of age or older.
(iii) Roulette, poker, blackjack, a card game, a dice game, or any other
game or contest typically offered in a casino other than sports betting.
(iv) A fantasy contest.
(e)
“Authorized participant” means an individual who has a valid internet sports
betting account with a sports betting operator and is at least 21 years of age.
(f) “Board”
means the Michigan gaming control board created under section 4 of the Michigan
Gaming Control and Revenue Act, 1996 IL 1, MCL
432.204.
(g) “Casino”
means a building or buildings in which gaming is lawfully conducted under the
Michigan Gaming Control and Revenue Act, 1996 IL 1, MCL 432.201 to 432.226, or
in which class III gaming is lawfully conducted by an Indian tribe in this
state under a facility license issued in accordance with a tribal gaming
ordinance approved by the chair of the National Indian Gaming Commission.
(h) “Class III
gaming” means that term as defined in 25 USC 2703.
(i) “Compact” means a tribal-state compact governing the
conduct of gaming activities in this state that is negotiated under the Indian
gaming regulatory act, Public Law 100-497, 102 Stat 2467.
(j) “Fantasy
contest” means a simulated game or contest with an entry fee that meets all of
the following conditions:
(i) No fantasy contest team is composed of the
entire roster of a real-world sports team.
(ii) No fantasy contest team is composed entirely of individual athletes
who are members of the same real-world sports team.
(iii) Each prize and award or the value of all prizes and awards offered to
winning fantasy contest players is made known to the fantasy contest players in
advance of the fantasy contest.
(iv) Each winning outcome reflects the relative knowledge and skill of the
fantasy contest players and is determined by the aggregated statistical results
of the performance of multiple individual athletes selected by the fantasy
contest player to form the fantasy contest team, whose individual performances
in the fantasy contest directly correspond with the actual performance of those athletes in the athletic event in which those
individual athletes participated.
(v) A winning outcome is not based on randomized or historical events, or
on the score, point spread, or performance in an athletic event of a single
real-world sports team, a single athlete, or any combination of real-world
sports teams.
(vi) The fantasy contest does not constitute or involve and is not based on
any of the following:
(A) Racing
involving animals.
(B) A game or
contest ordinarily offered by a horse track or casino for money, credit, or any
representative of value, including any races, games, or contests involving
horses, or that are played with cards or dice.
(C) A slot
machine or other mechanical, electromechanical, or electric device, equipment,
or machine, including computers and other cashless wagering systems.
(D) Any other
game or device authorized by the board under the Michigan Gaming Control and
Revenue Act, 1996 IL 1, MCL 432.201 to 432.226.
(k) “Fund”
means the internet sports betting fund created under section 16.
(l) “Gaming equipment” or “sports betting equipment” means any mechanical,
electronic, or other device, mechanism, or equipment used in the operation of
internet sports betting that directly affects the wagering and results of
internet sports betting offered under this act. Gaming equipment does not
include a personal computer, mobile phone, or other device that is owned and
used by an individual to place an internet sports betting wager.
(m) “Gross
sports betting receipts” means the total of all sums,
including, but not limited to, valid or invalid checks, valid or invalid credit
or debit card deposits, valid or invalid ACH deposits, currency, coupons, free
play or promotional credits, redeemable credits, vouchers, entry fees assessed
for tournaments or other contests, or instruments of monetary value whether
collected or uncollected, in each case actually wagered by an authorized
participant at or with a sports betting operator on sports betting, less all of
the following:
(i) Winnings.
(ii) Amounts returned to an authorized
participant because of a game, platform, or system malfunction or because the
sports bet must be voided because of concerns regarding integrity of the wager
or game.
(iii) Uncollectible markers or successfully
disputed credit or debit card charges that were previously included in the
computation of gross sports betting receipts.
(n) “Indian lands” means that term as defined in 25 USC 2703.
(o) “Indian tribe” means that term as defined in 25 USC 2703 and any
instrumentality, political subdivision, or other legal entity through which an
Indian tribe operates its casino in this state.
(p) “In-game betting” means placing an internet sports betting wager
after an athletic event has started.
(q) “Institutional investor” means a person that is any of the
following:
(i) A
retirement fund administered by a public agency for the exclusive benefit of federal,
state, or local public employees.
(ii) An employee benefit plan or
pension fund that is subject to the employee retirement income security act of
1974, Public Law 93-406.
(iii) An investment company
registered under the investment company act of 1940, 15 USC 80a-1 to 80a-64.
(iv) A collective investment trust
organized by a bank under 12 CFR part 9.
(v) A closed end investment trust.
(vi) A chartered or licensed life
insurance company or property and casualty insurance company.
(vii) A chartered or licensed
financial institution.
(viii) An investment advisor
registered under the investment advisers act of 1940, 15 USC 80b-1 to 80b-21.
(ix) Any other person that the
board determines through rulemaking should be considered to be an institutional
investor for reasons consistent with this act.
(r) “Internet” means the international computer network of interoperable
packet-switched data networks, inclusive of additional technological platforms,
such as mobile, satellite, and other electronic distribution channels.
(s) “Internet sports betting” means operating, conducting, or offering
for play sports betting through the internet.
(t) “Internet sports betting account” means an electronic ledger in
which all of the following types of transactions relative to an authorized
participant are recorded:
(i)
Deposits and credits.
(ii) Withdrawals.
(iii) Internet sports betting
wagers.
(iv) Monetary value of winnings.
(v) Service or other
transaction-related charges authorized by the
authorized participant, if any.
(vi) Adjustments to the account.
(u) “Internet sports betting platform” means an integrated system of
hardware, software, or applications, including mobile applications and servers,
through which a sports betting operator operates, conducts, or offers sports betting
through the internet.
(v) “Internet sports betting platform provider” means a sports betting
supplier that contracts with a sports betting operator to provide an internet
sports betting platform.
(w) “Internet sports betting wager” means the cash, or cash equivalent,
including free play, loyalty points, and other redeemable sports betting
credits, risked by an authorized participant on sports betting through the
internet.
(x) “Mobile application” means an application on a mobile phone or other
device through which an individual is able to place an internet sports betting
wager.
(y) “Occupational license” means a license issued by the board to a
person to perform an occupation that directly impacts the integrity of internet
sports betting and that the board has identified as requiring a license to
perform the occupation.
(z) “Official league data” means statistics, results, outcomes, and
other data relating to an athletic event obtained by a sports betting operator
under an agreement with a sports governing body, or
an entity expressly authorized by the sports
governing body for determining the outcome of tier 2 sports bets.
(aa) “Person” means an individual, partnership, corporation,
association, limited liability company, federally recognized Indian tribe, or
other legal entity.
(bb) “Sports betting” means to operate, conduct, or offer for play wagering conducted under this act on athletic
events and other events approved by the board. Sports betting includes, but is
not limited to, single-game bets, teaser bets, parlays, over-under, moneyline, pools, exchange betting, in-game betting,
proposition bets, and straight bets. Sports betting does not include a fantasy
contest.
(cc) “Sports betting operator” means a person that is issued a sports
betting operator license.
(dd) “Sports betting operator license” means a license issued by the
board to a person to operate, conduct, or offer internet sports betting.
(ee) “Sports betting supplier” means a person
that the board has identified under rules promulgated by the board as requiring
a license to provide a sports betting operator goods or services regarding the
operation of internet sports betting. Sports betting supplier includes, but is
not limited to, internet sports betting platform providers.
(ff) “Sports betting supplier license” means a license issued by the
board to a sports betting supplier.
(gg) “Sports betting wagering device” means a mechanical, electrical, or
computerized terminal, device, apparatus, or piece of equipment used to place
an internet sports betting wager. Sports betting wagering device does not
include a personal computer, mobile phone, or other device owned and used by an
individual to place an internet sports betting wager.
(hh) “Sports
governing body” means an organization that prescribes final rules and enforces
codes of conduct for an athletic event and the participants in the athletic
event.
(ii) “Tier 1 sports bet” means an internet sports betting wager that is not a tier 2 sports bet.
(jj) “Tier 2 sports bet” means an internet sports
betting wager that is placed after an athletic event has started.
(kk) “Vendor” means a person that is not licensed under this act that
supplies any goods or services to a sports betting operator or sports betting
supplier.
(ll) “Winnings” means the total cash value of all
property or sums including currency or instruments of monetary value paid to an
authorized participant by a sports betting operator as a direct result of a
winning sports betting wager.
Sec. 4. (1) Internet sports betting may be conducted only to the extent
that it is conducted in accordance with this act.
(2) An internet sports betting wager received by a sports betting
operator or its internet sports betting platform provider is considered to be
gambling or gaming that is conducted in the sports betting operator’s casino
located in this state, regardless of the authorized participant’s location at
the time the participant initiates or otherwise places the internet sports
betting wager.
(3) A law that is inconsistent with this act does not apply to internet
sports betting as provided for by this act.
(4) This act does not apply to internet sports betting conducted
exclusively on Indian lands by an Indian tribe under a facility license issued
in accordance with a tribal gaming ordinance approved by the chair of the
National Indian Gaming Commission. For purposes of this act, internet sports
betting is conducted exclusively on Indian lands only if the individual who
places the internet sports betting wager is physically present on Indian lands
when the internet sports betting wager is initiated and
the internet sports betting wager is received or otherwise made on equipment
that is physically located on Indian lands, and the internet sports betting
wager is initiated, received, or otherwise made in conformity with the safe
harbor requirements described in 31 USC 5362(10)(C).
(5) A person shall not provide or make available sports betting wagering
devices in a place of public accommodation in this state, including a club or
other association, to enable individuals to place internet sports betting
wagers. This subsection does not apply to a sports betting operator
aggregating, providing, or making available sports betting wagering devices
within its own casino.
(6) For purposes of this act, the intermediate routing of electronic
data in connection with internet sports betting, including routing across state
lines, does not determine the location or locations in which the internet
sports betting wager is initiated, received, or otherwise made.
(7) A sports betting operator may use no more than 1 internet sports
betting platform to offer, conduct, or operate internet sports betting. Only a
sports betting operator or its internet sports betting platform provider may
process, accept, offer, or solicit internet sports betting wagers. The sports
betting operator must clearly display its own brand or that of an affiliate on
the internet sports betting platform that it utilizes. The sports betting
operator may also elect, in its sole discretion, to have the brand of the
internet sports betting platform that it utilizes be the name and logos of no
more than 1 internet sports betting platform provider if the internet sports
betting platform also clearly displays the sports betting operator’s own trademarks
and logos or those of an affiliate. A sports
betting operator is responsible for the conduct of its internet sports betting
platform provider.
Sec. 5. (1) The board has the powers and
duties specified in this act and all other powers necessary to enable it to
fully and effectively execute this act to administer, regulate, and enforce
internet sports betting under this act.
(2) The board
has jurisdiction over every person licensed by the board and may take
enforcement action against a person that is not licensed by the board that
offers internet sports betting in this state.
(3) The board
may enter into agreements with other jurisdictions, including Indian tribes, to
facilitate, administer, and regulate multijurisdictional sports betting by
sports betting operators to the extent that entering into the agreement is
consistent with state and federal laws and if the sports betting under the
agreement is conducted only in the United States.
(4) The board
may permit sports betting operators licensed by the board to accept internet
sports betting wagers under this act on any amateur or professional athletic
event or other event that is not prohibited by state or federal law and is
approved by the board.
Sec. 6. (1)
The board may issue a sports betting operator license only to an applicant that
is either of the following:
(a) A person
that holds a casino license under the Michigan Gaming Control and Revenue Act,
1996 IL 1, MCL 432.201 to 432.226.
(b) An Indian
tribe that lawfully conducts class III gaming in a casino located in this state
under a facility license issued in accordance with a tribal gaming ordinance
approved by the chair of the National Indian Gaming
Commission.
(2) The board
shall issue a sports betting operator license to an applicant described in
subsection (1) after receiving the application described in subsection (4) or
(5), as applicable, and the application fee, if the board determines that the
internet sports betting proposed by the applicant complies with this act and
the applicant is otherwise eligible and suitable. An applicant is eligible if
it meets the requirements set forth in subsection (1)(a) or (b). Each casino
licensee described in subsection (1)(a) and each Indian tribe described in
subsection (1)(b) is eligible for not more than 1 sports betting operator
license. It is the burden of the applicant to establish by clear and convincing
evidence its suitability as to character, reputation, integrity, business
probity, and financial ability. The application or enforcement of this
subsection by the board must not be arbitrary, capricious, or contradictory to
the express provisions of this act. In evaluating the eligibility and
suitability of an applicant under the standards provided in this act, the board
shall establish and apply the standards to each applicant in a consistent and
uniform manner. In determining whether to grant a sports betting operator
license to an applicant, the board may request from the applicant and consider
as a factor in the determination any or all of the following information:
(a) Whether
the applicant has adequate capitalization and the financial ability and the
means to develop, construct, operate, and maintain the applicant’s casino and
proposed internet sports betting platforms in accordance with this act and the
rules promulgated by the board.
(b) Whether
the applicant has the financial ability to purchase
and maintain adequate liability and casualty insurance and to provide an
adequate surety bond.
(c) Whether
the applicant has adequate capitalization and the financial ability to
responsibly pay its secured and unsecured debts in accordance with its
financing agreements and other contractual obligations.
(d) Whether
the applicant has a history of material noncompliance with casino or
casino-related licensing requirements or compacts with this state or any other
jurisdiction, where the noncompliance resulted in enforcement action by the
person with jurisdiction over the applicant.
(e) Whether
the applicant has been indicted for, charged with, arrested for, or convicted
of, pleaded guilty or nolo contendere to, forfeited bail concerning, or had
expunged any criminal offense under the laws of any jurisdiction, either felony
or misdemeanor, not including traffic violations, regardless of whether the
offense has been expunged, pardoned, or reversed on appeal or otherwise. The
board may consider mitigating factors, and, for an applicant described in
subsection (1)(b), shall give deference to whether the applicant has otherwise
met the requirements of the applicant’s gaming compact for licensure, as
applicable.
(f) Whether
the applicant has filed, or had filed against it, a proceeding for bankruptcy
or has ever been involved in any formal process to adjust, defer, suspend, or
otherwise work out the payment of any debt.
(g) Whether
the applicant has a history of material noncompliance with any regulatory
requirements in this state or any other jurisdiction where the noncompliance
resulted in an enforcement action by the regulatory agency with jurisdiction
over the applicant.
(h) Whether at
the time of application the applicant is a defendant in litigation involving
the integrity of its business practices.
(3) A sports betting operator license issued under this act is valid for
the 5-year period after the date of issuance and, if the board determines that
the sports betting operator licensee continues to meet the eligibility and
suitability standards under this act, is renewable for additional 5-year
periods.
(4) A person described in subsection (1)(a) may apply to the board for a
sports betting operator license to offer internet sports betting as provided in
this act. The application must be made on forms provided by the board and
include the information required by the board.
(5) A person described in subsection (1)(b) may apply to the board for a
sports betting operator license to offer internet sports betting as provided in
this act. The application must be made on forms provided by the board that
require only the following information:
(a) The name and location of any of the applicant’s casinos.
(b) The tribal law, charter, or any other organizational document of the
applicant and other governing documents under which the applicant operates each
of its casinos.
(c) Detailed information about the primary management officials of the
applicant’s casinos who will have management responsibility for the applicant’s
internet sports betting operations. As used in this subdivision, “primary
management official” does not include an elected or appointed representative of
the applicant unless the representative is also a full-time employee of the applicant’s sports betting operations.
(d) The current facility license for the applicant’s casinos.
(e) The applicant’s current tribal gaming ordinance.
(f) The gaming history and experience of the applicant in the United
States and other jurisdictions.
(g) Financial information, including copies of the last independent
audit and management letter submitted by the applicant to the National Indian
Gaming Commission under 25 USC 2710(b)(2)(C) and (D) and 25 CFR parts 271.12
and 271.13.
(h) The total number of gaming positions, including, but not limited to,
electronic gaming devices and table games, at each of the applicant’s casinos.
(6) An initial application for a sports betting operator license must be
accompanied by an application fee of $50,000.00. The rules promulgated under
section 10 may include provisions for the refund of an application fee, or the
portion of an application fee that has not been expended by the board in processing
the application, and the circumstances under which the fee will be refunded.
The board may assess additional fees for the costs related to the licensure
investigation.
(7) The board shall keep all information, records, interviews, reports,
statements, memoranda, or other data supplied to or used by the board in the
course of its review or investigation of an application for a sports betting
operator license or renewal of a sports betting operator license confidential.
The materials described in this subsection are exempt from disclosure under
section 13 of the freedom of information act, 1976 PA 442, MCL 15.243.
(8) An application under this section must be submitted and considered in accordance with this act and any rules
promulgated under this act.
(9) A sports betting operator shall pay a license fee of $100,000.00 to
the board at the time the initial sports betting operator license is issued and
$50,000.00 each year after the initial license is issued.
(10) The board shall deposit all application and license fees paid under
this section into the fund.
(11) A sports betting operator shall not offer internet sports betting
until both of the following conditions are met:
(a) The board has issued a license to at least 1 person under subsection
(1)(a) and 1 person under subsection (1)(b).
(b) The governor agrees to add sports betting under the tribal-state
gaming compact for any tribe in this state whose tribal-state gaming compact
requires agreement by the governor for the addition of each new class III gaming
game if those tribes request an agreement under section 3(B) of the tribe’s
tribal-state gaming compact as described in this subdivision within 60 days
after the effective date of this act and the request is in compliance with the
requirements of section 3 of the tribe’s compact.
(12) A person described in subsection (1)(b) that offers gaming in this
state under a compact that requires agreement by the governor for the addition
of any new class III gaming games may request the addition of sports betting as
an allowable class III gaming game. A tribe that receives the addition of
sports betting under this subsection shall not offer internet sports betting
until licensed under this act as a sports betting operator and the requirements
of subsection (11) are satisfied.
(13) An institutional investor that holds for
investment purposes only less than 25% of the equity of an applicant under this
section is exempt from the licensure requirements of this act.
Sec. 7. (1) The board shall condition the
issuance, maintenance, and renewal of a sports betting operator license to a
person described in section 6(1)(b) on the person’s compliance with all of the
following conditions:
(a) The person
complies with this act, rules promulgated by the board, and minimum internal
controls pertaining to all of the following:
(i) The types of and
rules for internet sports betting offered under this act.
(ii) Technical standards, procedures, and
requirements for the acceptance, by the person, of internet sports betting
wagers initiated or otherwise made by individuals
located in this state who are not physically present on the person’s Indian
lands in this state at the time the internet sports betting wager is initiated
or otherwise made.
(iii) Procedures and requirements for the
acceptance of internet sports betting wagers initiated or otherwise made by
individuals located in other jurisdictions, if the board authorizes
multijurisdictional sports betting as provided in this act.
(iv) The requirements set forth in sections 10a
and 11.
(b) The person
adopts and maintains technical standards for internet sports betting platforms,
systems, and software that are consistent with the standards adopted by the
board under section 10.
(c) The person
maintains 1 or more mechanisms on the internet sports betting platform that are
designed to reasonably verify that an authorized
participant is 21 years of age or older and that internet sports betting is
limited to transactions that are initiated and received or otherwise made by an
authorized participant located in this state or, if the board authorizes
multijurisdictional sports betting as provided in this act, another
jurisdiction in the United States authorized by the multijurisdictional agreement.
(d) The person
adopts and maintains responsible gaming measures consistent with those
described in section 12.
(e) The person
continues to maintain and operate in this state a casino offering class III
gaming and the casino contains not less than 50% of the gaming positions that
were in place on the effective date of this act.
(f) The person
pays to this state within the time period described in section 14(3), 8.4% of
the adjusted gross sports betting receipts received by that person from all
internet sports betting conducted under this act. All payments made under this
subdivision must be allocated according to section 15a.
(g) The person
agrees to provide and timely provides, on written request of the board, books
and records directly related to its internet sports betting for the purpose of
permitting the board to verify the calculation of the payments under subdivision
(f).
(h) The person
provides a waiver of sovereign immunity to the board for the sole and limited
purpose of consenting to both of the following:
(i) The jurisdiction of
the board to the extent necessary and for the limited purpose of providing a mechanism
for the board to do all of the following:
(A) Issue,
renew, and revoke the person’s sports betting operator
license.
(B) Enforce
the payment obligations set forth in this section and section 14.
(C) Regulate
the person under and enforce sections 10(1)(a), (b), (d) to (g), 10a, 11, 12(4)
and (5), 13, and 16a.
(D) Inspect
the person’s internet sports betting operation and records to verify that the
person is conducting its internet sports betting in conformity with this act.
(E) Assess
fines or monetary penalties for violations referred to in sub-subparagraph (C).
(F) Enforce
the payment of sports betting operator license fees described in section 6(9).
(ii) The jurisdiction of the courts of this
state, and expressly waiving the exhaustion of tribal remedies, with the
circuit court for Ingham County, and any courts to which appeals from that
court may be taken, having exclusive jurisdiction to permit this state to
enforce administrative orders of the board, the person’s obligation to make
payments required under subdivision (f), and to enforce collection of any
judgment. Any monetary award under this subparagraph is deemed limited recourse
obligations of the person and does not impair any trust or restricted income or
assets of the person.
(2) This state,
acting through the governor, at the request of any Indian tribe, is authorized
to negotiate and conclude and execute any amendments to an Indian tribe’s
compact necessary to effectuate internet sports betting by the Indian tribe
under this act and to ensure internet sports betting conducted by the Indian
tribe is in compliance with this act. If the governor fails to enter into
negotiations with the Indian tribe, or fails to negotiate
in good faith with respect to any request, this state waives its sovereign
immunity to permit the Indian tribe to initiate an action against the governor
in his or her official capacity in either state court or in federal court and
obtain those remedies as authorized in 25 USC 2710(d)(7).
(3)
Notwithstanding anything in this act to the contrary, this act only regulates
internet sports betting as provided in this act and does not extend to the
board, or any other agency of this state, any jurisdiction or regulatory
authority over any other aspect of any gaming operations of an Indian tribe
described in section 4(4) beyond those rights granted to this state under this
act and the compact with the Indian tribe.
Sec. 8. (1) The board may issue a sports betting supplier license to a
sports betting supplier. A person that is not licensed under this section shall
not provide goods, software, or services as a sports betting supplier to a
sports betting operator.
(2) On application by an interested person, the board may issue a
provisional sports betting supplier license to an applicant for a sports
betting supplier license. A provisional license issued under this subsection
allows the applicant for the sports betting supplier license to conduct
business with a sports betting operator before the sports betting supplier
license is issued to the applicant. A provisional license issued under this
subsection expires on the date provided by the board. The board shall not issue
a provisional internet sports betting supplier license to an internet sports
betting platform provider under this subsection until
board rules as described in section 10(1) are in effect.
(3) A sports betting supplier license issued under subsection (1) is
valid for the 5-year period after the date of issuance. A sports betting
supplier license is renewable after the initial 5-year
period for additional 5-year periods if the board determines that the sports
betting supplier continues to meet the eligibility and suitability standards
under this act.
(4) A person may apply to the board for a sports betting supplier
license as provided in this act and the rules promulgated under this act.
(5) Except as otherwise provided in this section, an application under
this section must be made on forms provided by the board and include the
information required by the board.
(6) An application under this section must be accompanied by a
nonrefundable application fee in an amount to be determined by the board, not
to exceed $5,000.00. The board may assess additional fees for the cost related
to the licensure investigation.
(7) The board shall keep all information, records, interviews, reports,
statements, memoranda, or other data supplied to or used by the board in the
course of its review or investigation of an application for a sports betting
supplier license or renewal of a sports betting supplier license confidential.
The materials described in this subsection are exempt from disclosure under
section 13 of the freedom of information act, 1976 PA 442, MCL 15.243.
(8) A sports betting supplier shall pay a license fee of $5,000.00 to
the board at the time an initial sports betting supplier license is issued to
the sports betting supplier and $2,500.00 each year after the initial license
is issued.
(9) The board shall deposit all application and license fees paid under
this act into the fund.
(10) An institutional investor that holds for investment purposes only
less than 25% of the equity of an applicant under this
section is exempt from the licensure requirements of this act.
Sec. 9. (1) The board has jurisdiction over and shall supervise all
internet sports betting operations governed by this act. The board may do
anything necessary or desirable to effectuate this act, including, but not
limited to, all of the following:
(a) Develop qualifications, standards, and procedures for approval and
licensure by the board of sports betting operators and sports betting
suppliers.
(b) Decide promptly and in reasonable order all license applications and
approve, deny, suspend, revoke, restrict, or refuse to renew sports betting
operator licenses and sports betting supplier licenses. A party aggrieved by an
action of the board denying, suspending, revoking, restricting, or refusing to
renew a license may request a contested case hearing before the board under the
administrative procedures act of 1969, 1969 PA 306, MCL 24.201 to 24.328.
A request for hearing under this subdivision must be made to the board in
writing within 21 days after service of notice of the action by the board.
(c) Conduct all hearings pertaining to violations of this act or rules
promulgated under this act.
(d) Provide for the establishment and collection of all applicable
license fees, taxes, and payments imposed by this act and the rules promulgated
under this act and the deposit of the applicable fees, taxes, and payments into
the fund.
(e) Develop and enforce testing and auditing requirements for internet
sports betting platforms, internet sports betting wagering, and internet sports
betting accounts.
(f) Develop and enforce requirements for responsible gaming and player
protection, including privacy and confidentiality standards
and duties.
(g) Develop and enforce requirements for accepting internet sports
betting wagers.
(h) Adopt by
rule a code of conduct governing board employees that ensures, to the maximum
extent possible, that persons subject to this act avoid situations,
relationships, or associations that may represent or lead to an actual or
perceived conflict of interest.
(i) Develop and administer civil fines for sports betting
operators and sports betting suppliers that violate this act or the rules
promulgated under this act.
(j) Audit and
inspect books, records, and facilities relevant to internet sports betting
operations, internet sports betting wagers, and internet sports betting
accounts, including, but not limited to, the books and records regarding
financing and accounting materials held by or in the custody of a sports
betting operator or sports betting supplier.
(k) Acquire by
lease or by purchase personal property, including, but not limited to, any of
the following:
(i) Computer hardware.
(ii) Mechanical, electronic, and online equipment
and terminals.
(iii) Intangible property, including, but not
limited to, computer programs, software, and systems.
(2) The board
may investigate and may issue cease and desist orders and obtain injunctive
relief against a person that is not licensed by the board that offers internet
sports betting in this state.
(3) The board
shall keep all information, records, interviews, reports,
statements, memoranda, and other data supplied to or used by the board in the
course of any investigation of a person licensed under this act confidential.
The materials described in this subsection are exempt from disclosure under
section 13 of the freedom of information act, 1976 PA 442, MCL 15.243.
Sec. 10. (1)
The board shall promulgate the rules pursuant to the administrative procedures
act of 1969, 1969 PA 306, MCL 24.201 to 24.328. The rules may include anything
necessary and proper to govern internet sports betting, including, but not
limited to, all of the following:
(a) The
acceptance of internet sports betting wagers.
(b) The
development and posting of house rules regarding internet sports betting.
(c) The method
of reporting to be used by licensees.
(d) The types
of records that must be kept.
(e) The ways
in which an authorized participant may fund his or her internet sports betting
account, that must include, at a minimum, the use of cash, cash equivalents,
automated clearing house, debit cards, credit cards, and any other form of
payment authorized by the board. As used in this subdivision, “automated
clearing house” means a national or governmental organization that has
authority to process electronic payments, including, but not limited to, the
National Automated Clearing House Association and the Federal Reserve System.
(f)
Protections for authorized participants placing internet sports betting wagers.
(g) The
qualifications, standards, and procedures for approval and licensure by the
board for sports betting operators and sports betting suppliers consistent with
this act.
(h) Requirements to ensure responsible gaming.
(i) Technical and financial standards for internet sports
betting platforms.
(j) Procedures
for a contested case hearing under this act consistent with the administrative
procedures act of 1969, 1969 PA 306, MCL 24.201 to 24.328.
(k)
Requirements for occupational licensing for vendors.
(l) Requirements for vendors and vendor registration.
(2) The board
may audit and inspect books and records relating to internet sports betting
operations, internet sports betting wagers, internet sports betting accounts,
or internet sports betting platforms, including, but not limited to, the books
and records regarding financing and accounting materials held by, or in the
custody of, a licensee.
(3) Subject to
the procedures under subsection (4), the board may use information received
from a sports governing body to determine whether to
allow either of the following:
(a) Internet
sports betting wagering on a particular event.
(b) Authorized
participants to make internet sports betting wagers of a particular type.
(4) If a sports governing body requests internet sports betting
wagering information or requests the board to prohibit internet sports betting
wagering on a particular event or making internet sports betting wagers of a
particular type, the board shall notify, in writing, all sports betting
operators, which must be allowed to respond to the sports
governing body’s request, in writing, in the time prescribed by the board.
After reviewing the request, any response, and any other information available
to the board, the board may grant the request or part of the request if it determines that it is necessary to protect the
integrity of the event or public confidence in the integrity of the event on
which the internet sports betting wagers are being placed.
Sec. 10a. (1)
Except as provided in subsection (2), a sports betting operator may use any
data source for determining the results of all tier 2 sports bets.
(2) A sports
governing body headquartered in the United States may notify the board that it
desires sports betting operators to use official league data to settle tier 2
sports bets under this act. A notification under this subsection must be made
in the form and manner as the board may require. The board shall notify each
sports betting operator of the sports governing
body’s notification within 5 days after the board’s receipt of the
notification. If a sports governing body does not
notify the board of its desire to supply official league data, a sports betting
operator may use any data source approved by the board for determining the
results of any tier 2 sports bets on athletic events of that sports governing body.
(3) Within 60
days after the board notifying each sports betting operator of a sports governing body notification to the board under
subsection (2), sports betting operators shall use only official league data to
determine the results of tier 2 sports bets as described in this act on
athletic events sanctioned by that sports governing
body unless any of the following apply:
(a) The sports governing body or designee cannot provide a feed of
official league data to determine the results of a particular type of tier 2
sports bet as described in this act, in which case sports betting operators may
use any data source approved by the board for determining the results of the
applicable tier 2 sports bet until the data feed
becomes available on commercially reasonable terms.
(b) A sports
betting operator can demonstrate to the board that the sports
governing body or its designee will not provide a feed of official league data
to the sports betting operator on commercially reasonable terms. The following
is a nonexclusive list of other factors the board may consider in evaluating
whether official league data is being offered on commercially reasonable terms:
(i) The availability of a sports governing
body’s tier 2 sports bet official league data to a sports betting operator from
more than 1 authorized source.
(ii) Market information regarding the purchase by operators of data from
any authorized source including sports governing bodies or their designees for
the purpose of settling sports wagers, for use in this state or other jurisdictions.
(iii) The nature and quantity of data, including the quality and complexity
of the process used for collecting the data.
(iv) The extent to which sports governing bodies or their designees have
made data used to settle tier 2 sports bets available to operators.
(c) The sports governing body or other designee does not obtain a
sports betting supplier license to the extent required by law or other approval
as required by the board.
(4) While the
board is determining whether official league data is commercially reasonable
under subsection (3), a sports betting operator may use any data source
approved by the board for determining the results of any tier 2 sports bets.
The board shall make a determination under subsection (3) within 120 days after
the sports betting operator notifies the board that
it desires to demonstrate that the sports governing
body or its designee will not provide a feed of official league data to the
operator on commercially reasonable terms.
Sec. 11. (1) A
sports betting operator shall provide, or shall require the sports betting
supplier providing an internet sports betting platform to provide, 1 or more
mechanisms on the internet sports betting platform that are designed to
reasonably verify that an authorized participant is 21 years of age or older
and that internet sports betting is limited to transactions that are initiated
and received or otherwise made by an authorized participant located in this
state or, if the board authorizes multijurisdictional internet sports betting
as provided in this act, another jurisdiction in the United States authorized
by the multijurisdictional agreement.
(2) An
individual who wishes to place an internet sports betting wager under this act
must satisfy the verification requirements under subsection (1) before the
individual may establish an internet sports betting account or make an internet
sports betting wager on an internet sports bet offered by a sports betting
operator.
(3) A sports
betting operator shall include, or shall require the sports betting supplier
providing an internet sports betting platform to include, mechanisms on its
internet sports betting platform that are designed to detect and prevent the
unauthorized use of internet sports betting accounts and to detect and prevent
fraud, money laundering, and collusion.
(4) A sports
betting operator, or a sports betting supplier providing its internet sports
betting platform, shall not knowingly authorize any
of the following individuals to establish an internet sports betting account or
knowingly allow them to place an internet sports betting wager, except if
required and authorized by the board for testing purposes or to otherwise
fulfill the purposes of this act:
(a) An individual who is less than 21 years old.
(b) An individual whose name appears in the board’s responsible gaming
database.
(5) A sports betting operator shall display, or shall require its
internet sports betting platform provider to display, in a clear, conspicuous,
and accessible manner, evidence of the sports betting operator’s license issued
under this act.
Sec. 12. (1) The board may develop responsible gaming measures,
including a statewide responsible gaming database identifying individuals who
are prohibited from establishing an internet sports betting account or
participating in internet sports betting offered by a sports betting operator.
The executive director of the board may place an individual’s name in the
responsible gaming database if any of the following apply:
(a) The individual has been convicted in any jurisdiction of a felony, a
crime of moral turpitude, or a crime involving gaming.
(b) The individual has violated this act or another gaming-related law.
(c) The individual has performed an act or has a notorious or unsavory
reputation such that the individual’s participation in sports betting under this
act would adversely affect public confidence and trust in sports betting.
(d) The individual’s name is on a valid and current exclusion list
maintained by this state or another jurisdiction in the United States.
(e) Any other reason the board considers appropriate to protect the
integrity of internet sports betting under this act.
(2) The board may promulgate rules for the establishment and maintenance
of the responsible gaming database.
(3) A sports betting operator, in a format specified by the board, may
provide the board with names of individuals to be included in the responsible
gaming database.
(4) A sports betting operator shall display or require its internet
sports betting platform provider to display, on the internet sports betting
platform used by the sports betting operator, in a clear, conspicuous, and
accessible manner the number of the toll-free compulsive gambling hotline
maintained by this state and offer responsible gambling services and technical
controls to authorized participants, consisting of both temporary and permanent
self-exclusion for all internet sports betting offered and the ability for
authorized participants to establish their own periodic deposit and internet
sports betting wagering limits and maximum playing times.
(5) An authorized participant may voluntarily prohibit himself or
herself from establishing an internet sports betting account with a sports
betting operator. The board may incorporate the voluntary self-exclusion list
into the responsible gaming database and maintain both the self-exclusion list
and the responsible gaming database in a confidential manner.
(6) The self-exclusion list and responsible gaming database established
under this section and all information and records used by the board in the
administration of the self-exclusion list and responsible gaming database are
exempt from disclosure under section 13 of the
freedom of information act, 1976 PA 442, MCL 15.243.
Sec. 13. (1) A person shall not do any of the following:
(a) Offer internet sports betting in this state if the person is not a
sports betting operator unless this act does not apply to internet sports
betting under section 4(4).
(b) Knowingly make a false statement on an application for a license to
be issued under this act.
(c) Knowingly provide false information to the board or an authorized
representative of the board.
(d) Willfully fail to report, pay, or truthfully account for any license
fee, tax, or payment imposed by this act, or willfully attempt in any way to
evade or defeat the license fee, tax, or payment.
(e) Knowingly, with the intent to cheat, alter, tamper with, or
manipulate any game, platform, equipment, software, hardware, devices, or
supplies used to conduct internet sports betting, in order to alter the odds or
the payout, or to disable the game, platform, equipment, software, hardware,
devices, or supplies from operating in the manner authorized by the board, or
knowingly, with the intent to cheat, offer or allow to be offered, with the
intent to cheat, any game, platform, equipment, software, hardware, devices, or
supplies that have been altered, tampered with, or manipulated in such a
manner.
(f) Open, maintain, or use in any way an internet sports betting account
or make or attempt to make an internet sports betting wager if the individual
is under the age of 21, or knowingly allow an individual under the age of 21 to
open, maintain, or use in any way an internet sports betting account or make or attempt to make an internet sports betting
wager.
(g) Claim,
collect, or take, or attempt to claim, collect, or take, money or anything of
value from an internet sports betting operator with the intent to defraud, or
to claim, collect, or take an amount greater than the amount won.
(h) Offer,
promise, or give anything of value to a person for the purpose of influencing
the outcome of a sporting or athletic event, contest, or game on which an
internet sports betting wager may be made, or place, increase, or decrease an
internet sports betting wager after acquiring knowledge, not available to the
general public, that anyone has been offered, promised, or given anything of
value for the purpose of influencing the outcome of the sporting or athletic
event on which the internet sports betting wager is placed, increased, or
decreased.
(i) Place, increase, or decrease an internet sports betting
wager or determine the course of play after acquiring knowledge, not available
to all players, of the outcome of the athletic event or any event that affects
the outcome of the athletic event or that is the subject of the internet sports
bet or aid a person in acquiring the knowledge described in this subdivision
for the purpose of placing, increasing, or decreasing an internet sports
betting wager or determining the course of play contingent on that event or
outcome.
(2) A person
that violates subsection (1)(a) is guilty of a felony punishable by
imprisonment for not more than 10 years or a fine of not more than $100,000.00,
or both.
(3) A person
that violates subsection (1)(b) to (i) is guilty of a
misdemeanor punishable by imprisonment for not more than 1 year or a $10,000.00
fine.
(4) The board may consider a person’s violation of subsection (1) in
determining whether to issue a license under this act to the person.
(5) The
attorney general or a county prosecuting attorney may bring an action to
prosecute a violation of subsection (1)(a) in the county in which the violation
occurred or in Ingham County.
Sec. 14. (1)
Except for a sports betting operator that is an Indian tribe, a sports betting
operator is subject to a tax of 8.4% on its adjusted gross sports betting
receipts received by the sports betting operator.
(2) A sports
betting operator that is an Indian tribe is subject to the payment requirements
under section 7(1)(f).
(3) A sports
betting operator shall pay the tax or payment, as applicable, under subsection
(1) or (2) on a monthly basis. The payment for each monthly accounting period
is due on the tenth day of the following month.
(4) A sports
betting operator is not subject to any excise tax, license tax, privilege tax,
occupation tax, or other tax, payment, or fee imposed exclusively on a sports
betting operator or sports betting operators by the state or any political
subdivision of this state, except as provided in this act. This subsection does
not impair the contractual rights under an existing development agreement
between a city and a sports betting operator that holds a casino license under
the Michigan Gaming Control and Revenue Act, 1996 IL 1, MCL 432.201 to 432.226.
(5) In addition
to payment of the tax and other fees as provided in this act, and to any
payment required pursuant to an existing development agreement described in
subsection (4), if a city has imposed a municipal services fee equal to 1.25%
on a casino licensee, the city may charge a 1.25%
fee on the adjusted gross sports betting receipts of a sports betting operator
that holds a casino license under the Michigan Gaming Control and Revenue Act,
1996 IL 1, MCL 432.201 to 432.226, whose casino is in that city.
Sec. 15. The
tax imposed under section 14(1) must be allocated as follows:
(a) Thirty
percent to the city in which the sports betting operator’s casino is located,
for use in connection with the following:
(i) The hiring, training, and deployment of
street patrol officers in that city.
(ii) Neighborhood development programs designed to create jobs in that city
with a focus on blighted neighborhoods.
(iii) Public safety programs such as emergency medical services, fire
department programs, and street lighting in that city.
(iv) Anti-gang and youth development programs in that city.
(v) Other programs that are designed to contribute to the improvement of
the quality of life in that city.
(vi) Relief to the taxpayers of that city from 1 or more taxes or fees
imposed by that city.
(vii) The costs of capital improvements in that city.
(viii) Road repairs and improvements in that city.
(b) Sixty-five
percent to this state to be deposited into the fund.
(c) Five
percent to the Michigan agriculture equine industry development fund created
under section 20 of the horse racing law of 1995, 1995 PA 279, MCL 431.320.
However, if the 5% allocated under this subdivision to the Michigan agriculture
equine industry development fund created under
section 20 of the horse racing law of 1995, 1995 PA 279, MCL 431.320, exceeds
$3,000,000.00 in a fiscal year, the amount in excess of $3,000,000.00 must be
allocated and deposited in the fund created under section 16.
Sec. 15a. Any payments under section 7(1)(f) must be allocated as follows:
(a) Ninety percent to this state to be deposited in the fund.
(b) Ten percent to the Michigan strategic fund created under section 5
of the Michigan strategic fund act, 1984 PA 270, MCL 125.2005.
Sec. 16. (1) The internet sports betting fund is created in the state
treasury.
(2) The state treasurer may receive money or other assets required to be
paid into the fund under this act or from any other source for deposit into the
fund. The state treasurer shall direct the investment of the fund. The state
treasurer shall credit to the fund interest and earnings from fund investments.
(3) The board is the administrator of the fund for auditing purposes.
(4) The board shall expend money from the fund, on appropriation, for
all of the following:
(a) The board’s costs of regulating and enforcing internet sports
betting under this act.
(b) After the expenditure under subdivision (a), each year, $500,000.00
to the compulsive gaming prevention fund created in section 3 of the compulsive
gaming prevention act, 1997 PA 70, MCL 432.253.
(c) After the expenditures under subdivisions (a) and (b), each year,
$2,000,000.00 to the first responder presumed coverage fund
created in section 405 of the worker’s disability compensation act of 1969,
1969 PA 317, MCL 418.405.
(d) All money remaining in the fund after the expenditures under
subdivisions (a) to (c) is to be deposited into the state school aid fund
established under section 11 of article IX of the state constitution of 1963.
Sec. 16a. (1) A sports betting operator shall provide to the board a
monthly report to include all of the following regarding its internet sports
betting operations, by sport and type of internet sports betting wager:
(a) Total amount of internet sports betting wagers received.
(b) Winnings.
(c) Free play redeemed.
(d) Deductions.
(e) Adjusted gross sports betting receipts.
(2) The board shall provide the report under subsection (1) to the
department of treasury, state budget office, and house and senate fiscal
agencies on request. In addition, the department of treasury and the state
budget office may request additional information from the sports betting
operator that is directly related to, and for the purposes of verification of,
the financial data provided under subsection (1)(a) and (b), which must be
provided within 60 days after the request. Any information provided under this
section is confidential and proprietary and is exempt from disclosure under the
freedom of information act, 1976 PA 442, MCL 15.231 to 15.246.
Sec. 17. To the extent that sports betting equipment used to offer
internet sports betting under this act is a gambling device as that term is
defined in 15 USC 1171, a shipment of sports betting
equipment, the registering, recording, and labeling of which has been completed
by the manufacturer or the manufacturer’s dealer in accordance with 15 USC 1171
to 1178, is a legal shipment of a gambling device into this state.
Sec. 18. This act does not authorize the construction or operation of a
casino that was not constructed or operating before the effective date of this
act.
Sec. 19. (1) An applicant must submit with its application, on forms
provided by the board, a photograph and 2 sets of fingerprints for each
individual that is subject to licensure.
(2) An applicant and licensee shall consent to inspections, criminal
history background checks, searches and seizures, and the providing of
handwriting exemplars, fingerprints, photographs, and information as authorized
in this act and in rules promulgated by the board.
(3) The board may collect fingerprints from, and conduct criminal
history investigations on, a board employee or prospective board employee.
(4) The board
may conduct criminal history investigations on applicants, licensees, board
employees, prospective board employees, and other persons including board
agents and contractors working for the board for the purpose of carrying out
its statutory powers and responsibilities under this act and rules promulgated
under this act.
(5) For the
purpose of carrying out its statutory powers and responsibilities, the board
shall require the persons identified in subsection (4) to submit his or her
fingerprints for review by the department of state police and the Federal
Bureau of Investigation for the criminal history record check, in the form and
manner required by the department of state police
and the Federal Bureau of Investigation to obtain any information currently or
subsequently contained in the files of the department of state police or the
Federal Bureau of Investigation. The department of state police shall provide
all criminal history record checks requested by the board under this act and
rules promulgated under this act. The department of state police may charge the
board a fee for a criminal history record check required under this section. The
board shall not share the criminal history record check with a private entity.
(6) The
department of state police shall store and retain all fingerprints submitted
under this act in an automated fingerprint identification system that provides
for an automatic notification if new criminal arrest information matches
fingerprints previously submitted under this act. Upon the notification
described in this subsection, the department of state police shall immediately
notify the board. The fingerprints retained under this act may be searched
against future fingerprint submissions, and any relevant results will be shared
with the board.
(7) If the
department of state police is able to participate in the Federal Bureau of
Investigation’s automatic notification system, all fingerprints submitted to
the Federal Bureau of Investigation may be stored and retained by the Federal
Bureau of Investigation in its automatic notification system. The automatic
notification system provides for automatic notification if new criminal arrest
information matches fingerprints previously submitted to the Federal Bureau of
Investigation under this act. If the department of state police receives a
notification from the Federal Bureau of Investigation under this act, the
department of state police shall immediately notify
the board.
This act is ordered to take immediate effect.
Clerk of the House of Representatives
Secretary of the Senate
Approved___________________________________________
____________________________________________________
Governor