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State says Allston market ran a small slots parlor on the side; wants to seize the money police found there in a raid

The state Attorney General's office yesterday filed for permission to confiscate $182,189.11 it says Boston Police found in a May raid of the Harvard Convenience Store and what police described as its illegal three-machine slots parlor at Brighton Avenue at Harvard Avenue.

Police say they uncovered a gaming room behind a closed door next to the store cash register around 12:30 a.m. on May 31, as part of an investigation into 911 calls about minors drinking and gambling inside the store in one of Allston's most prominent locations, according to the AG's forfeiture filing in Suffolk Superior Court.

According to a police report, police found no children behind a closed door next to the store cash register, but did find a number of men, drinking beers and three of them playing video slot machines - one of whom quickly pulled a voucher representing his winnings out of the machine as officers walked in. Police say that in addition to the beers the men in the room were holding, they found about two dozen empty or partially consumed bottles of Corona and Modelo.

They add they did not have to bust down any doors; the store manager, whose wife owns the store, opened the door to the room for them when they arrived and told him why they were there.

Later in the day, armed with a search warrant, police also found the more than $182,000 in what they said were receipts from the illegal machines, inside the machines themselves, two safes and the store cash register - which police said they could ID as having come from the slot machines because they were stored with vouchers from the machines.

According to police, the machines accepted bets by way of paper money, in denominations of up to $100 a bet. Winning bets would generate a voucher, which a player could then redeem for actual cash.

Police did not charge anybody with a criminal offense, but issued a licensing citation for the store, which won a city license in December to sell beer and wine. The Boston Licensing Board has yet to schedule a hearing on the citation.

The state is seeking the money under its civil forfeiture law related to the proceeds of illegal gaming, because slot machines are illegal except at state-sanctioned casinos, and as the state notes in its filing, "the store is not licensed by the Massachusetts Gaming Commission to operate a gaming enterprise with slot machines on the premises."

Complete complaint (1.3M PDF).

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Comments

The state is seeking the money under its civil forfeiture law related to the proceeds of illegal gaming, because slot machines are illegal except at state-sanctioned casinos, and as the state notes in its filing, "the store is not licensed by the Massachusetts Gaming Commission to operate a gaming enterprise with slot machines on the premises."

Good luck with that. The police property room is a black hole.

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This is basically from the plot of Young Sheldon, but in that case the laundromat with the hidden casino was paying protection money to the cops, and that held them off for a while.

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I always assumed that show was about a bike mechanic in Newton who was somewhat of a pioneering publisher of DIY repair info the world wide web.

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In the abstract it is a bit silly that gambling can only be done at "state-sanctioned casinos." Once the state offers official gambling, the moral argument about casinos is gone and its now all about collecting tax dollars.

I do applaud the enterprising nature of the store owners.

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But also protecting the state-sanctioned monopolies held by the multi-billion-dollar corporations holding licenses to operate those casinos -- along with the flow of campaign contributions enabled by that gaming revenue.

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I wish there was a legal way for small businesses to offer gambling. That would allow the profits to stay local, instead of disappearing to a megacorporation.

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it's also to ensure that there are standards to which the businesses are being held, in terms of how "fair" the gambling is (i.e, is it actually gambling or is it completely rigged) as well as enforcing things like anti money laundering measures

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Now I don’t have to say all that.
Plus mention debt collection techniques.

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The purest form of gambling is the state lottery, yet somehow it’s legal for the state to prey on its citizens. Yes, neighboring states caved, but we could have held the line against this moral abyss.

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And do what with the money?

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Healey's got a hot hand. Her ship is coming in and it ain't going to crash on the Tobin.

/s

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...but it seems curious that no criminal charges were filed, just a citation for a license violation and, of course, the cash grab. Could it be that someone forgot to pay off the right someone, but nobody particularly wants sworn testimony in a criminal proceeding?

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