BetOnSports founder pleads guilty in U.S. court

WASHINGTON, (Reuters) – The founder of the defunct  British online gambling firm BetOnSports pleaded guilty in U.S.  court yesterday and agreed to forfeit more than $43 million in  criminal proceeds, the Justice Department said.

It said Gary Kaplan, 50, who founded the high-profile early  player in offshore Internet sports gambling, pleaded guilty to  charges of conspiring to violate the federal racketeering and  other U.S. laws.

Kaplan, who transferred a week ago from a Swiss bank  account the $43,650,000 he had agreed to forfeit, entered his  plea in U.S. District Court in St. Louis.
If the judge accepts the terms of the plea deal, Kaplan  will be sentenced to a prison term of 41 to 51 months, the  Justice Department said.
Kaplan’s sentencing has been set for Oct. 27. He has been  in custody without a bond set since his arrest in March of  2007.

BetOnSports ceased operations in 2006, and customers lost  between $7 million and $20 million, the Justice Department has  said.
Kaplan admitted in court that beginning in the mid to late  1990s, he set up business entities offshore in Aruba, Antigua  and eventually Costa Rica to provide betting services to U.S.  residents through Internet Web sites and toll-free telephone  numbers.