Entertainment & Sports
Sep. 14, 2007
Tribes, Tracks, Union Team Up
Powerful interests unhappy with the outcome of a battle in the Legislature over expanded Indian gaming rights are gearing up for a possible replay before voters in February. Gaming expert and law professor I. Nelson Rose said the issue of sovereignty is always in the background of gaming negotiations.




By Linda Rapattoni
Daily Journal Staff Writer
SACRAMENTO - Powerful interests unhappy with the outcome of a battle in the Legislature over expanded Indian gaming rights are gearing up for a possible replay before voters in February.
Strange alliances have formed between Indian tribes and horse racing tracks - traditional competitors for gambling dollars - and a union that wants to ...
Daily Journal Staff Writer
SACRAMENTO - Powerful interests unhappy with the outcome of a battle in the Legislature over expanded Indian gaming rights are gearing up for a possible replay before voters in February.
Strange alliances have formed between Indian tribes and horse racing tracks - traditional competitors for gambling dollars - and a union that wants to ...
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