Minnesota Gambling License
State Of Minnesota Gambling License
In re Lawful Gambling License of Henry Youth Hockey Association, License No. 02795, 511 N.W.2d 452, 457 (Minn.App.1994) (Board must regulate to insure gambling is conducted in public interest and must not only look at acts of licensee, but also harm to public if acts unpunished); Spilotro v. Licensed lawful gambling organizations pay gambling taxes and/or fees on non-linked bingo, raffles, paddletickets, electronic-linked bingo, tipboards, sports-themed tipboards, and electronic and paper pull-tabs. (See Minnesota Statutes, Chapter 297E.). All legal forms of gambling in Minnesota require a minimum age of 18 for lotteries, poker, casinos, charitable gambling, bingo, skill-based tournaments, paddlewheel, tip board, raffles, and pari-mutuel wagering on horses. All casino gambling takes place at tribal casinos in Minnesota, with the exception of live card games at Canterbury Park.
Wisconsin Gambling License
Department overview | |
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Formed | 1996; 24 years ago |
Preceding agencies |
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Jurisdiction | Minnesota |
Headquarters | St. Paul |
Employees | 19 full-time positions, including: seven sworn agents (director, senior special agent, and five special agents); three (non-sworn) special (liquor) investigators; one law enforcement liaison and six administrative personnel. |
Department executive | |
Parent department | Minnesota Department of Public Safety |
Website | dps.mn.gov/divisions/age/Pages/default.aspx |
The Minnesota Alcohol and Gambling Enforcement Division (AGED) is a law enforcement agency within the Minnesota Department of Public Safety charged with regulation of Alcoholic beverages and Gambling, within the state of Minnesota .
The Alcohol Enforcement Unit issues alcohol manufacturing and wholesale licenses, and approval of some retail licenses. In addition agents investigate compliance with state alcohol laws and regulations, and investigate alcohol-related complaints. The Gambling Enforcement Unit conducts criminal and gaming license background investigations, and monitors the 18 tribal casinos in the state for compliance with the State-Tribal compacts. AGED special investigators conduct inspection and compliance visits to licensed liquor and gambling establishments to ensure compliance with the state liquor and gambling laws and rules.[1]
See also[edit]
References[edit]
- ^'AGE Home'. dps.mn.gov. Retrieved 17 August 2018.