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Across State Lines By funding state races, gambling interests have avoided national scrutiny and left a trail nearly impossible to follow -- until now. June 23, 1997
The gambling industry deals its campaign contributions "no-peek" style, dodging the national spotlight by pouring millions into state politics, where campaign finance records are spotty and hard to obtain. But now, for the first time anywhere, the MoJo Wire presents an exclusive searchable database that lets you track contributions made by the industry's big players across eleven states. But beware: This puzzle is missing a lot of pieces. Obtaining a complete set of campaign finance and (sometimes useless) lobbying expenditure reports from all 50 states requires a small fortune and a cross-country trip. Consequently, a state's political givers are often invisible outside its borders. Within those borders, however, public interest groups have begun tracking contributions by gambling interests in their own states. And a few states now maintain online databases of contribution records. Since our records were compiled from so many different state and private agencies, they're extremely non-standard. The cross-state database includes contributions from 1992-96, but not all states have figures for each year. Some state records include money spent on ballot initiatives, some have lobbying expenditures figured in. But now you can start to see which gambling interests -- say, Circus Circus, Harrah's, or Eddie DeBartolo Jr. -- are betting it all on politics. | Web Exclusives: Heavy Betting Across State Lines Ea$y Money: The Documentary Fun Facts From the Magazine: Ea$y Money All Bets Are Off World Wide Wagering Hot!Media |
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