
Last night Full Tilt Poker released a statement to Forbes explaining why they have not been able to pay back their players.
The deadline of September 15 to find an investor is looming over the poker site, and the statement not only reveals the reason for their shortfall in funds, but also that six potential investors have visited their operation in Dublin.
The full statement is below, source Forbes.com.
"As is obvious from the events that have transpired since April 15th, Full Tilt Poker was not prepared for the far-reaching, US government enforcement effort of Black Friday."
"The events of Black Friday came on the heels of prior government enforcement activities and significant theft. Over the two years preceding Black Friday, the US government seized approximately $115M of player funds located in U.S. banks. While we believed that offering peer-to-peer online poker did not violate any federal laws—a belief supported by many solid and well-reasoned legal opinions—the DOJ took a different view. In addition, as was widely reported, a key payment processor stole approximately $42M from Full Tilt Poker. Until April 15th, Full Tilt Poker had always covered these losses so that no player was ever affected. Finally, during late 2010 and early 2011, Full Tilt Poker experienced unprecedented issues with some of its third-party processors that greatly contributed to its financial problems. While the company was on its way to addressing the problems caused by these processors, Full Tilt Poker never anticipated that the DOJ would proceed as it did by seizing our global domain name and shutting down the site worldwide."
"Over the last four months, Full Tilt Poker has been actively exploring opportunities with outside investors in order to stabilize the company and pay back our players. At least six of those groups, including hedge funds, operators of other internet businesses and individual investors, have visited Dublin to inspect the operation. We have recently engaged an additional financial advisor through an investment banking group to assist us in our search for an infusion of cash as well as a new management team to restore the site and repay players. While any deal of this nature is necessarily complex given the current regulatory environment, our players should know that Full Tilt Poker is fully committed to paying them back in full and restoring confidence in our operations."
PokerStars
William Hill Poker
PartyPoker
Poker770
Unibet Poker
Betfair Poker
Winner Poker
BetVictor
PKR Poker
bet365 Poker| News | Learn Poker | Play Poker | Live Reporting | Freerolls & Tournaments | Forum | Quick Room Review |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
PokerNews.com is the world's leading Poker website. Among other things, visitors will find a daily dose of articles with the latest poker news, live reporting from tournaments, exclusive videos and an extensive online poker rooms section with detailed poker reviews, the best poker bonuses and so much more.
PokerStars is the largest online poker site offering the biggest amount of poker games and different game variations including Texas Hold'em, Omaha and other popular poker games. By joining PokerStars you can easily learn all the poker rules and poker strategy by playing free poker games. Join PokerStars and enjoy top quality online poker.
© 2003-2012 PokerNews.com All rights reserved
08-31-2011 12:22
Really?? The "It's not our fault??" defense - four-and-a-half months late?? How much money are you guys spending on "additional financial advisors" and a "new management team"?? And have you guys actually ever issued an apology and a mea culpa?? It's always "we are committed to getting our money to our (now former) players" "we're working on it" "we're almost there" and "more information coming next week"...Congratulations - at lease you guys will make case study fodder for business schools on "how not to survive a crisis" for decades to come...