Legal soccer betting makes life tough for the bookies, say police
Nine suspects arrested for taking illegal wagers on Euro 2004
The legalisation of soccer betting was hailed as a success by police yesterday as officers arrested nine people for illegally taking bets on the Euro 2004 soccer games.
The introduction of legal betting successfully put extra pressure on underground operations, senior officers said.
Superintendent Ng Ping-kuen, from the Organised Crime and Triad Bureau, said: 'Our intelligence suggests that there are fewer illegal bookmaking activities since the legalisation of soccer betting.'
His comments come amid a string of reports suggesting underground syndicates are booming during Euro 2004.
Mr Ng said the trend was also reflected in their enforcement records.
Before the legalisation in August last year, the police conducted 46 successful operations and seized more than $37 million worth of cash and betting slips between November 2002 and last July.