Puerto Rico Legalizes Slots Outside Casinos

The new law, enacted as part of a comprehensive reform of the island’s tax code, transfers some 25,000 non-casino EGMs from the gray market into the legal market. The government expects the change to boost its coffers by $160 million a year in new revenue. The law will put yet another nail in the coffin of the territory’s casino industry, including Casino de Puerto Rico (l.), which has been struggling for years.

Puerto Rico Governor Ricardo Rosselló has signed a bill into law allowing machine games outside casinos.

The measure, passed by the Legislative Assembly in November, gives the stamp of legality to some 25,000 previously gray market machines across the Caribbean island, which functions as a self-governing U.S. Commonwealth.

The law is part of a wider draft of new tax measures introduced by Rosselló in April aimed at providing the hurricane-wracked island with nearly US$2 billion in tax relief over the next five years.

According to the Senate President Thomas Rivera Schatz, the legal machines will generate about $160 million in tax revenue per year, 50 percent of which is earmarked for a police retirement fund and 45 percent for municipalities in need of assistance through an agency that administers an island-wide health insurance system.

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On May 25, 1935, Ohio State sophomore Jesse Owens delivered arguably the greatest 45 minutes in sports history at the Big Ten track meet in Ann Arbor. Owens broke three world records and tied a fourth, setting new marks in the long jump (26′81/4"), the 220-yard dash (20.3 seconds), and the 220-yard low hurdles (22.6 seconds), while equaling the 100-yard dash world record (9.4 seconds). Despite his individual brilliance, Michigan narrowly edged out Ohio State for the team title, 48 to 43.5.

On This Day In Sports History

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