Court rejects casino measure for November ballot

Boxes of signatures to get a casino amendment on the November ballot are delivered to the secretary of state’s office by Jeni Hughes (from left), Shelia Wooley and Jim Thompson at the Capitol in Little Rock on Wednesday, Aug. 22.
Boxes of signatures to get a casino amendment on the November ballot are delivered to the secretary of state’s office by Jeni Hughes (from left), Shelia Wooley and Jim Thompson at the Capitol in Little Rock on Wednesday, Aug. 22.

— The Arkansas Supreme Court has rejected a proposed ballot measure to give a professional poker player the exclusive right to operate casinos in the state.

The court ordered that no votes be counted in Nancy Todd’s proposed constitutional amendment to allow casino gambling. The proposed amendment would have given Todd the right to operate casinos in four Arkansas counties.

MORE OCT. 4 RULINGS

The court ruled that signatures gathered were invalid because she revised her ballot measure after gathering them.

Officials had rejected the proposal from the November ballot after they said it didn’t tell voters it would prohibit electronic gambling at a horse track in Hot Springs and a dog track in West Memphis. Todd had revised the language of her proposal to say it may repeal the law allow the electronic gambling.

Read more in tomorrow's Arkansas Democrat-Gazette.

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