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PayPal charged with breaking Patriot Act
By Dawn Kawamoto
Staff Writer, CNET News.com
March 31, 2003, 1:22 PM PT
http://news.com.com/2100-1018-994810.html

A U.S. Attorney's office has alleged that PayPal violated laws regarding
the processing of online gambling payments, and is asking parent company
eBay to hand over nine months of the gambling-related earnings in
settlement.

The U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of Missouri told eBay that its
online payment service violated provisions in the USA Patriot Act between
October 2001 and July 2002, according to eBay's annual report, filed Monday
with securities regulators. Under the act, it is prohibited to transmit
funds known to have come from a criminal offense, or that are intended to
promote or support unlawful activities.

The agency is seeking to collect any earnings that PayPal received from
online gambling merchants during the nine-month period, as well as
interest. Last year, PayPal received 6 percent of its revenue from online
gambling, according to its filing with the Securities and Exchange
Commission.

eBay, however, takes issue with the U.S. Attorney's allegations.

"PayPal acted in the good faith belief that its conduct did not violate
(the USA Patriot Act), and PayPal calculates that the amount of its
earnings from online gaming activities was less than asserted in the (U.S.
Attorney's) letter," the filing states.

The San Jose, Calif.-based auction company, which received the U.S.
Attorney's notice on Friday, is reviewing the matter and has not decided
whether it will pay the requested settlement price, said Kevin Pursglove,
an eBay spokesman.

If a settlement is reached, it won't be the first time PayPal has paid up
over processing online gambling payments. Last August, the service reached
a settlement with the attorney general for the state of New York, under
which it ceased processing payments for New York online gambling merchants
and also paid the state $200,000 in penalties.

eBay, which acquired PayPal in October, has halted the practice of
processing online gambling payments. In its filing, the company says the
most recent controversy could hit the service hard.

"Any finding of a civil or criminal violation by PayPal, or potentially any
settlement, could also endanger PayPal's ability to obtain, maintain or
renew money transmitter licenses in jurisdictions where it requires such
licenses to operate, which would materially harm our business," according
to the filing.

The company is aware that PayPal's business could also suffer if future
regulation under the USA Patriot Act requires it to revise its process for
verifying the identity of its customers. The USA Patriot Act, signed into
law in 2001, gives law enforcement agencies greater latitude in monitoring
Internet usage and sharing information. The law is designed to reduce the
prospect of terrorist attacks.

"PayPal's business could suffer if customers use its system for illegal or
improper purposes, or if usage of its system is reduced because of
increased verification requirements," the filing states.

But Pursglove noted that PayPal already uses a rigorous customer
identification system and has a good view, internally, of payments that
merchants try to process for illicit or illegal activity. The loss of such
business would be insignificant to eBay's revenue, he said.

He also noted that whether eBay settles for the amount the U.S. Attorney in
Missouri is seeking, something less or nothing at all, there would be no
material affect on its finances or operations. eBay declined to disclose
the amount the U.S. Attorney office is seeking.

Shares of eBay slipped $3.98, or about 4 percent, to $85.31 in Monday trading.

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R. A. Hettinga <mailto: [EMAIL PROTECTED]>
The Internet Bearer Underwriting Corporation <http://www.ibuc.com/>
44 Farquhar Street, Boston, MA 02131 USA
"... however it may deserve respect for its usefulness and antiquity,
[predicting the end of the world] has not been found agreeable to
experience." -- Edward Gibbon, 'Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire'

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