New York Under
New York state law, it is unlawful to profit from promoting a poker game without the appropriate gaming licences. Simply playing in such a game is not unlawful.
Historical New York clubs Some of the longest operating underground clubs have been in
New York City. Two of these, the Diamond Club and the
Mayfair Club, were famous proving grounds for such now well-known poker players as
Howard Lederer,
Erik Seidel and
Dan Harrington. The
New York Police Department, however, closed these clubs in the summer of 2000 during the
Rudolph Giuliani administration's law and order campaign.
Recent years Underground poker nevertheless flourished in New York City after the Giuliani busts. In
Manhattan, circa 2004, the most well-known clubs included PlayStation near
Union Square and New York Players’ Club (NYPC) (sometimes referred to as
72nd Street) on the Upper West Side. On May 26, 2005, New York City police raided and shut down numerous rooms, including PlayStation and NYPC. Clubs that were not targeted then voluntarily closed their doors for some time in spring 2005, but were mostly reopened by that summer. The reopened clubs began to draw some celebrity clientele, including
Alex Rodriguez of the
New York Yankees (who was officially reprimanded for playing in such clubs), and
Robert Iler (who was actually present for the October 23, 2005 bust of the club
Ace Point at 328 E. 61st Street). Raids continued regularly throughout 2005, closing clubs such as
Rounders on West 25th Street in the Flatiron District of Manhattan, and, after a series of busts and re-opens, the Brooklyn Players' Club in Park Slope area of Brooklyn. Clubs generally continued throughout New York City during 2006 and into 2007, but seemed to the clientele to keep their size smaller to avoid the attention that the larger clubs such as NYPC and PlayStation brought. However, robberies still remained common throughout 2007. This issue reached a crescendo when the City Limit, at 251 Fifth Avenue in Manhattan, was robbed on November 2, 2007.
Frank DeSena of
Wayne, NJ was killed in an accidental weapons fire during the armed robbery. ==See also==