Title: Gambling Commission and Third Party Websites
1Gambling Commission and Third Party Websites
2600,000 UK Gambling Commission regulatory
settlement highlights the importance of
appropriately managing all third-party websites
that a licensed operator may be responsible for
under white-label agreements.
3A regulatory review by the UK Gambling Commission
resulted in a 600,000 regulatory settlement.
Gambling businesses who allow others to use their
technology via a different brand, should contact
our specialist gambling lawyers for advice to
ensure their systems and processes properly
comply with the Gambling Commissions
requirements and with UK law. Our gambling
solicitors can be reached via 0800 170 1538.
4Contents
- 01 / Gambling Operators Warned Over Third
- Party Responsibility
- 02 / Breaches of AML Requirements
- 03 / Social Responsibility Failings
- 04 / Inadequate due diligence on third parties
- 05 / Good Practice
501 / Gambling operators warned over third-party
responsibilities
6Gambling operators warned over third-party
responsibilities
- The UK Gambling Commission announced via its
website on 6 May 2020 that following the
commencement of a review of its operating licence
under section 116 in August 2019, FSB
Technology UK Limited has been required to pay a
financial penalty of 600,000 and the
Commissions costs of 34,300 for its failure to
ensure that several of its third-party
websites complied with licence conditions and
codes of practice. - It has also had additional conditions imposed on
its licence to ensure it conducts risk-based due
diligence on new and current third-party partners
it runs websites on behalf of. - FSBs business model is based on a white
labelling arrangement including the contracting
of provisions of its licensed activities to third
parties. This arrangement places responsibility
on the licensee to ensure that its third-party
partners comply with the Gambling Act and the
requirements imposed by the Licence Conditions
and Codes of Practice (LCCP). - However, the Gambling Commissions investigation
discovered that FSB did not have sufficient
oversight of several third-party websites and did
not itself have effective anti-money money
laundering and social responsibility policies and
procedures in place. It also failed to comply
with LCCP on numerous occasions including
failings within FSBs processes aimed at
preventing money laundering and protecting
vulnerable people.
7The three key failings included a breach of the
Licence Condition 12.11(2),(3) which require
measures to be in place to prevent money
laundering and terrorist financing,
Gambling operators warned over third party
responsibilities
a failure to comply with Social Responsibility Cod
e 3.4.1 in respect of customer interactions, and d
ue diligence and control failings relating to the
white-labelling arrangement supervision.
802 / Breaches of AML Requirements
9Breaches of AML Requirements
- The anti-money laundering failings included a
situation where a customer had not been required
to provide adequate source of funds evidence and
had gambled and lost circa 282,000 over a period
of some 18 months. Another situation involved one
of the third-party websites operating without suff
icient oversight of VIPs and with a VIP team
manager employed by the third-party
website acting without adequate oversight
and without sufficient AML training. - The Commission also found that FSBs own AML
controls did not adequately address the risks
posed by higher risk customers. These included,
failing to establish and maintain appropriate
risk-sensitive policies, procedures and controls
relating to the management of its third party
partners, a lack of adequate documentation and
audit trail to demonstrate decision making, and
inadequately resourced and trained compliance
team and a failure to undertake account reviews
to monitor the re-opening of accounts by
third-party partners.
1003 / Social Responsibility Failings
11Social Responsibility Failings
- The social responsibility failings included
failures to protect problem gamblers. Commission
officials found that FSB were failing to carry
out customer interactions in compliance with
Social Responsibility Code 3.4.1. FSB were
permitting staff employed by third-party partners
to carry out customer interactions with
insufficient oversight and training as a result
FSB was not ensuring that appropriate and
meaningful customer interactions took place or
were properly recorded. - Additionally, FSB failed to comply with Social
Responsibility Code 3.5.3 in preventing one of
its third-party partners from sending a marketing
email to 2,324 customers who had previously
self-excluded. This was compounded by FSB then
emailing the affected customers with an apology
rather than ensuring that no further contact
emails were issued given that there should have
been no contact with the self-excluded customers.
1204 / Inadequate due diligence on third parties
13Inadequate due diligence on third parties
- A further failing included a breach of Licence
Condition 16.11 in permitting one of its
third-party partners to use an inappropriate
banner advertisement containing cartoon nudity
which proved to be the unauthorised use of
copyrighted material. The Commission found that
FSB had failed to take reasonable steps in
undertaking due diligence prior to entering into
a contractual relationship with a third party.
Had it done so, FSB would have identified obvious
concerns that there was a risk the third-party
could use such advertisements given its clear
association to an unlicensed website with
questionable repute. - FSB accepted that it did not carry out sufficient
due diligence which would have identified
concerns with regard to the international
operator of the brand name which included the
fact that the ultimate ownership of the company
was unclear and the relationship between the
company and the ownership of the brand name used
was also unclear. In one of the other cases, FSB
failed to assess the risks of entering into
third-party contractual arrangements where there
were links to an individual who was a Politically
Exposed Person (PEP). - As a result of these failings, a condition has
been added to FSBs operating licence requiring
it to conduct risk-based due diligence before
entering into a relationship with a third-party
partner, manage and evaluate its existing
third-party relationships and carry out
risk-based due diligence on all its third-party
partners at least annually.
1405 / Good Practice
15Good Practice
The Commission has highlighted that gambling
operators should take account of the failings
identified in their investigation and review the
following matters and has warned businesses that
they will face regulatory action if they do not
properly manage all third-party websites they are
responsible for
- Is your governance, due diligence, contractual
and audit arrangements effective and are you
refreshing existing due diligence at least
annually? - Are your policies and procedures for identifying
high risk customers for AML and SR customer
accounts effective? - Have you adequately resourced your AML and SR
departments, so your staff are always able to put
your policies and processes in place for all
customers? - Have your staff and your third-party partners
received sufficient AML and SR training? - Are you recording all customer interactions,
including decisions not to interact with
customers, and are these records available for
colleagues to refer to when making decisions? - Are your customers providing documentation to
support their level of spend and loss, and not
simply giving assurances?
16This case highlights the importance for gambling
businesses of engaging fully with specialist
gambling lawyers such as our team to avoid
compliance breaches.
Any gambling business that faces a compliance
assessment or receives notice of the commencement
of a section 116 review by the Gambling
Commission should contact our specialist lawyers.
17Our specialist gambling lawyers have detailed
knowledge of these provisions and can assist if
you have concerns or face a review of a gambling
licence, including a section 116 review. We can
be reached via 0800 170 1538.
18Thank you,in any case
- Ince Gordon Dadds LLP
- Aldgate Tower, 2 Leman Street, London E1 8QN
- DX 1070 London City
- T 0800 170 1538
- licensing_at_incelaw.com
- Director of Betting and Gaming