![]() The motion said the Supreme Court likely will not rule on the underlying challenge to the gambling deal until sometime next year. “This exigency has been created by the launch of the Seminole Tribe’s mobile betting application on November 7, 2023, without prior warning,” the attorneys wrote in a 15-page motion. With the case pending, attorneys for the pari-mutuel companies Tuesday asked the Supreme Court to “immediately suspend the sports betting provisions” of a law that carried out the gambling deal. Read: Idalia Aid, ‘Safe Florida Home’ Bill Passes The companies contend that the sports-betting part of the deal violates a 2018 constitutional amendment requiring voter approval of casino gambling. The pari-mutuel companies filed a petition in September at the Supreme Court challenging part of a gambling deal between the state and the tribe that would allow online sports betting.
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