--- In vpFREE@yahoogroups.com, "leetcrowell2" <lee.crowell@...> wrote:
>
> The question is- what would Mickey Crimm have done?
>
> Just my .02- Thanks, Lee.
>
It's hard to say if I would have crossed the line or not. That's some REAL BIG temptation to make a quick score. Any time I run into something that's in the grey area there is always the little guy on my right shoulder telling me not to do it, and the little guy on my left shoulder telling me damn the torpedoes. I've been involved in some grey areas before, but never a play that was absolutely across the line. I've always prided myself on not having to cheat to win. And the penalty, at the very least, for Mr. Kane, is he will be barred from every casino in the country. That is something I would never want to face.
But I can tell you absolutely for sure that Mr. Kane is a dumb crook.
When the guy stumbled onto the glitch he called a friend and informed him. I definitely would not have done that. You cannot be charged with conspiracy if you are not in cahoots with someone. And you are running the risk that your so called friend will expose the play to others.
And this is where Mr. Kane is an absolutly, positively, sure as hell, dumber than a rock crook. He took W2'G's!!! What an idiot!!! If he never took a W2-G he would still be putting the play down, and would probably be putting it down forever. The large jackpot amounts, in quick succession, caused the scrutiny by security.
He should have been turning $80 jackpots into $800 jackpots, not $800 jackpots into $8000 jackpots. He wouldn't have invested any more time doing it that way. It's a hell of a lot quicker to put an $80 jackpot on a machine than an $800 jackpot.
Reply via web post | Reply to sender | Reply to group | Start a New Topic | Messages in this topic (10) |