Gambling Commission Suspends Deadheat Racing Licences

The commission stopped Deadheat’s remote and non-remote operating licences. Great Britain’s Gambling Commission halted Deadheat Racing licences during its review process. Suspected social responsibility and anti-money laundering failures triggered this action. Immediate suspension affects both licence types. Remote and non-remote betting licences face restrictions. London-based Deadheat has possessed these licences since January 2015. Suspected failures became key considerations for suspension decisions by the regulator.

The commission explained its concerns about operational activities. These activities contradicted licensing objectives, according to officials. Licence conditions faced violations during operations. The licensee might lack suitability for the continuation of licensed activities. Consumer treatment requires fairness during suspension periods. Full information about developments must reach affected customers. The commission communicated these expectations to the operator.

Gambling Commission Maintains Enforcement Against Rule Violations

Deadheat joins other operators facing commission actions recently. Multiple announcements covered suspensions and financial penalties over recent weeks. Videoslots received a £650,000 fine for regulatory breaches recently. AML and social responsibility violations caused this penalty. NetBet paid £650,000 in November too. Similar AML and social responsibility failings prompted their fine.

October saw Spribe OÜ’s software licence suspension by the commission. Hosting requirements compliance failed according to regulators. Serious non-compliance led to this decision. The supplier planned immediate hosting licence applications then. Normal operations would resume within the weeks they expected.

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