When you sign a marker, that marker has your name, the bank name, and your bank account number on it. It is legally considered a check. If you look at a marker, it looks practically like a normal check and it legally is a check. The casino can deposit it if they want to in the exact same way that they would deposit a normal check. A casino won't normally try to depoit the marker(check) unless you tell them to or unless you refuse to pay them. If you refuse to pay them, they will deposit the marker. If you don't have the money in your bank account, then they can have you arrested for writing a bad check.
To answer Scav's question, what is going on right now is nothing new. Vegas casinos have been having people arrested for years for not paying their debts. They only do this as a last resort. If you are willing to work with them, they won't have you arrested. They will let you make a payment plan and will often times even give you a discount on what you owe. It's only if you refuse to pay them, that they will have you arrested.
By the way, it wasn't until some time in the early to mid 1980s that the law changed and gambling debts became legally enforceable. Back in the 1970s, if you refused to pay a casino, they had no legal recourse against you.
Last edited by Rupert Pupkin : 06-19-2008 at 03:53 AM.
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