CCTV And Recorded Footage Take On Casino Criminals

Aug 28, 2007 3:14 PM


         Subscribe in NewsGator Online   Subscribe in Bloglines

When Ah Tung was fighting a Macau casino to honor a $95,000 jackpot she won on a slot machine, the 16-year-old had reason to thank the CCTV cameras, reports Agence France-Press (AFP).

The video footage helped the teenage Hong Kong native win the money after Sands casino in the southern Chinese city refused to pay her, arguing she was too young to be there.

The unprecedented case, which made headlines worldwide in February, was decided when Macau's gaming watchdog promised whoever won a game "without cheating" would receive their payouts.

The watchdog ruled that the underage player had entered the casino unchallenged and was therefore entitled to her winnings.

Such issues are usually top-secret affairs, unless, as in Ah Tung's case, they are leaked to the press.

Casino operators are highly secretive about the systems designed to stop cheaters, fraud or settle money disputes.

Four major casinos in the gambling haven of Macau contacted by AFP all turned down requests to discuss their security operations, and the suppliers of gaming technologies and equipment are cagey about the topic.

"Anti-cheating strategies and mechanisms are always our major concern and they are in place in each of our casinos," a spokeswoman for Asia's casino resort, Hotel Lisboa, told AFP. "However, we choose not to discuss such security-sensitive subjects in public."

Andy Mok, sales director of Vodatel Systems, Taipa, Macau, which designs surveillance systems for casinos, says operators invest millions of dollars in high-tech programs to combat fraud and cheaters.

From the moment visitors walk onto a casino floor through a metal detector, they are watched by multiple cameras and security guards, with their movements recorded continuously from every angle, he says.

Several Macau casinos are also testing face-recognition technology to keep cheaters off their premises, Mok says.

Vodatel's software can match a person's cheekbones and eyeballs against a database of undesirable gamblers provided by law enforcement authorities across the world.

CCTV, though, remains a major surveillance tool.

"They couldn't operate without it. If a table is not under surveillance they won't have gaming on their table," says Andrew Hubble, regional manager of Dallmeier International, Germany, which supplied CCTV systems to Sands and the Venetian Macau resort-casino.

Dallmeier is providing 3,000 digital video recorders to the new mega resort, a number that will eventually grow to more than 6,000, making it the world's largest digital surveillance system.

"Casinos are the most pro-active and sophisticated user of CCTV solutions out of any CCTV user," he told AFP.

With an average of two and a half cameras watching each gaming table, they have the capability to zoom close enough to see what value of chips are used, where the bets are placed and count how many chips are on a stack.

Even the individual chips themselves can be monitored by an embedded radio frequency tracker, according to International Gaming Technology (IGT), the world's largest slot machine provider and a provider of gaming monitoring systems.

The tags have been used on new passports, to track library books and livestock and have been used in Las Vegas casinos for two years. The system will enter the Macau market at the Venetian.

Want to use this article? Click here for options!
© 2009 Penton Media Inc.

Today's New Product

Product 1 Image

Privaris Biometric Verification Software

In support of the Privaris family of personal identity verification tokens for secure physical and IT access, an updated version of its plusID Manager Version 2.0 software extends the capabilities and convenience to administer and enroll biometric tokens. The software offers multi-client support, import and export functionality, more extensive reporting features and a key server for a more convenient method of securing tokens to the issuing organization.

To read more...


Govt Security

Cover

SUBSCRIBE

This month in Access Control

Latest Jobs

Popular Stories

Webinar

A Cost-Effective Framework For Total Security Integration

Join AC&SS and MAXxess as they review two different IP-framework applications
Wednesday, July 30, 2008 at 2:00pm ET/11:00am PT

Register Now!

Back to Top