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By Jim O'Sullivan
State House News Service
A bingo software firm is suing Treasurer Timothy
Cahill and the state's Lottery chief for more than
$20 million over the awarding of gaming contracts,
claiming they engaged in a conspiracy to favor a
Georgia company in exchange for money for Cahill's
campaign.
In a federal suit filed last Friday, Rhode
Island-based Bingo Innovative Software alleged that
Cahill and Lottery Executive Director Mark Cavanagh
blocked implementation of a TV bingo game despite
projected profits for the cash-strapped system, in
part to further their own careers and open
private-sector opportunities for themselves and
others.
Cahill aides ripped the suit as groundless.
Bingo Innovative claimed that Scientific Games
International - the Georgia firm that has paid a
close Cahill associate, Thomas Kelly, over $100,000
for consulting - won special favor from Cahill and
Cavanagh as former Lottery employees received
"lucrative" employment at Scientific.
Treasury general counsel Grace Lee called the
case "absolutely meritless and one of the most
frivolous lawsuits I've ever seen filed."
"This is nothing but a blatant attack to waste
the taxpayers' dollars," Lee said.
Lee called it "absolutely" unusual that Cahill
and Cavanagh were named as individuals.
Bingo Innovative said it lost out on lucrative
contracts to Scientific, and blamed Cahill for
preventing the introduction of a bingo game this
year, in violation of an agreement between the
company and the Lottery.
Cahill aides said the suit had mistakenly
conflated two separate Lottery initiatives, Keno
and bingo.
Scientific won a contract from the Lottery for a
Keno racing game introduced in May 2007, which
evolved later that year from featuring electronic
cars to electronic horses. Earlier this year, the
Lottery fired Scientific and hired Tournament One,
a gaming and production firm with offices in Las
Vegas and Connecticut, Cahill aides said. They said
Bingo Innovative never competed for a Keno
contract.
Both firms lost out on a 2007 contract for a TV
bingo, although Bingo Innovative later convinced
the Lottery to go along with a low-cost, 60-day
pilot TV bingo game, Lee said. When the company
failed to produce a cable TV partner, Lee said, the
partnership ended.
In the suit, Bingo Innovative claimed that a
Lottery-commissioned study found Bingo's game "a
home run" and said it believed Scientific's Keno
game inferior. The Lottery went forward with the
Keno game, but has not established a bingo
game.
In its suit, Bingo Innovative said Cahill and
Cavanagh had acted for "perpetuation ... in their
current public positions and for the opportunity of
future employment both in the public and private
sectors" and "in order to provide compensation to
Scientific Games International for campaign
fundraising" for Cahill.
"Such fundraising was undertaken by Scientific
Games in a 'pay to play' scheme in which
most-favored contractor status was awarded based on
fundraising activity," Bingo Innovative
claimed.
"Such fundraising was arranged by and through a
political operative engaged by Scientific Games who
enjoys a close personal relationship with" both
Cahill and Cavanagh, the company said.
Kelly is a Quincy neighbor of Cahill's and has
long been on the inside of the treasurer's
political operation.
After a record-breaking year last year, the
Lottery has largely flamed out amid the economic
downturn. Revenues for the system were running 3.5
percent to 3.75 percent behind last year's pace,
for a projected net loss of $30 million, Cahill
said at a Dec. 15 hearing with state budget
officials.
Bingo Innovative requested a jury trial. Its
lawyer Leon Blais did not immediately respond to a
request for comment.
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