New Jersey Administrative Code
Title 13 - LAW AND PUBLIC SAFETY
Chapter 69F - RULES OF THE GAMES
Subchapter 14 - POKER
Section 13:69F-14.19 - Bad beat payouts; high hand payouts; posting of rules; contributions; counting and displaying of payout amount; procedures for implementation
Current through Register Vol. 56, No. 18, September 16, 2024
(a) A casino licensee may elect, in its discretion, to offer a payout for one or more pre-designated high value poker hands when such a hand in a round of play is held by a player either as a losing hand (a "bad beat") or without regard to the relative rank of any other player's hand. Such payouts shall be made from a separate fund created from pot contributions required at tables where either a bad beat payout or a high hand payout is offered and shall be paid in accordance with the procedures established pursuant to this section. The funds extracted from pot contributions may be used by the casino licensee for other types of poker bonus payouts, so long as all funds extracted from any pot are awarded to poker players. A casino licensee may not offer both a bad beat payout and a high hand payout at the same poker table.
(b) A casino licensee shall post at each poker table that offers either a bad beat payout or a high hand payout, a notice advising patrons of eligibility for such payout. In addition to displaying the current amount of any payout, a casino licensee that offers a payout shall post its payout rules in a conspicuous location within its poker room, which, at a minimum, shall address:
(c) A casino licensee shall extract from each pot at a poker table designated for participation in either a bad beat payout or a high hand payout, a prescribed contribution to the payout, which amount shall be collected in accordance with the casino licensee's payout rules as set forth in its Rules of the Games Submission. Prior to distributing the pot to a winning patron and after the dealer has extracted the rake, the amount from each pot to be contributed to a payout shall be determined, segregated from the pot, and deposited into the payout box. A casino licensee may, upon amending its payout rules and pursuant to (j) below, terminate collection of contributions at any time.
(d) At least once each gaming day and upon notice to the Division, a casino licensee shall count the accumulated contents of each payout box and the contents shall be transferred to the cashiers' cage or a satellite cage. The counting shall occur at a closed poker table, the cashiers' cage, or a satellite cage in accordance with the casino licensee's internal control procedures.
(e) Once each payout box or a container containing the contents of the payout boxes is delivered to the cashiers' cage or satellite cage, a cashier shall count the contents of each box or, if the contents of such boxes were previously counted by poker room personnel and combined in a locked container for transport, verify the aggregate count.
(f) In lieu of the procedures set forth in (d) and (e) above, a casino licensee may count and record the total value of gaming chips contained in the approved contribution container(s) and return the gaming chips to the table inventory, subject to the following requirements:
(g) Upon completing the form as prescribed in (f)3 above, the dealer shall deposit the original Payout Contribution Form in the drop box attached to the poker table and the person who verified the count shall place the duplicate in a locked accounting box maintained at a secure location.
(h) At least once each gaming day, a casino accounting department representative shall collect the duplicate Payout Contribution Forms contained in the locked accounting box and verify that that the number of forms contained in the locked accounting box equals the number of original Contribution Forms received from the count room. In the event of a variance, the representative shall determine the missing form(s) by comparing form serial numbers. In any instance in which a duplicate form cannot be matched with an original, the Master Game Report shall be adjusted to add to poker revenue the value of either bad beat payout or high hand payout contributions on such form.
(i) Each poker hand that qualifies for either a bad beat payout or a high hand payout shall be verified by a poker shift supervisor prior to awarding the payout. Upon verification, the poker shift supervisor shall:
(j) The casino accounting department shall prepare a payout distribution in cash, a recognized cash equivalent, or gaming chips in accordance with the casino licensee's internal control procedures. Notwithstanding (f)2 above, a casino licensee may elect to pay a payout at the cashiers' cage.
(k) The official record of the amount of daily contributions to payouts shall be maintained by the casino accounting department. No less than once each gaming day and immediately upon notification of a verification by a poker shift supervisor, a casino accounting department representative shall:
(l) No bad beat payout or high hand payout shall be offered at a poker table until a casino licensee has submitted procedures to the Division for discontinuing the applicable payout. Such procedures shall address the method by which pot contributions shall be terminated and/or for transferring payout amounts to other payouts, so as to ensure that all payout amounts are paid to poker patrons.
(m) A casino licensee may also offer a secondary bad beat payout that is awarded to a lesser qualifying bad beat hand, and which shall be funded by:
(n) The appendix to the Rules of the Games Submission for a bad beat payout shall prescribe the rules to be followed if more than one player at a table has a qualifying bad beat payout hand.
(o) Once the amount of a bad beat payout or a high hand payout has been displayed to the public, the display shall not be reduced to a lesser amount unless the amount has been paid to a winning patron.
(p) A casino licensee may use a percentage of the daily payout contributions to fund a portion of the next payout (reset amount). The percentage of the daily contributions used to fund the reset amount shall be set forth in the internal control submission of the casino licensee and shall also be posted in the poker room of the casino licensee. The casino licensee shall also account for and document all reset amounts in a manner approved by the Division.
(q) Prior to implementing any changes to the information required in (b)1 through 4 above, a casino licensee shall be required to post a notice advising patrons of the change; provided, however, that the qualifying hand requirements for a bad beat payout may not be increased until that bad beat payout has been won.