The
police department Friday finally showed its cards against beleaguered poker
star Richard Lee.
It's a stack.
Since February, a vice officer has rifled through trash, tailed luxury cars, gambled
online and sorted through a string of local bank accounts and phone records in
an effort to gather evidence against Lee and others, according to an affidavit
for a search warrant released Friday.
What police found could alter the public poker face of this city's
once-celebrated gambling star, who placed sixth last month while hyping San
Antonio in the World Series of Poker Main Event in Las Vegas.
Lee, otherwise known as "The Chinaman," is the "biggest
bookie" in San Antonio, according to a "credible source" quoted
in the document. The affidavit also names Lee as the brains behind an illegal
Internet gambling operation run in part from his Shavano Park home.
The suspected illegal Web site, www.betbsbnow.com,
pretends to be based offshore, the affidavit said, while in fact it is a local
operation that takes bets and collects and pays proceeds from illegal gambling
and sports booking.
Lee in recent days has denied doing anything illegal and said he never has
engaged in bookmaking. No one has been charged in the investigation.
"For you people in San Antonio who know me," Lee said, "I think
you can tell I am a person of integrity."
Lee had help with his operation, the affidavit said.
The document suggests Lee employed people to act as "runners."
Tuesday night, officers searched the homes of Lee, his son-in-law Larry
Davenport, Matthew Winslow, and Daniel Ortiz. In the homes of Lee and Winslow,
officers found so-called "players lists," which were not included in
the affidavit.
Police also seized vehicles, cell phones, computer equipment, cameras, firearms
and millions of dollars in assets from bank accounts.
It all began with a business card.
According to the document, an anonymous source faxed a vice officer a copy of a
card containing the URL of the Web site, two "wager lines," a
customer service number, two local phone numbers and a local address. The
business was a gambling operation, the source said, and it was local.
In February, the officer called the customer service number and set up an
account with the Web site. He began to bet. Meanwhile, the officer subpoenaed a
phone service provider and found that the local phone numbers on the card
belonged to Lee, the document said.
The officer then stopped by the local address — a UPS store where people can
rent mailboxes. Perusing mail covers, he found that Lee, Davenport, Winslow,
Ortiz and Marco Hernandez, an employee of Lee, had received mail at the
location, according to the affidavit.
Next, the officer uncovered multiple bank accounts belonging to Lee and found
that he had received a large number of substantial cash deposits. He also found
checks from Lee with the words "Gamb Loss" or "G. Loss"
written on the memo line, the affidavit said.
The officer then moved on to the bank accounts of Winslow, Davenport, Ortiz and
Hernandez and concluded that numerous people either had written checks to or
received checks from the men "for the obvious purpose of settling debts
from illegal gambling/sports booking," the document said.
Next came the spying.
In April, the officer followed Davenport and Ortiz to a far North Side
restaurant. Inside he watched the men consult "what appeared to be a
ledger" while talking on cell phones.
Meanwhile, the officer had some bets to settle — he owed the online gambling
company just under $500.
He called the customer service number on the card. An agent named
"Cowboy" told the officer to send a money order to Costa Rica and
requested the tracking number so he could retrieve the funds, the document
said.
The officer then received call logs for numbers connected to Lee. He found that
"multiple phone numbers associated with Richard Lee had in fact called
phone numbers associated" with the Web site.
Online, the site provides answers to frequently asked questions. One asks,
"Is gambling on the Internet legal?"
The earnest reply: "Every region throughout the world has different laws,
so we can't really answer that question."