Delta Air Lines CEO Ed Bastian announced a partnership with DraftKings at his CES speech in Las Vegas back in January. Since inflight gambling is illegal, I assumed this would mean earn Deltaing SkyMiles for sports betting through DraftKings. After all, you can earn Marriott points with BetMGM already today.
However Bastian actually said that they would integrate DraftKings into their inflight entertainment system.
From fantasy sports to online adventures, gaming has become part of the daily lives of millions of our customers. And you shouldn’t have to hit pause just because you’re in the sky.
When the partnership was announced, word is that the contract hadn’t actually been signed with DraftKings and details of what it would mean hadn’t been fully fleshed out. Maybe it hadn’t even made it to legal yet? Well, it looks like Delta is finally doing some work to figure things out.
A new Delta survey asks whether customers want “exclusive access to sports gambling (sportsbook) opportunities” as something to “trial or explore on your personal device through Delta’s Wi-Fi portal?”
Interesting question asked in Delta Survey – Do you want exclusive access to sports gambling on your personal device while on Delta WiFi?
byu/lemonsqueezy19 indelta
Gambling On U.S. Airlines Is Illegal
Under the Gambling Devices Act of 1962 (also known as the Johnson Act, 15 USC 1171) gambling is illegal on US commercial aircraft. Gambling is legal in airports if it’s legal in the jurisdiction where the airport sits. The Las Vegas airport has generated over $1 billion in gambling revenue.
Las Vegas Airport
Foreign Airlines Used To Offer Inflight Gambling
For 32 years it was legal for foreign airlines flying to and from the U.S. to offer inflight gambling while U.S. carriers couldn’t do it. Some airlines experimented with it.
- In 1981 Singapore Airlines engaged in a two month test offering slot machines on the Singapore – San Francisco route. They proved so popular that the machines in the back of the cabin caused egress and service issues, with too many passengers congregating. The light weight machines that were selected (lighter weight means less fuel burn) weren’t sturdy enough either.
In fact all seven slot machines broke on their inaugural run. Singapore Airlines revisited the idea in the late 1990s.
- Swiss tried seat-based inflight gambling in the 1990s but ended the option when the crash of Swissair Flight 111 in 1998 was linked to arcing in the wiring of the inflight entertainment system. New systems have been greatly improved over the last 20 years.
- Ryanair announced in 2005 that it would offer inflight gambling, with CEO Michael O’Leary going so far as to suggest passengers would eventually fly free with the airline making money off games of chance. The effort never came to fruition.
Foreign Carriers Can’t Offer Gambling On U.S. Flights Now, Either
US-registered cruise ships got the ability to offer gambling with 1991’s United States-Flag Cruise Ship Competitiveness Act.
TWA and Northwest Airlines lobbied for airlines to receive a similar exemption. However the government protected them from an uneven playing field in a different way – the Gorton amendment (49 USC 41311) prohibited gambling not just on US-registered aircraft but on any plane flying to or from the U.S. This may not be legal under US aviation treaties, but it has not been tested. Swiss operated under an exemption to the Gorton amendment.
While the Gorton amendment says that foreign airlines may not “install, transport, or operate, or permit the use of, any gambling device on board an aircraft in foreign air transportation” the FAA has said that it’s permissible for an aircraft flying to the U.S. to have an installed gambling device as long as it is deactivated for the flight.
Inflight Gambling Almost Was Legalized In The Mid-’90s
The Department of Transportation studied inflight gambling in 1996, largely concluding it was fine, but stopping short of recommending legalizing the practice. The Clinton Administration at the time was proposing a national study on the effects of gambling and DOT held off from pre-empting this.
Delta Could Earn Billions If The Law Changed
In 1996, DOT concluded that airlines could earn $1 million per aircraft per year by offering gambling, $1.6 million in 2020 dollars or $1.3 billion per year for an 800 plane airline. (Airlines have argued that the potential economic impact is even greater than this.) Delta’s fleet is nearly 1,000 aircraft.
So What’s Delta Doing Here?
In the short-term they probably offer inflight gaming without monetary bets in order to stay legal. That means giving (selling) access to Delta customers, so that DraftKings can build its client base that will then gamble with real money on the ground.
Surely their lawyers don’t think that if gambling is promoted through their online content, but delivered via a website they don’t host, that they’d be compliant with the Gambling Devices Act of 1962 as amended? Then again, with the change in administration, I’m not even sure doing blatantly illegal things is “a crime anymore, there’ve been a lot of changes in the law.”
Longer-term I’d think we’ll see a renewed lobbying effort to legalize inflight gambling, because there’s simply so much money at stake – that airlines are currently leaving on the table.
As if SkyPesos weren’t useless enough already
What’s next? Drugs on the plane? Prostitution in the restroom?
I would not like to be sitting next to someone wagering on live games during a flight.
I hope they get the tech right – Swissair tried onboard gambling and it crashed a plane
What could possibly go wrong?
You can bet on whether your bags will be delayed/lost, whether you get a full can of soda, whether the person in front keeps their shoes or reclines. The possibilities are endless.
Another Premium FAILURE by Delta Airlines
Yet another reason to avoid America.
gambling and drinking in a cramped tube at 40,000 feet
what could go wrong?
another example of why US airlines will never be premium. Too focused on things that are anything but.
DraftKings? Wasn’t that the company that had the huge scandal where their own employees were winning big money at the expense of regular customers?
Glad to hear that ife has improved to the point where it’s no longer causing planes to crash. Score one for science!
There are too many issues to add this to the mix. Not all pax can behave onboard anymore and this only adds to it. How many are going to refuse to put their seat belts on when necessary?More will want to sit in f/a js, and more will turn to drinking. And people will congregate where machines are located. This is such a big RED FLAG, not NO, but a big HELL NO!
I’m here for @Tim Dunn’s take. To me, that may actually be even more interesting than Gary’s post. *wink*
@L737, if @Matt is still around, I’d imagine he’d say, “For an airline that does give craps, please consider Delta.” (Trying to tie in gambling somehow.)