Penal Code § 330 PC – Illegal Gambling in California (2024)

California Penal Code § 330 PC prohibits gambling, also called gaming, by the use of a “banking or percentage game.” That said, it is still lawful in California to play social poker games and other games of chance, skill, and strategy involving individual bets.

Illegal gaming is a misdemeanor carrying up to 6 months in jail and a fine of up to $1000.

PC 330 states that “Every person who deals, plays, or carries on, opens, or causes to be opened, or who conducts, either as owner or employee, whether for hire or not, any game of faro, monte, roulette, lansquenet, rouge et noire, rondo, tan, fan-tan, seven-and-a-half, twenty-one, hokey-pokey, or any banking or percentage game played with cards, dice, or any device, for money, checks, credit, or other representative of value, and every person who plays or bets at or against any of those prohibited games, is guilty of a misdemeanor, and shall be punishable by a fine not less than one hundred dollars ($100) nor more than one thousand dollars ($1,000), or by imprisonment in the county jail not exceeding six months, or by both the fine and imprisonment.”

Examples

  • running poker games and collecting a fee based on the number of bets played.
  • operating a black-jack parlor and taking a percentage of overall winnings.
  • playing in games of roulette where a person acts as a “house” and takes money from the losers.

Defenses

You can beat an illegal gambling charge with a good legal defense. Common defenses include:

  • no banking or percentage game,
  • unlawful search and seizure,
  • charity bingo game, and/or
  • no knowledge illegal gambling was occurring on your property

Penalties

A violation of this statute is amisdemeanor. This is opposed to a felony or an infraction.

The offense is punishable by:

  • custody in county jail for up to six months, and/or
  • a fine between $100 and $1,000.

A judge can award misdemeanor (or summary) probation in lieu of jail time.

Penal Code § 330 PC – Illegal Gambling in California (1)

Our California criminal defense attorneys will explain the following in this article:

  • 1. When is gambling a crime in California?
  • 2. Are there legal defenses?
    • 2.1. No banking or percentage game
    • 2.2. Unlawful search and seizure
    • 2.3. Charity bingo game
    • 2.4. No knowledge
  • 3. What are the penalties for a 330 PC violation?
  • 4. Are there immigration consequences?
  • 5. Can I get a conviction expunged?
  • 6. Does a conviction affect gun rights?
  • 7. Are there related offenses?
    • 7.1. Obtaining money by gaming fraud – PC 332
    • 7.2. Bookmaking – PC 337
    • 7.3. Prostitution and solicitation – PC 647b

1. When is gambling a crime in California?

Under California Penal Code 330 PC, California gambling laws make it a crime to

  • deal,
  • play,
  • carry on,
  • open, or
  • conduct,

any “prohibited game,” whether for hire or not.1

A “prohibited game” means any game that qualifies as either:

  • a “banking” game, or
  • a “percentage” game.2

A “banking” game is one in which there is a “house” or “bank” that participates in the game and

  • collects money from the losers, and
  • uses it to pay the winners.3

A “percentage game” is any game of chance in which the “house” collects money calculated as a portion of bets made or total winnings.4

California’s illegal gaming statute lists a number of specific games to which it might apply. Some examples include:

  • roulette,
  • rondo, and
  • twenty-one.5

However, the law will apply to any game that is conducted as a banking or percentage game.6

Example: David is the owner of a “pai gow” parlor. This is a Chinese dominoes game that is played for cash bets. The parlor makes money by taking a percentage of the winnings of every game that is played there.

Here, David is guilty of illegal gambling. He conducts a prohibited percentage game.

Note that PC 330 does not apply to Native American-run casinos on tribal lands.

2. Are there legal defenses?

You can beat an illegal gambling charge with a good legal defense.

Four common defenses to alleged violations of gaming laws are:

  1. no banking or percentage game,
  2. unlawful search and seizure,
  3. charity bingo game, and/or
  4. no knowledge illegal gambling was occurring on your property

2.1. No banking or percentage game

330 PC only applies to gambling with respect to either banking or percentage games.

This means it is a legal defense to say that:

  • while you may have been gambling,
  • you were not doing so in a prohibited game.

Perhaps, for example, you were just playing a social game of poker with friends.

2.2. Unlawful search and seizure

Authorities cannot conduct a search or take property without a valid search warrant. If no warrant, then they must have a legal excuse for not having one. If the police:

  • gather evidence from an unlawful search and seizure,
  • then that evidence can get excluded from a criminal case.

This means that any charges in the case could get reduced or even dismissed.

2.3. Charity bingo game

There is an exception to the ban on banking or percentage games for bingo, raffles, etc. conducted by charitable organizations (such as churches and humanitarian nonprofits).

Note that the proceeds gained in furtherance of these games, though, can only be used for charitable purposes.8

2.4. No knowledge

Owners and managers of property where illegal gaming takes place are criminally liable only when they know what is going on. If illegal gambling is going on without their knowledge, then charges against them should be dismissed.9

Penal Code § 330 PC – Illegal Gambling in California (2)

A violation of this law can result in a fine and/or jail time.

3. What are the penalties for a 330 PC violation?

A violation of this statute is a misdemeanor.

The offense is punishable by:

  • custody in county jail for up to six months, and/or
  • a fine between $100 and $1,000.10

A judge can award misdemeanor (or summary) probation in lieu of jail time.

4. Are there immigration consequences?

A conviction for illegal gambling will not have any bad immigration consequences.

Some California crimes, like crimes involving moral turpitude, can result in you being:

  • deported, or
  • marked as inadmissible.

Gambling under PC 330, though, is not this type of crime.

5. Can I get a conviction expunged?

An expungement is possible if you are convicted under this statute. You can get a conviction expunged if you complete either:

  • probation, or
  • your jail term (whichever is applicable).

An expungement is favorable because it removes many of the hardships associated with a conviction.

6. Does a conviction affect gun rights?

A conviction under this statute will not affect your gun rights.

Some criminal convictions will strip away your right to own or possess a gun. An example is any conviction for a felony.

Illegal gambling, though, is not one of these crimes.

7. Are there related offenses?

There are three crimes related to 330 PC unlawful gambling. These are:

  1. obtaining money by gaming fraud – PC 332,
  2. bookmaking – PC 337, and
  3. prostitution and solicitation – PC 647b.

Note also that illegal gambling is a federal crime as well under 18 U.S.C. 1955).

7.1. Obtaining money by gaming fraud – PC 332

Penal Code 332 PC makes it a California theft crime to fraudulently obtain someone else’s money or property via:

  • card games or tricks such as “three-card monte,”
  • betting or gambling, or
  • pretensions to fortune-telling.

Note that a prosecutor does not have to prove fraud under this section.

7.2. Bookmaking – PC 337

Penal Code 337 PC makes it a crime to engage in the following activities:

  • bookmaking,
  • pool-selling,
  • occupying any building, room or other enclosed space for the purpose of recording bets,
  • receiving, holding or forwarding money that is being wagered in a bet,
  • recording or registering bets.

All of these activities are associated with gambling.

7.3. Prostitution and solicitation – PC 647b

Penal Code 647b PC is California’s law on prostitution and solicitation. This section makes it a misdemeanor to (if you are 18 or older):

  • pay or accept money in exchange for a sexual act (“prostitution”),
  • offer to engage in an act of prostitution (“solicitation”), or
  • agree to engage in an act of prostitution.

Sometimes establishments that offer illegal gambling are also associated with prostitution.

For additional help…

Penal Code § 330 PC – Illegal Gambling in California (3)

Contact our law firm for help with your legal needs.

For additional guidance or to discuss your case with a criminal defense attorney, we invite you to contact us at Shouse Law Group. We serve clients throughout the state of California, including Los Angeles, Glendale Santa Monica, San Diego, San Bernardino, San Francisco, and more. We can be reached through phone, text message, or contact form. For information on gambling in Nevada and Colorado, please see our articles on:

  • Nevada Laws for Gaming Fraud (NRS 465.070),” and
  • Illegal Gambling in Colorado (CRS 18-10-103).”

Legal References:

  1. California Penal Code 330 PC. For example, in the 2017 motion picture Molly’s Game, the high stakes poker games became illegal only once the protagonist started taking rakes in order to compensate for her losses.
  2. See Sullivan v. Fox (1987) 189 Cal.App.3d 673.
  3. See same.
  4. See same. As to slot machines, note that being house-banked is not required for a game to be an unlawful slot machine or device. See People v. Grewal (2014) 224 Cal.App.4th 527.
  5. California Penal Code 330 PC.
  6. See same.
  7. California Penal Code 326.5.
  8. See same.
  9. People v. Markham (Cal. 1857), 7 Cal. 208, 7 Cal. 209.
  10. California Penal Code section 330 PC.
Penal Code § 330 PC – Illegal Gambling in California (2024)

FAQs

Penal Code § 330 PC – Illegal Gambling in California? ›

Illegal Gambling

What is the penal code 330 PC illegal gambling in California? ›

PC 330 states that “Every person who deals, plays, or carries on, opens, or causes to be opened, or who conducts, either as owner or employee, whether for hire or not, any game of faro, monte, roulette, lansquenet, rouge et noire, rondo, tan, fan-tan, seven-and-a-half, twenty-one, hokey-pokey, or any banking or ...

What are 3 elements of illegal gambling? ›

Gambling consists of three elements: consideration, prize and chance. If any one of those three elements is missing, the game is simply not gambling (Rose, 1986)).

How long is the sentence for illegal gambling? ›

A violation of PC 330 is a misdemeanor offense. If you are convicted of this charge, you could be sentenced to up to six months in county jail. You would be required to serve at least 50% of that time in custody. You could also be subjected to fines from anywhere between $100 up to $1000 for a conviction.

What is Section 330 of the California Penal Code? ›

Under California Penal Code Section 330 PC, gaming is illegal and can expose those convicted to criminal penalties. To prove a charge of gaming, a prosecutor must be able to establish the following elements: The defendant deals, plays or carries on or conducts any banking or percentage game.

What happens if you get caught gambling in California? ›

The potential penalties for gaming fraud as a misdemeanor include; misdemeanor probation, fines and jail time. California's misdemeanor probation is also known as a summary or informal probation.

What kind of gambling is illegal in California? ›

Any banking game (collecting from the losers to pay the winners) or percentage game (when the house gets a cut of the winnings) is illegal. If you are charged with illegal gambling, the charge is considered a misdemeanor and you can face several penalties, including: Up to six months in county jail.

What are the 4 types of gambling? ›

Gambling refers to the act of wagering or betting on an event or game with the hope of winning money or other valuable prizes. Gambling can take many forms, including casino games, sports betting, lottery games, and online gambling.

What makes illegal gambling illegal? ›

To establish whether a gambling business is illegal in California, the federal government defers to California Penal Code 330 PC, which defines illegal gambling (gaming) as: a banking game (one in which a bank or house participates actively in the game); or.

What makes some forms of gambling illegal? ›

Many state gambling laws outlaw games, bets, or wagers that are at least partially dependent on some element of chance. If a game or competition that gives prizes to winners is based on skill, such as a car race, marathon, or shooting competition, it's not considered gambling.

How much is illegal gambling worth? ›

Illegal gambling is nearly half the revenue size of legal gambling in the U.S. ($44.2 billion versus $92 billion), according to American Gaming Association estimates. Americans spend more than $510.9 billion annually on illegal and unregulated gambling operations—but they may not even know it.

How do I report illegal gambling in California? ›

Illegal gambling activity, cardroom activities, background checks, game rules, and self-exclusion at cardrooms. (916) 830-1700 – For Complaints: select option 4, Compliance and Enforcement Section.

Is gambling at home illegal in California? ›

Games where gambling is involved do run the risk of getting their players into trouble since gambling is illegal in the state of California. Luckily, for most people, playing poker amongst family members and friends is legal. It is when a poker game is run for profit by the host, then it becomes illegal.

What is the Penal Code crimes against persons in California? ›

See Penal Code §§ 92-100. Crimes against the person covers many of the crimes of violence, or crimes that injure another person. It includes homicide, kidnapping, robbery, attempted murder, human trafficking, or assault and battery.

What is the Penal Code malice in California? ›

Penal Code 188 PC says, “(a) For purposes of Section 187, malice may be express or implied. (1) Malice is express when there is manifested a deliberate intention to unlawfully take away the life of a fellow creature.

What is the Penal Code infraction in California? ›

In California, an infraction is a minor violation of the law. Unlike misdemeanors and felonies, which are crimes, infractions are not considered to be crimes. If you get charged with an infraction, you can be fined up to $250.00 but as long as you pay the fine you cannot be sent to jail.

Who investigates illegal gambling in California? ›

The mission of the Bureau of Gambling Control is to ensure that gambling in California is conducted honestly, competitively and free of criminal and corruptive elements. The Bureau has regulatory authority over California's cardrooms under the Gambling Control Act.

Is it illegal to gamble at home in California? ›

Games where gambling is involved do run the risk of getting their players into trouble since gambling is illegal in the state of California. Luckily, for most people, playing poker amongst family members and friends is legal. It is when a poker game is run for profit by the host, then it becomes illegal.

What is CA law on online gambling? ›

Are online casinos legal in California? No, you cannot legally play games with online casinos for real money in California just yet. The only places where you can enjoy casino games are at more than 60 tribal casinos, which are controlled by the many Native American tribes that are registered in the state.

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Twana Towne Ret

Last Updated:

Views: 6134

Rating: 4.3 / 5 (64 voted)

Reviews: 95% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Twana Towne Ret

Birthday: 1994-03-19

Address: Apt. 990 97439 Corwin Motorway, Port Eliseoburgh, NM 99144-2618

Phone: +5958753152963

Job: National Specialist

Hobby: Kayaking, Photography, Skydiving, Embroidery, Leather crafting, Orienteering, Cooking

Introduction: My name is Twana Towne Ret, I am a famous, talented, joyous, perfect, powerful, inquisitive, lovely person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.