Sentences with phrase «gambling debt by»

Not exact matches

By contrast, its GPI performance declined over the same period as the booming province experienced growing wealth disparity, increased household debt, more greenhouse gas emissions and a spike in problem gambling, among other things.
Owed By Charles Barkley (right), a $ 400,000 gambling debt to the Wynn Las Vegas casino.
The Spanish club are currently suffering a financial crisis after revealing that they are almost # 15million in debt, and facing years of budget cuts after gambles by the club's owners.
The state legislature has a game plan: get approval for debt, gambling or additional taxes by promising they will be used for things like the environmental trust fund, the Second Avenue Subway and East Side Access, mass transit in general, and in - classroom schools.
Bronx Supreme Court Justice George Villegas is being sued by a Queens woman who claims the judge borrowed $ 500,00 from her to pay off gambling debts and keep loansharks at bay.
Since 2010, George Osborne has drastically missed his deficit target, lost the UK's AAA credit rating, increased public debt by trillions and made huge gambles on the tax revenues.
Among the credit - card debts, loans and routine outside income reported by city officials as part of their mandated annual reports, one item stood out: «gambling winnings» by City Councilman Erich Ulrich.
Synopsis: Private investigator Philip Marlowe (Humphrey Bogart) is hired by General Sternwood to help resolve the gambling debts of his wild young daughter,... [MORE]
girl sleep with boy then ditches boy, boy tries to get girl back by stalking girl and paying girl's father's gambling debts.
He's supposed to be haunted by his past, his gambling debts leading to his wife's demise, but it never seems like anything rattles Hazen, who just kind of half - heartedly shrugs his way through the entire fantasy journey.
The story revolves a Kyle played by Taylor, who has a serious gambling addiction and who builds up a massive debt which he fails to pay off.
Joe is hired by a low - life family — shaggy gambling debt - ridden son Chris (Emile Hirsch), his addled sister Dottie (Juno Temple), their hapless dad (Thomas Haden Church), and his dilapidated second wife Sharla (Gina Gershon)-- to kill Chris and Dottie's mother.
Having run into trouble at Princeton for his ties to online gambling and now in debt for thousands, math whiz Richie Furst (Timberlake)-- whose once - promising Wall Street career was killed by the»08 economic crisis — discovers he's been cheated out of his money by an offshore gambling site.
The Girl from the Naked Eye Film Review by Kam Williams Gambler Goes Vigilante after Girlfriend's Murder in Grisly Revenge Flick Jake (Jason Yee) is a guy who let his gambling debts spiral out of control.
Enticed by the thrill of online football betting and casinos, the sales manager, who wanted to be known only as Mr Ang, borrowed from multiple registered moneylenders to feed his gambling habit as well as to cover debts with moneylenders and even loan sharks.
Here is a recent debt settlement company trade association presentation from The Association of Settlement Companies (TASC) that appears to suggest to TASC members to consider circumventing new consumer protection rules to come from the FTC by avoiding traditional phone lines, moving operations offshore like gambling and payday operations, and selling discounted medical & health products with the debt settlement sale.
I do know that gambling debt in a lot of instances is probably masked by credit card debt.
A negative relationship between debt size and reported gambling behaviour moderated by prize level was found.
As the movie delves into the high stakes gambles investors were making on high - risk and generally opaque financial structures such as RMBS and collateralized debt obligations (CDOs) it is fitting that the story line takes a bit of a side trip from Wall Street to Las Vegas, which ended up as one of the markets worst hit by the resulting crash.
According to a review by The Economist, «As they hustle, in some cases taking on vast debts to secure the prize (you can't buy a $ 50m building until you first find $ 5,000, according to [an] industry joke), these bigwigs do plenty of dangerous gambling, double - crossing and, of course, suing.»
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