Home » ‘This has to stop’: From behind bars, a former sports betting addict is urging the PM to tackle gambling addiction

‘This has to stop’: From behind bars, a former sports betting addict is urging the PM to tackle gambling addiction

‘This has to stop’: From behind bars, a former sports betting addict is urging the PM to tackle gambling addiction

A former financial planner who stole $3.3 million from his clients to fund his sports betting addiction has written to the prime minister from his prison cell, urging him to adopt the recommendations made by a parliamentary inquiry into online gambling harm.

Gavin Fineff is serving a maximum sentence of nine years in jail. 

He says three sports betting agencies, Ladbrokes, Tabcorp and BetEasy, not only exploited his addiction, but allowed him to lose millions without properly checking his income, and then kept the proceeds of his crimes after he was prosecuted.

In his letter, obtained by ABC Investigations, the 45-year-old father of two has called on the government to “tackle gambling addiction properly” and do more to regulate an industry that he considers predatory.

“The gambling companies know they are cultivating and exploiting addictions like the one I had. It’s part of their unspoken business model,” he writes in his letter, which he also plans to send to all parliamentarians.

“This has to stop before even more innocent people are harmed.”

Over a year ago, a House of Representatives committee chaired by the late Labor MP Peta Murphy handed down its final report on online gambling following a lengthy inquiry.

Among the report’s 31 recommendations were a phased-in ban on gambling advertising, more stringent identity checks on gamblers, a ban on online gambling inducements, and the introduction of a national online gambling regulator.

When the committee published its report, You Win Some, You Lose More, Ms Murphy said it was time to treat gambling harm as a public health issue.

“Australians are the biggest losers in the world when it comes to gambling. We have a culture where sport and gambling are intrinsically linked,” she said.

“These behaviours are causing increasingly widespread and serious harm to individuals, families, and communities.”

The late Labor MP Peta Murphy chaired the inquiry into online gambling. (ABC News: Ross Nerdal, file photo )

Ms Murphy died in December last year from cancer. The prime minister praised her as someone who “led the charge on new reforms to minimise the harm caused by online gambling” through the cross-party committee.

But despite these proposals being seen as a key part of her political legacy, the Albanese government has yet to pass legislation based on the report’s findings.

Independent MP Andrew Wilkie said the government had been too slow to act.

“Peta was a highly regarded, much-loved member of the parliament and the work Peta did leading this inquiry into online gambling was absolutely first-rate work.

“I think it does dishonour Peta not to act on those recommendations. 

“I do think it dishonours Peta that the government has sat on those recommendations for more than a year.”

In a statement, the Minister for Communications Michelle Rowland said the government was “firmly committed to minimising harms from online wagering”.

“The government is engaging with stakeholders, including harm reduction advocates, health experts and industry, as we develop further reforms.

“The status quo of online wagering advertising is untenable and the government will announce a comprehensive response to the parliamentary inquiry shortly.”

Michelle Rowland stands at the despatch box to answer a question during Question Time in federal parliament.

Communications Minister Michelle Rowland says the government is committed to “minimising harms from online wagering”.(ABC News: Adam Kennedy, file photo)

Fineff, who made a submission to the inquiry, says it’s time the prime minister acted.

“The committee’s inquiries were extensive and the evidence it uncovered was explosive. At the core of their recommendations was that public health must be prioritised over profits for gambling companies,” he says in his letter from prison.

“Online gambling has rapidly fuelled gambling addiction in Australia with fast bets, fast losses and fast cash transfers.

“The committee made a number of evidence-based recommendations that would reverse the current situation. I implore you to accept and legislate for every recommendation.”

Mr Wilkie is helping to distribute Fineff’s letter through his office. He has praised him for continuing to agitate for reform from behind bars.

Dressed in suit and tie, Andrew Wilkie speaks at a press conference at Parliament House.

Independent MP Andrew Wilkie is helping to distribute Fineff’s letter to parliamentarians.(ABC News: Adam Kennedy, file photo)

“Gavin acknowledges the harm he has done to his victims, that is clear,” he said.

“But there is no doubt in my mind that he is determined to use his circumstances to highlight the problem of gambling addiction, and to advocate for solutions.

“The recommendations of the parliamentary inquiry should be implemented in full. The committee has done the work. They know the facts, and now the government must act.”

Gambling addict ‘traded like property’

ABC Investigations first met Gavin Fineff over four years ago, before he was charged and prosecuted for stealing from 12 of his clients.

At the time, he admitted he had been gambling with other people’s money and spoke to the ABC to shine a light on what he saw as the exploitative practices of the sports betting industry.

What was unique about Fineff’s case was that three different betting agencies had targeted him through their VIP programs, and he was willing to disclose in detail the tactics and techniques used to keep him gambling — even when he had been blocked by other agencies.

“I was offered all sorts of things, events and experiences, and bonus money to bet with. They had reward systems for more deposits,” Fineff said.

Man with black hair in blue t-shirt stands on balcony with trees in background.

ABC Investigations first met Gavin Fineff in 2020.(ABC News: David Maguire, file photo)

In the world of sports betting, ‘VIP customers’ are incentivised to keep losing. The more they lose, the more lucrative they become to the betting agencies.

To keep them gambling, the VIPs are made to feel special. 

They are taken to sporting events and given “bonus bets”. 

VIP managers are paid a commission on their clients’ net losses — some as high as 20 per cent — making it in their financial interest to turn a blind eye to excessive losses. 

The inquiry recommended that commissions be prohibited.

Fineff first became a VIP customer with TAB. In one six-month period he lost $1.5 million with the agency, at a time when he was on an annual income of around $130,000.

Betting agencies are required under law to comply with “know your customer” provisions – that means properly verifying identification and reporting on any suspicious transactions.

Fineff says proper checks on his ability to fund such astronomical losses were not conducted during that period.

“At the time, I was never asked anything about my activity, or if it might be harmful or how I was funding that,” he says.

Man with black hair in blue t-shirt stands on balcony looking at phone in his hand with brick building and trees in background.

After Tabcorp froze Gavin Fineff’s betting account, he was contacted by two other betting agencies.(ABC News: David Maguire, file photo)

By the time Tabcorp eventually asked the financial planner what his annual income was, he had lost $3.9 million. 

When he did not provide an answer, his account was frozen.

That should have been the end of Fineff’s destructive period of sports betting, but a few weeks later, when he was waiting for a train, an unknown caller popped up on his phone.

It was an employee from another sports betting agency, Ladbrokes.

He says he told the VIP agent there that his account at TAB had been frozen.

“He said that wouldn’t be a problem at all and went on to say that he could set up the account for me. He set up the account in a different name, and without me providing identification,” he said.