| The
same thing can occur when a player table-hops the
pretense of playing or giving action at several
tab example, a player goes to Craps 1 and takes
out a $1,000, then goes to Craps 2 after a few minutes
and for a few minutes there, then goes to Craps
3 and another marker for $1,000, and then walks
back to the ier's cage to cash in his chips.
He won't be fooling anyone, not if the casino has
an staff on the floor. Some players may get away
with this in a crowded and poorly supervised casino,
but for the part, casinos will not allow this to
happen with junke players with big credit lines,
not if they think the sole of this move is to use
the casino bankroll for the player's personal use
and purposes, free of charge.
The casino can't stop a player from cashing in or
lea table at any time; what they can do is have
someone the gambler and explain their rules and
tell him his nlight be cut off if he's not giving
them action, but simply using their money to build
up his own cash reserve.
Now, there are players who table-hop legitimately,
who find one table cold and run to another and then
another, looking for that one hot table. The casino
knows that this happens often and knows that players
are superstitious creatures at heart but it doesn't
really care about these players as long as the intent
is action.
If a player wants to gamble, if he's at the tables
primarily to gamble, he can do what he wants to
do and run from table to table or around the table
three times before each bet if that's his pleasure.
But if he's at the table, signing markers just to
get the casino's money into his pocket, without
paying interest on it, then he's going to be told
abruptly to stop that scam. |