Gambling addiction among women on rise

Published: Nov. 23, 2008 at 4:19 PM
LAS VEGAS GAMING.

CINCINNATI, Nov. 23 (UPI) -- There is a growing national trend of women turning to crime to finance their gambling habit, U.S. experts say.

The Cincinnati Enquirer reported Sunday that women are increasingly becoming addicted to gambling.

"There's a big societal shift. Women didn't used to do this. Women are catching up to men," said Keith Whyte, executive director of the National Council on Problem Gambling.

Take Michelle Paluga, 43, of Colerain Township, Ohio. She stole $150,000 from her employer and another $28,000 from the parent-teacher association chapter of which she was president, all to feed her gambling addiction.

She was sentenced in August to 18 months in prison. She's due out in February 2010.

Arnie Wexler, former executive director for the Council on Compulsive Gambling of New Jersey, now runs a problem-gambling counseling business with a national hotline.

Ten years ago, 20 percent to 25 percent of calls to the New Jersey council involved female gamblers, he said, but today he said his national problem gambling hotline -- 1-888-LASTBET -- gets about half of its calls from women.

"When you have a situation with slots or (video) poker machines, that's where the numbers are going crazy," Wexler said.

© 2008 United Press International, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Order reprints



Additional News Stories
Colorado to keep Hawkins as coach (49 min)
NFL: Dallas 24, Oakland 7 (51 min)
Rejected Gingrich gift goes to pit bulls
COL BKB: Texas A&M 69, Clemson 60
Scientists to complete turkey genetic map
Murray advances to ATP semifinals
Pop-up book entrepreneur Waldo Hunt dies
fark
Rare Winston Churchill TV screen test to be shown, get more viewers than "The Jay Leno Show"
"Hey kids, Daddy's going to run into the sailing shop and pick up a few things. Why don't you two...
Drug mule claims that he had no idea that the 67 packages he swallowed contained 2.2 lbs of cocaine...
Coed dorms leading to a massive increase in the obvious
This Thanksgiving be thankful a 300-pound, 6-foot bald homeless man with blue eyes didn't break...
Long lost ghost trap keeps catching crabs. But enough about Anna Nicole Smith