• Home
  • News
  • World
  • Politics
  • Money
  • Lifestyle
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • Sports
  • Travel
  • More
    • Tech
    • Web Stories
    • Spotlight
    • Press Release
What's On

Alison Hammond’s flattering This Morning leather midi skirt is perfect for skimming over curves

8 October 2025

Cole Palmer injury return timeline emerges after Chelsea star is spotted by fans

8 October 2025

Kate Garraway steals The Traitors best dressed title in 2-in-1 coat you can shop for £45

8 October 2025

Olympian Jessica Ennis-Hill shares gold-medal tips for stress-free school mornings

8 October 2025

Gerry McCann reveals reasons family didn’t do Madeleine DNA test at ‘stalker’ trial

8 October 2025

Keir Starmer insists UK hasn’t forgotten about British man locked up in India for eight years

8 October 2025

Understanding HMRC tax codes – how to check if you’re owed a refund

8 October 2025
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Trending
  • Alison Hammond’s flattering This Morning leather midi skirt is perfect for skimming over curves
  • Cole Palmer injury return timeline emerges after Chelsea star is spotted by fans
  • Kate Garraway steals The Traitors best dressed title in 2-in-1 coat you can shop for £45
  • Olympian Jessica Ennis-Hill shares gold-medal tips for stress-free school mornings
  • Gerry McCann reveals reasons family didn’t do Madeleine DNA test at ‘stalker’ trial
  • Keir Starmer insists UK hasn’t forgotten about British man locked up in India for eight years
  • Understanding HMRC tax codes – how to check if you’re owed a refund
  • Thomas Tuchel says England are ‘underdogs’ for World Cup after 59 years of hurt
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube
England TimesEngland Times
Demo
  • Home
  • News
  • World
  • Politics
  • Money
  • Lifestyle
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • Sports
  • Travel
  • More
    • Tech
    • Web Stories
    • Spotlight
    • Press Release
England TimesEngland Times
Home » Betfair court case could change online gambling after punter blows £1.5 million
News

Betfair court case could change online gambling after punter blows £1.5 million

By staff8 October 2025No Comments5 Mins Read

Lee Gibson, 47, is appealing a High Court ruling that rejected his £1 million damages claim against Betfair after he lost £1.5 million gambling between 2009 and 2019

A multimillionaire who blew nearly £1.5m on football wagers is attempting to overturn a ruling after suing Betfair for allowing him to gamble – in a landmark case that could change the rules on what duties online betting companies owe to gamblers.

Lee Gibson, 47, claims the betting giant should have stopped him sooner as it allegedly knew he was a “problem gambler”. The buy-to-let property tycoon told the Court of Appeal he placed more than 30,000 bets through Betfair between 2009 and 2019.

He is claiming £1 million in damages – roughly the amount he lost in the six years before filing his claim in 2021. His case was rejected by a High Court judge last year, but this week it returned to court before three top judges.

READ MORE: ‘Lovely’ dad won £9million on lottery but five years later it ‘killed him’READ MORE: Paddington takes legal action as Spitting Image depicts bear as cocaine-loving podcaster

A court heard that despite leaving school at 16, Mr Gibson became a multi-millionaire by buying and renovating homes in the Leeds area. At one point, he owned 16 houses, which were rented to students.

His barrister, Yash Kulkarni KC, said Mr Gibson’s betting focused on “correct score” football markets – sometimes in “obscure” games – and in sums up to £20,000. He argued the judge should have found that Betfair “knew or ought to have known” that Mr Gibson was a “problem gambler”. He added that because the company treated him as a VIP client with an individual “relationship manager”, it had taken on a responsibility to look after him.

“The evidence showed that Betfair knew or had information available to them showing that Mr Gibson was chasing his losses, had borrowed money or sold something to gamble, and was gambling at a level beyond that which he could afford from his income after tax and expenses,” Mr Kulkarni told the court.

What Mr Gibson at first found “enthralling and exciting” came crashing down in March 2019 when his losses became “unsustainable” and his account was suspended. He began gambling on Betfair’s exchange in 2009. By the end of 2012, he had lost £100,000, climbing to £500,000 by the end of 2015, £1m by January 2018 and £1.5m in March 2019.

As a VIP, he was allegedly offered perks including football hospitality and golf invitations, though these tailed off over time. When Betfair asked about the source of his gambling funds under anti-money laundering rules, he said he was a landlord with multiple properties.

At the end of the High Court trial last year, Judge Nigel Bird ruled Betfair could not reasonably have known Mr Gibson was a problem gambler. “Mr Gibson consistently and often reassured Betfair that he was able to fund his gambling, including his losses, and none of the information he provided to Betfair painted a different picture,” he said. “The fact that he consistently satisfied anti-money laundering checks makes it impossible for Mr Gibson to argue that the size of his losses was, of itself, enough to raise reasonable concerns.”

Judge Bird continued: “Indeed, even after the trial, there is no real suggestion that Mr Gibson could not afford his gambling. He could, at least on the face of the information he gave to Betfair, afford to fund his gambling, he misled Betfair about his gambling and it is very difficult to identify a problem gambler who is not being honest. In my view, Mr Gibson did not simply fail to share information about his gambling problem, he took steps actively to hide it and to portray to the world at large, and to Betfair in particular, a wholly inaccurate picture.”

But at the Court of Appeal, Mr Kulkarni argued that the judge was “wrong” in his findings. He said: “The judge ought to have found that Betfair knew or ought to have known that Mr Gibson was likely to be a problem gambler throughout the material time of the claim and his finding otherwise was plainly wrong. Mr Gibson placed at least 20,000 individual bets in the six years prior to 22 January 2021, which is more than five per day.”

“The judge ought to have gone on to find that where a person appears likely to be gambling prolifically despite facing heavy losses, using money which appears likely to be at least in part from selling his business assets or loaning money against them, that person is likely to be a problem gambler,” he said.

Mr Kulkarni also challenged the judge’s finding regarding the VIP relationship manager, arguing their role “was to interact with him to maintain or increase his betting” and “exploited his betting habits to extend bonuses and offers likely to induce further betting”. He added: “Betfair assumed a responsibility to take reasonable care that its facilitation of his gambling did not cause him financial harm by reason of his being a problem gambler.”

Betfair – listed in the claim as TSE Malta LP – is opposing the appeal before three High Court Chancellor Sir Julian Flaux, Lord Justice Popplewell and Lord Justice Birss. Its lawyers argue that Judge Bird’s ruling was correct and have urged the Court of Appeal to uphold it.

The court is expected to reserve its judgement for a later date.

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit Tumblr Email

Related News

Gerry McCann reveals reasons family didn’t do Madeleine DNA test at ‘stalker’ trial

8 October 2025

Gerry McCann says hope Madeleine alive makes false claims ‘pull at heartstrings’

8 October 2025

‘Life-threatening illness had made me shrink two inches by time doctors caught it’

8 October 2025

Rabbi says: ‘Response to Manchester terror attack shows Britain is a decent society’

8 October 2025

Stephen Lawrence’s mum brands David Norris ‘coward who refused to show his face’

8 October 2025

Stephen Lawrence killer is ‘unreliable narrator of his own life’, parole board told

8 October 2025
Latest News

Cole Palmer injury return timeline emerges after Chelsea star is spotted by fans

8 October 2025

Kate Garraway steals The Traitors best dressed title in 2-in-1 coat you can shop for £45

8 October 2025

Olympian Jessica Ennis-Hill shares gold-medal tips for stress-free school mornings

8 October 2025

Gerry McCann reveals reasons family didn’t do Madeleine DNA test at ‘stalker’ trial

8 October 2025
Stay In Touch
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Pinterest
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
  • Vimeo
Don't Miss
Politics

Keir Starmer insists UK hasn’t forgotten about British man locked up in India for eight years

By staff8 October 20250

Keir Starmer’s comments came as Jagtar Singh Johal’s brother urged the PM to say ‘enough…

Understanding HMRC tax codes – how to check if you’re owed a refund

8 October 2025

Thomas Tuchel says England are ‘underdogs’ for World Cup after 59 years of hurt

8 October 2025

‘Louis Tomlinson is finally being recognised and bravely opening up – it’s about time’

8 October 2025
England Times
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us
© 2025 England Times. All Rights Reserved.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

Go to mobile version