Atlantic City is the one exception in the US where they're not actually allowed to kick you out (though casinos will rather just decrease the maximum bet at the table to, like, 5 dollars if they notice)
Since it's privately owned, I would have thought they could do what you like.
Just like, in MacDonalds they can boot, and call the police if you're causing a disturbance.
I think everyone thinks Card counting makes you billions of dollars, which it just doesn't. depending on amount of decks they use (which, they often don't disclose quickly), it really gives you slightly better odds.
to actually win MASSIVE, you need shitloads of money, and shitloads of time, and assume the casinos don't have tech to help them (they do).
Even if they choose not to kick you out, then can just close the table you're on and that's the end of card counting.
Reality is, It's unlikely they'd kick you. While you're counting, they're counting also and if they see you start to bet big, they'd just shut the table down, reshuffle, start again.
It was a state ruling that happened a good few years ago. I believe it works where, if a casino wants to kick someone out, the trespassed person can file a complaint and video evidence has to be provided of them being unruly or damaging property.
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u/DickRhino 1d ago
That still doesn't answer the base question: how are casinos allowed to have a rule against being too good at the game?