Title 25 › Chapter 29— INDIAN GAMING REGULATION › § 2703
Defines the key words used in this chapter. Attorney General is the U.S. Attorney General. Chairman is the head of the National Indian Gaming Commission. Commission is the National Indian Gaming Commission. Indian lands are reservation lands and lands held in trust or under federal restriction where a tribe acts as the government. Indian tribe is a group the Secretary recognizes for federal Indian programs and as having self-government. Class I gaming is social games with very small prizes or traditional games tied to tribal ceremonies. Class II gaming covers bingo (including electronic forms) and certain card games that state law allows or does not ban, but it does not include banking card games (like baccarat or blackjack) or slot machines or their electronic copies. Special rules let some tribal card games in Michigan, North Dakota, South Dakota, and Washington run on or before May 1, 1988 count as class II only to the same extent they were run then. Also, during the 1-year period beginning October 17, 1988, some games legally run on Indian lands on or before May 1, 1988 count as class II if the tribe asked the State to negotiate a compact no later than 30 days after October 17, 1988; a similar 1-year rule applies starting December 17, 1991 for Wisconsin if the tribe asked the State by November 16, 1988, but if a final court decision during that period finds those games illegal under state law, they must stop the day after that decision. Class III gaming is any gaming that is not class I or class II. Net revenues are gross gaming income minus prizes and operating costs, but not including management fees. Secretary means the Secretary of the Interior.
Full Legal Text
Indians — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
25 U.S.C. § 2703
Title 25 — Indians
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60