Frustrated
U.S.
Poker
Players
Welcomed
in
Costa
Rica
By
Tim
Johnson
/
McClatchy
Newspapers
Playa
Jacó,
Costa
Rica
-
From
his
oceanfront
balcony,
Tyler
Forrester
glanced
out
at
the
Pacific
surf
on
the
beach.
Palm
trees
rustled
in
the
breeze.
“Tough
life
I’m
living,"
Forrester
said,
cackling
at
his
own
humor.

Forrester
is
28.
He
has
a
degree
in
Slavic
literature
from
Duke
University,
but
his
academic
life
is a
thing
of
the
past.
Forrester
now
makes
his
living
in a
bedroom
before
two
computer
monitors
playing
online
games
of
Texas
Hold
’Em
for
hours
on
end.
He’s
a
professional
poker
player,
and
a
very
successful
one
at
that.
Forrester,
who
grew
up
in
Dillon,
Mont.,
is
one
of
probably
150
American
professional
online-poker
players
who
flooded
Costa
Rica
after
Black
Friday:
April
15,
2011,
when
U.S.
federal
prosecutors
went
after
the
founders
of
the
three
largest
online-poker
companies,
slamming
a
lid
on
the
surging
business.
Many
of
the
Americans
—
who
are
generally
male
and
in
their
20s
—
aren’t
happy
about
leaving
their
U.S.
homes.
Unlike
Forrester,
they
voice
anger
at
being
denied
the
chance
to
earn
a
living
in
their
home
country
even
while
paying
taxes
there.
A
few
miles
to
the
south
in
Playa
Hermosa,
Jimmy
Doherty
and
Jake
Wycklendt
share
a
wooden
house
on
pillars
with
their
two
pet
pit
bulls.
Both
men
hail
from
towns
near
Milwaukee.
“I
definitely
resent
the
government,"
said
Wycklendt,
who’s
28,
describing
how
infrequently
he
can
visit
his
wife
and
two
children,
who
live
in
Las
Vegas.
“I’m
sick
of
it.
This
sucks,"
he
said.
“Obviously,
I’m
really
bitter
at
the
fact
that
I
have
to
be
in
another
country,"
added
Doherty,
25,
who
started
amassing
poker
earnings
while
he
was
studying
to
become
an
engineer
at
the
University
of
Wisconsin
at
Madison.
“Even
playing
15
hours
a
week,
I
was
making
as
much
as
an
electrical
engineer
would
at a
full-time
job,"
he
said.
“My
parents
were
very
grateful
that
they
didn’t
have
to
pay
for
my
college
anymore."
The
American
online
poker
players
in
Costa
Rica
are
called
“poker
refugees,"
partly
because
that’s
the
name
of a
relocation
service
in
the
capital,
San
Jose,
that
helps
U.S.
players
travel
to
the
Central
American
nation,
open
bank
accounts,
find
housing
and
start
playing
online
quickly.
“These
guys
play
anywhere
from
four
to
24
games
at
one
time,"
said
Kristin
Wilson,
a
former
professional
surfer
from
Florida
who
started
the
Poker
Refugees
relocation
service.
Wilson’s
company
ensures
that
players
who
move
to
Costa
Rica
have
nearly
foolproof
accommodations,
to
avoid
the
usual
travails
of
less-developed
countries.
“If
the
Internet
or
power
goes
out
for
30
seconds,
they
can
lose
thousands
of
dollars.
So
they
have
to
have
two
sources
backed
up
to a
battery.
And
they
have
a
USB
data
card.
So
if
the
Internet
goes
out,
they
just
switch
over
to
the
data
card,"
she
said.
Wilson
said
her
clients
“are
not
really
gamblers.
They
are
specialists
at
the
craft
of
poker."
They
master
numbers,
percentages
and
patterns
in
their
opponents,
exploiting
weaknesses.
Invariably,
players
are
good
at
math,
but
not
necessarily
at
reading
the
facial
signs
required
for
live
table
poker.
Brent
Courson,
30,
is
good
at
both.
He
spends
an
average
of
three
weeks
each
month
playing
online
in
Costa
Rica,
then
a
week
either
in
his
hometown
of
Grand
Rapids,
Mich.,
or
traveling
to
tournaments.
In
nine
years,
he
said,
he’s
made
“a
little
under
a
few
million"
dollars.
“There’s
probably
30
of
us
living
in
Jaco,"
he
said
in a
Skype
interview
from
Las
Vegas,
where
he
was
playing
in
the
World
Series
of
Poker.
“My
typical
day
is
wake
up
about
noon.
The
games
have
been
running
better
at
night,
so I
play
till
4 or
5 in
the
morning,"
he
said.
Courson
moved
to
Jaco
Beach
four
months
ago
and
lives
on
the
12th
floor
of a
high-rise.
His
balcony
offers
vistas
of
jungle
and
beach.
“The
view
I
have
in
Costa
Rica
is a
lot
better
than
the
one
I
have
in
Grand
Rapids,"
he
said.
Still,
he
hopes
that
online
poker
will
be
regulated
soon
and
back
on
its
feet
in
the
United
States.
“I
don’t
envision,
say,
spending
the
next
three
years
living
in
Costa
Rica,"
he
said.
“I
think
that
would
be
too
isolated."
Many
U.S.
players
settle
in
the
capital,
nestled
amid
mountain
coffee-growing
farms.
San
Jose
has
more
urban
amenities
as
well
as
direct
flights
to
15
U.S.
cities.
Phil
Murphy,
a
49-year-old
former
pest-control
agent
from
Seattle
who
switched
careers
to
online
poker,
said
he
had
strong
impressions
when
he
got
off
the
plane
recently:
“Guards
and
gates
everywhere.
That’s
the
first
thing
that
stuck
out
at
me."
Murphy
said
he’d
recommend
Costa
Rica
to
other
frustrated
U.S.
players.
“It’s
a
good
place
if
they
want
to
play
poker.
The
nightlife
is
crazy
—
muy
bueno!"
he
said.
“I
live
in
like
the
Beverly
Hills
of
Costa
Rica.
Maybe
that’s
why
it’s
all
gated
up."
Others
said
they
faced
culture
shock
on
arrival.
“The
roads,
the
infrastructure,
everything
was
a
complete
shock,"
said
Jason
Webster,
a
27-year-old
pro
from
Darien,
Ga.
Without
knowing
Spanish,
“you
can’t
communicate
with
people."
A
former
financial
adviser,
Webster
said
he
now
was
“paying
more
money
in
taxes
than
my
salary
was
at
Merrill
Lynch."
Webster
is
galled
that
he
still
feeds
Uncle
Sam
while
being
forced
to
live
abroad.
“I’m
extremely
angry.
It’s
ridiculous
that
the
government
says
that
we
can’t
do
this
in
the
land
of
the
free,"
he
said.
Unlike
lotteries,
“poker’s
a
game
of
skill."
Players
generally
think
that
the
U.S.
casino
industry
is
behind
the
shutdown
of
most
online
poker,
concerned
about
how
much
revenue
it
draws
off.
They
scoff
at
the
legality
and
widespread
nature
of
lotteries
and
racetrack
gambling,
and
say
it’s
hypocritical
not
to
act
quickly
to
regulate
online
poker.
Forrester,
the
Duke
grad,
is
more
philosophical.
“I’m
not
angry
about
it.
The
system
before
Black
Friday
was
unsustainable,
in
my
opinion.
The
U.S.
government
wasn’t
collecting
taxes"
on
online
poker
sites,
he
said.