Regulatory News Videoslots Limited Faces £650,000 Penalty for AML and Social Responsibility Breaches Marta SanderPublished: November 20, 2025 Updated: November 21, 2025032 views Excerpt: The UK Gambling Commission has imposed a £650,000 financial penalty on Videoslots Limited following an investigation that revealed significant Anti-Money Laundering (AML) and social responsibility failures. The operator of videoslots.co.uk, mrvegas.com, and megariches.com will also receive a warning and must undergo a third-party audit to ensure effective implementation of its AML and safer gambling policies. Table of Contents Systemic Monitoring Failures IdentifiedAML Control Weaknesses ExposedRegulatory Response and Industry ImplicationsDigital Payment Risks Under ScrutinyCompliance Requirements and Next Steps Systemic Monitoring Failures Identified The Commission’s investigation uncovered serious shortcomings in Videoslots’ customer monitoring systems, which failed to effectively identify and prevent potential gambling harm. While the operator’s systems automatically set monthly deposit limits for customers, these limits operated on a calendar month basis and excluded initial deposits, creating significant gaps in player protection. The flawed system resulted in multiple instances of customers exceeding their intended deposit limits. One customer lost £5,000 within a month despite having a £3,000 monthly deposit limit. Another customer lost the same amount in less than 24 hours with the same limit in place, while a third customer lost £7,500 over 18 days despite a £2,000 monthly deposit limit. The operator’s monitoring systems also failed to identify customers potentially at risk. In one case, a customer lost £6,550 over three active gambling days across a two-month period without receiving any interaction from the operator. AML Control Weaknesses Exposed The investigation revealed substantial gaps in Videoslots’ AML and Counter Terrorist Financing (CTF) procedures, including policy deficiencies, record management omissions, and an over-reliance on algorithmic monitoring that proved ineffective when tested. A particularly concerning case involved a customer who deposited more than £75,000 using digital pre-payment vouchers over a 16-day period. The customer then transferred proceeds to four different bank accounts and accessed their account from outside Great Britain. Despite these high-risk indicators, the automated AML risk scoring system failed to trigger source of funds requirements in a timely manner. The operator’s automated scoring system did not identify this activity as high risk, instead presuming the activity was funded from recycled winnings without supporting evidence to explain the customer’s complex and unnecessary deposit and withdrawal patterns. In another instance, a customer conducting high levels of deposits and withdrawals over a month did not have their risk profile appropriately escalated. The operator assumed the account was funded from recycled winnings based on significant wins, without sufficient scrutiny or acceptable interaction to validate this assumption. Regulatory Response and Industry Implications John Pierce, Commission Director of Enforcement, stated: “Operators are required to have effective Social Responsibility and Anti-Money Laundering policies, procedures and controls as a condition of holding an operating licence. In this case, the operator’s monthly deposit limits were found to be ineffective when tested in practice and AML controls were not applied to the standards we expect.” Pierce highlighted the serious nature of the pre-paid digital voucher case: “The investigation identified a serious example where pre-paid digital vouchers had been used for gambling without effective oversight and early intervention. The over-reliance on an algorithm to monitor risk meant that the customer was able to carry out a high volume of deposits and transfer the proceeds of gambling to multiple different destination accounts with insufficient and timely checks or robust source of funds verification taking place.” Digital Payment Risks Under Scrutiny The Commission has raised significant concerns about open-loop payment systems, particularly digital vouchers that can be purchased using credit or cryptocurrency through third-party websites. Pierce emphasized: “Open-loop payment systems are high risk in nature because they could enable anonymous deposits and make it harder to trace funds. In this case, the licensee failed to implement timely customer interactions and did not conduct enhanced customer due diligence until the customer had reached significant spend thresholds – such failings are unacceptable.” The regulator has updated its risk information guidance to reflect concerns about digital vouchers. All operators using similar digital card or digital payment schemes must report this to the Commission as a key event immediately if they have not already done so. Compliance Requirements and Next Steps Videoslots Limited must complete an independent audit alongside the financial penalty and steps already taken to address the Commission’s findings. Pierce confirmed: “Alongside the financial penalty and the necessary steps already taken by Videoslots to address our findings, the operator must also complete an independent audit and we will monitor the outcome of this closely.” The case serves as a clear warning to all operators about the importance of robust AML controls and effective social responsibility measures, particularly when dealing with high-risk payment methods. Source: UK Gambling Commission