This past review by Austin Hoover was intriguing. I contacted a director at the company to discuss this particular player. They researched his activity and this is what really happened - the player did have a balance of $800 but then took some money to the roulette table. He started betting small - $2. But when he lost, he would double up to try to make it back.
Researching this player, he took some money to the roulette table, played a little bit and lost, and then deposited more to chase his losses, lost again, etc etc.
This is strange because if his account was truly hacked or compromised in some way, the perpetrator would have taken all the money to the poker room and dumped the chips to another account where the funds could then be withdrawn.
A fraudster would not have taken money to a roulette table and bet $2.
And what\'s interesting is that this same player had previously played in the casino, playing the exact same roulette game, and employing this exact same playing strategy of doubling up or chasing losses to break even or come out ahead.
His strategy just didn’t work this time, and now he has players remorse. Why would Bovada risk tarnishing their reputation over a mere $800 account when fair play is the most important aspect of an online gaming company?! They wouldn\'t, and they didn\'t.
I agree with Bovada and feel that Austin is upset that he lost his money. However, it was not Bovada\'s fault but his own.