Pubdate: Wed, 30 Sep 1998 Source: Associated Press Author: Brad Cain GAMBLING ADDICT'S SURVIVORS MAY ASK VOTERS TO OVERTURN GAME SALEM, Ore. (AP) -- Friends and relatives of a man who committed suicide after becoming hooked on video poker are hoping to ask Oregon voters to pull the plug on the game two years from now. The video poker opponents gathered on the front steps of the Capitol Tuesday to remember Bob Hafemann, a Milwaukie man who fatally shot himself three years ago after falling deeply into gambling-related debt. Hafemann's sister, Rhonda Hatefi, said her brother enjoyed his life as a $45,000-a-year steelworker before he became addicted to the Oregon Lottery's video poker game and lost his life's savings. "He only paid his rent. He let all of his other bills slide," Hatefi told reporters. "His death has devastated us as a family." Tom Grey, executive director of the National Coalition Against Lottery Expansion, said he will help Hatefi and others with an initiative campaign in 2000 aimed at ending or at least curtailing state-sponsored gambling. Grey, who lives in Hanover, Ill., said the campaign will be launched soon after this November's election to give gambling opponents plenty of time to round up signatures for the ballot two years from now. To give voters a choice, the opponents plan to push one initiative to get rid of the Lottery altogether and another one to ban just video poker -- by far the biggest moneymaker of the Lottery's games. "Our ultimate goal is to eliminate video poker," he said. "We see it as the crack cocaine of gambling." The opponents will have their work cut out for them, though, because various polls have indicated wide public support for the highly profitable game. "I think people understand that if the Lottery were to go away, you would lose $500 million in state revenue," said David Hooper, spokesman for the Oregon Lottery. "You would either have to lose services or increase taxes." Plus, he said, the state has allocated $4.5 million to run a 24-hour telephone hot line and treatment programs for problem gamblers, who make up about 3 percent of the total number of people who play the lottery. Still, Grey and other opponents said the state's own estimates are that there are more than 70,000 problem gamblers in Oregon and that state government is cashing in on those people's addiction. "Obviously, we've got a feeding frenzy in this state," he said. Hafemann's father, Harvey, said he knows only that video poker ruined his son's life. "He was trying to stop, but video poker took him down a road of no return," he said. - --- Checked-by: Patrick Henry