
NSW gamblers losing $24m to poker machines every day, analysis shows
Analysis of state government data by Wesley Mission has found the amount of money lost to poker machines during the first quarter of 2025 increased by 5.7% when compared with the same period in 2024.
According to the analysis, NSW residents are now losing an average of $1m an hour to poker machines across the state, or more than $24m every day.
Poker machines losses were the highest in Sydney's western suburbs. In the Canterbury-Bankstown area, more than $186m was lost to 4,924 poker machines in just 90 days, or an average of more than $2m a day.
Sign up for Guardian Australia's breaking news email
In just 90 days, more than $766m was lost to poker machines across seven local government areas in western Sydney: Fairfield, Cumberland, Blacktown, Parramatta, Penrith and Campbelltown and Canterbury-Bankstown.
Wesley Mission, which sat on the NSW government's expert independent panel on gambling reform, has warned residents in Sydney's west are now losing an average of about $3,200 a year.
The charity's chief executive, Stu Cameron, said the state government needed to urgently introduce tougher regulation of poker machines.
'The government has implemented limited reforms, but they clearly aren't having a material impact,' Cameron said. 'The losses continue to be massive, the poker machines keep multiplying and their devastating impact deepens every day.
'If the goal was to reduce gambling harm, then these reforms have failed. What we need now is courage – not more delays.'
A spokesperson for the NSW minister for gaming and racing, David Harris, said the government was committed to 'evidence-based gaming reform' that would reduce harm and stop money laundering, while supporting local communities and jobs.
'Our gaming reforms are about changing people's behaviour which takes time,' Harris said.
'The government is reducing the overall number of gaming machines in NSW by reducing the gaming machine entitlement cap by over 3,000 since this Government was elected in 2023.
'Our government has also committed $100m to harm minimisation, introduced more responsible gambling officers, and have slashed cash limits on new machines.'
Sign up to Breaking News Australia
Get the most important news as it breaks
after newsletter promotion
Wesley Mission also called on the state government to also introduce mandatory shutdowns of poker machines from midnight to 10am, to introduce a cashless gaming card with enforceable harm reduction limits, and to set tighter caps on the number of machines in high-risk communities.
'These are not radical ideas – they are basic public health protections,' Cameron said. 'If people were being harmed this severely by alcohol, drugs, or unsafe roads, the government would act.'
'Gambling should be no different. Instead, the government does little while the industry rakes in billions.'
Wesley Mission's analysis found the number of poker machines operating across the state had slightly increased when compared with the first quarter of 2024.
The shadow minister for gaming, Kevin Anderson, said the government had 'promised a big game' on poker machines before the state election, but failed to deliver.
'The delays are just mind boggling and so frustrating for industry,' Anderson said. 'When I talk to pubs and clubs, they want certainty from this government and they are not getting it.'
In November last year, the independent panel wrote a 'roadmap' on how to overhaul the state's regulation of poker machines and limit harm. The Minns government is yet to formally respond to the report's recommendations, which were contested by some panel members.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mail
39 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Mark Latham's porn star ex Nathalie Matthews converted to Islam three years ago - while he was One Nation's leader in NSW
Between her days as a secret porn star and debuting a doomed relationship with volatile politician Mark Latham, versatile businesswoman Nathalie Matthews converted to Islam. Ten days have passed since Ms Matthews first emerged to accuse Latham of inflicting 'a sustained pattern' of psychological, financial and emotional abuse but her colourful background continues to shock. The 37-year-old, born Nathalie May Darrough, was originally described only as a Liberal Party member who owned a global logistics firm with a presence in Sydney, Dubai and Perth. It later turned out the racing enthusiast had until recently operated an OnlyFans account under the name Bondi C** S***, apparently while she ran for Sutherland Shire Council in 2021. Daily Mail Australia can now reveal the daughter of an assistant principal at a Catholic school pledged herself as a Muslim in November 2022 to become Maryam Abdullah. A 'Certificate of Declaring Islam' issued by the United Arab Emirates shows Ms Matthews using her date of birth and maiden name Darrough to formally embrace Islam. A demure picture of Ms Matthews wearing a hijab appears at the top of the certificate which lists her previous religion as Christian. The document welcomes Ms Matthews into the Islamic fold with the induction: 'We praise Allah who guided her to Islam so she should adhere to the rulings of Allah and abstain from the forbidden.' Among acts forbidden by Islam are fornication - consensual sex between two people who are not married - while gambling and drinking alcohol are frowned upon. A Certificate of Islam is not required for a person to become a Muslim but some organisations provide an official document for legal or travel purposes. To gain such a certificate in the Muslim-majority UAE a convert must provide a valid passport, other identification, and one personal photo in which a woman should be wearing a hijab. Ms Matthews declined to comment on Wednesday night why she converted to Islam or whether she still considered herself to be Muslim. To become a Muslim, Ms Matthews would have recited the Shahada: 'I bear witness that there is no god but Allah, and I bear witness that Muhammad is the Messenger of Allah.' Latham, a former member of Pauline Hanson's One Nation Party, has supported a travel ban on certain Islamic countries and a decade ago said 'in western Sydney there is a Muslim problem'. Hanson removed Latham as One Nation's NSW leader in August 2023 and he subsequently resigned from the party to sit as an independent in the upper house. If what Latham has called a 'situationship' with Ms Matthews commenced sometime before May 2022, as she has said, his One Nation membership and her newfound faith overlapped. Daily Mail Australia confirmed Ms Matthews and Latham as a couple in July 2023 after they each posted pictures of themselves to social media in the same row of seats at Wimbledon on Court 1. Ms Matthews describes herself as the managing director of Skynet Global Logistics, a company engaged in freight forwarding, a role which according to LinkedIn she has held for 19 months. Her LinkedIn profile says she has advised for Compass Logistics International, managing and developing trade between Australia and the Gulf Cooperational Council, over the same period. LinkedIn also shows Ms Matthews has been a freelance host of Import Export TV – '[the] world's first and only channel dedicated to international trade and global supply chains' - since 2023. Ms Matthews states 'over the past few years' she has been working across the UAE and Australia 'helping to build companies, launch ventures, and unlock opportunities'. Earlier position with freight forwarding, supply chain and logistics companies date back to 2009, after Ms Matthews spent three years as a fulltime receptionist with Four Seasons Hotels and Resorts. Ms Matthews married British-born Ross Matthews about seven years ago - both were Liberal Party members - but the pair reportedly parted ways in 2022. Police are now seeking an apprehended violence order to protect Ms Matthews from her ex-husband, who has pleaded not guilty to using a carriage device to menace, harass or offend. Ross Matthews has distanced himself from his ex-wife, only breaking his silence on social media to address the ongoing furore about her dispute with Latham. 'Please stop messaging me,' he posted on X after the scandal erupted. 'I don't speak to Nathalie and do not care. Thank you.' Daily Mail Australia revealed on Wednesday that Ms Matthews had previously been in a relationship with a man she met through the transport and logistics industry who was about 20 years older than her. After they broke up, police sought an AVO against Ms Matthews - as Nathalie Darrough - to protect the man but in June 2015 the application was withdrawn. In February 2018, Ms Matthews - still known as Darrough - pleaded guilty to shoplifting from the Camilla fashion boutique at Westfield Miranda in Sydney's south. She was placed on a 12-month good behaviour bond without conviction and ordered to pay $449 to the store. None of that was known - or likely ever would have been known - until after The Australian newspaper reported on July 14 that Ms Matthews had privately sought an AVO against Latham. The AVO application follows a messy break-up of what Latham has called a 'sexed-up, consensual, open arrangement'. Ms Matthews alleges 64-year-old Latham committed degrading acts including forcing her to have sex with other people and 'defecating on me before sex and refusing to let me wash'. Following the original story in The Australian, intimate WhatsApp messages between Ms Matthews and Latham were leaked to The Daily Telegraph. 'Very hard thinking about you,' Latham wrote to Ms Matthews during parliamentary sitting hours, shortly after 11am on February 20. 'Need badly to taste you,' he wrote that afternoon, alongside an emoji of a tongue. Latham has denied all abuse accusations, claiming that he had 'scores of documents' which would vindicate him, and enjoyed a 'fantastic' sex life with Ms Matthews. Daily Mail Australia revealed last Friday that Ms Matthews worked as an OnlyFans porn star for years before she started dating the former federal Labor leader. Ms Matthews' posts - where she enhanced her appearance with AI face-tuning technology - included raw video footage of herself engaged in sexual intercourse with another person, as well as hundreds of explicit images. Her account has since been taken down from OnlyFans, but the material she posted had spread to online fan sites and forums. Although Ms Matthews is thought to have been living in the Cronulla area at the time, it is understood she believed the OnlyFans venture would bring in more revenue by using 'Bondi' rather than 'Sutherland' in her online profile. Latham's lawyer Zali Burrows served WiseTech global billionaire Richard White and Ms Matthews with subpoenas related to her AVO application last Friday. The subpoena requested emails, text messages, and OnlyFans direct messages between Mr White and Ms Matthews, who connected on LinkedIn in 2023. Latham has said the subpoenas requesting communications between Mr White and Ms Matthews had not been intended to intimidate her, as she claimed. Instead, Latham insisted he wanted access to those communications to test Ms Matthews' allegations that he had forced her have sex with other men. Mr White is not accused of any wrongdoing and this publication is not suggesting he and Ms Matthews engaged in a sexual relationship. Daily Mail Australia is also not suggesting any wrongdoing by Latham, only that Ms Matthews has made allegations against him as part of applying for an AVO.


Daily Mail
39 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Mushroom murderer Erin Patterson's shocking new medical diagnosis that could see her escape a life sentence behind bars
Mushroom chef killer Erin Patterson may avoid a life sentence in jail after prison doctors diagnosed her with a rare psychological condition two years ago. Daily Mail Australia has been told doctors believed Patterson had Munchausen's Syndrome when she first arrived at the Dame Phyllis Frost Correctional Centre after her arrest in November 2023. Munchausen Syndrome is a psychological condition where someone pretends to be ill or deliberately produces symptoms of illness in themselves. It is done with the intention of 'assuming the sick role' so friends and family will care for them and make them the centre of attention. The condition could potentially save Patterson from being jailed for life if it's cited as a mitigating factor for the murders, although that outcome is unlikely. Patterson, 50, was convicted of the murders of her in-laws Don and Gail Patterson, and Gail's sister Heather Wilkinson, and the attempted murder of Heather's husband Ian. She admitted in court to lying about having been diagnosed with cancer to obtain sympathy from her intended murder victims. During her epic ten-week trial at the Latrobe Valley Law Courts in Morwell, the jury heard Patterson relished the attention she got from her in-laws by pretending to be sick. The court heard from sole survivor Ian Wilkinson that Patterson told her lunch guests she had undertaken a diagnostic test that showed a spot on a scan, which was a tumour. While Don Patterson was dying in Korumburra Hospital following the lunch, he told hospital staff Patterson had mentioned she had been diagnosed with ovarian cancer, the jury heard. But Patterson admitted she didn't have any medical appointments relating to cancer, despite telling Gail Patterson she was undergoing medical investigations. And in the witness box, Patterson told the jury she had lapped up the attention she received from her in-laws in response to her fictitious cancer diagnosis. 'I had initially thought I had an issue with my elbow, I'd had a lot of pain for a number of weeks, I thought I had a lump,' she told the jury. 'I had told Don and Gail about what I was worried about. I'd probably whinged a bit too much to Don and Gail about it and felt a bit embarrassed by that. 'They made me feel loved and cared for in the way that they were asking about my health and I didn't want that to stop, so I kept going.' On July 7, a jury found Patterson killed and attempted to kill her victims in cold blood. A date for Patterson's pre-sentence plea hearing is yet to be fixed, but is expected to take place sometime in August. Patterson had been defended at trial by top Melbourne barrister Colin Mandy, KC and Sophie Stafford. A plea hearing allows a convicted criminal to have submissions made on their behalf to try and mitigate a jail sentence. Patterson faces the prospect of a life sentence without parole unless she can persuade Justice Christopher Beale that there are compelling reasons for her eventual release. These reasons often revolve around remorse and an offender's 'insight' into the crimes that led to their conviction. A person who pleads not guilty and goes to trial traditionally receives a far more severe penalty than someone who spares their victims the burden of having to give evidence at trial. Often, a medical explanation for one's offending can help mitigate a sentence. Such mental conditions, when accepted by the court, routinely earn violent offenders discounts on their sentences. The Leongatha home of Erin Patterson where she lured her lunch guests to their deaths 'Verdins principles' - as they are known under Victoria's Sentencing Act of 1991 - reduce the offender's moral culpability and force a judge to consider the added 'hardship' jail will have on them. They are principles rolled out and relied upon by convicted criminals and their lawyers on a daily basis in Victoria. It remains unclear if Patterson intends to allow herself to be assessed by a forensic psychiatrist before her sentence. Both prison and police sources have suggested Patterson is unlikely to admit to any form of mental illness or change her story at plea in an effort to save her skin. 'She's a narcissist,' one source said. 'She loves the attention and I doubt she'll be falling on her sword now and making any kind of admissions.' Patterson remains locked up in solitary confinement for her own safety. There she spends almost 24-hours a day alone. Prison sources have since poured water on earlier reports that suggested Patterson had been working in the prison kitchen. 'She's not working anywhere. And she sure as hell isn't working in the prison kitchen. She gets all her food brought into her. She's not going anywhere anytime soon,' a source said. High profile Melbourne criminal lawyer George Balot, of Balot Reilly Criminal Lawyers, told Daily Mail Australia Patterson still faced significant challenges to earn herself a discounted sentence. 'Mitigating factors are details about the offender and their offence that tend to reduce the severity of their sentence for example the offender's previous good character, the likely effects of prison on the offender for example, if the offender has a medical condition that would be hard to manage in prison,' he said. 'Courts can consider factors such as the offender's mental health. 'Generally speaking ill health will be a factor tending to mitigate punishment only when it appears that imprisonment will be a greater burden on the offender by reason of their state of health or when there is a serious risk of imprisonment having a gravely adverse effect on the offender's health. 'Sentencing individuals with Munchausen Syndrome or Factitious Disorder is a difficult exercise because the condition is complex. 'Sentencing decisions consider the offender's potential for rehabilitation. 'While it is not a recognised medical diagnosis, the courts acknowledge the underlying personality disorder and its impact on behaviour when determining appropriate sentences. 'Also protective custody is normally mitigating if evidence shows conditions are harsh.' Patterson will be sentenced at a date to be fixed.


Daily Mail
39 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Four Corners 'meltdown' two hours before going to air. Plus, blind gossip hints at media Lothario's dark side... and which TV star has meth on his mind? INSIDE MAIL
By and JO SCRIMSHIRE and NICHOLAS COMINO and PETER VAN ONSELEN, POLITICAL EDITOR FOR DAILY MAIL AUSTRALIA Published: | Sore corners In case you missed it, Four Corners poured a steaming bucket of s*** on Melbourne neurosurgeon Greg Malham this week, digging Sorry we are not currently accepting comments on this article.