Wednesday, June 2, 2010

City Capital Adds Three More Gaming Centers to Clean Sweeps Family

RALEIGH, NC--(Marketwire - June 1, 2010) - City Capital Corporation (PINKSHEETS: CTCC) today announced that its sweepstakes gaming subsidiary Clean Sweeps Holdings, LLC has now further expanded into the state of North Carolina with the addition of three sweepstakes gaming center locations. The three gaming centers currently operating Clean Sweeps hardware and software are located in the municipalities of Rolesville, Walnut Cove, and Kernersville. The locations represent approximately seventy additional Clean Sweeps terminals in operation, or under Clean Sweeps management.
Ephren Taylor, Chief Executive Officer of City Capital Corporation, stated, "In 2009 we laid out an aggressive plan to roll out thousands of our terminals into concentrated areas, these three locations represent the tip of our expansion into the Southeast. We look forward to adding new locations running our systems every month as we continue to grow this division."
Clean Sweep Holdings' games allow players to win cash or other prizes at terminals located in shopping centers and kiosks. The games attract players of all types, diversifying the clientele that frequent retail business entities. Comparable to the McDonald's Monopoly gaming concept, Sweepstakes Income games are 100% legal, yet they offer far more feasible probabilities for achieving victory. And perhaps more significantly, owners of Sweepstakes gaming machines regularly experience significant, rapid revenue generation that is simplistically sustainable.
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Sweepstakes Video Parlors Grow From Virginia To Florida

Internet-enabled sweepstakes videogames that pay cash prizes are cropping up from Florida to Virginia, leaving city and state officials in a quandary about how to respond. The games have long flourished in North Carolina, where House Speaker Joe Hackney (D-Chapel Hill) recently predicted the state legislature might amend the law to ban video sweepstakes games if the courts fail to do so. At least two district court judges have upheld the legality of the machines in North Carolina.
But now payoff sweepstakes games -- many located in Internet cafés -- have begun to proliferate elsewhere up and down the Eastern seaboard. In Florida, 400 people jammed a city council meeting in Jacksonville this month to debate the status of the games. As Internet sweepstakes gamerooms increase throughout the state, enforcement policies vary from one county to the next, and sometimes within a single county, according to local press sources.
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