LAS VEGAS, NV – After nearly eight years of litigation, a Las Vegas jury has ruled in favor of Richar Inc., the maker of the Richer Roulette, a roulette-style gambling machine, finding no patent infringement in a case brought by INAG Inc.
The lawsuit, which originated in 2016, centered around a “rotatable shuffler” used in Richar Inc.’s automatic table game, Richer Roulette. INAG Inc. had alleged that this component violated their patent for a card shuffling machine. However, after hearing the arguments, the jury took just 43 minutes to deliberate before delivering a unanimous verdict, finding no infringement on any of the four patent claims asserted by INAG.