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Gambling madness can snag court fans

Most of the people giddily filling out brackets for their NCAA “March Madness” office pool will never have a problem. But for a few unfortunate young people and their families, the Road to the Final Four, the nation’s fourth biggest gambling event, is paved with personal and financial ruin.
Some college students addicted to sports betting or online poker have taken it to extremes. They have committed crimes, including bank robbery and murder, over gambling debts. Others, unable to face the guilt or consequences of betting away tuition, have committed suicide.

Discussed: Meng-Ju “Mark” Wu, a 19-year-old freshman at UW-Madison who, in 2005, hung himself in jail while awaiting his murder trial committed over a $15,000 sports betting debt.