Daily fantasy sports site FanDuel stops taking money in NY

(Adds DraftKings statement, paragraph 7)

By Liana B. Baker and Suzanne Barlyn

NEW YORK, Nov 13 (Reuters) - Daily fantasy sports site FanDuel said on Friday it stopped taking new deposits in New York after the state's attorney general declared the games to be illegal gambling.

New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman sent cease and desist letters this week to daily fantasy sports market leaders FanDuel and DraftKings, demanding that they stop taking money from players in the state.

Both companies filed lawsuits in state court on Friday, contesting the order and asking the court to rule the games are legal.

FanDuel stopped taking new money from New Yorkers, but said players who deposited money previously could play in this weekend's contests. It said users in New York could also continue to withdraw from their accounts.

On Tuesday, the state attorney general's office declared the games against state law because customers "are clearly placing bets on events outside of their control or influence, specifically on the real-game performance of professional athletes."

DraftKings said in its lawsuit that Schneiderman was "using strong-arm tactics and defying the rule of law." DraftKings plans to continue taking money in New York during the five business days Schneiderman allowed for a response to his order, Chief Executive Officer Jason Robins said in New York on Friday.

"DraftKings will continue to operate in New York while we pursue all legal options available to prevent the New York Attorney General from denying our customers their right to play the games they love," a company representative said in a statement.

New York has more daily fantasy sports players than any other U.S. state, according to Eilers Research, so being forced to shut down there could cripple the fast-growing, multibillion-dollar industry.

DraftKings accused Schneiderman of abusing his authority by threatening to take action against payment processors Vantiv Inc and PayPal Holdings Inc.

Vantiv has stopped processing payments for DraftKings, the fantasy sports company said in its lawsuit. PayPal is still processing payments, pending developments in New York, a spokeswoman said.

The attorney general's declaration that daily fantasy sports is gambling, if correct, would make it "nearly impossible" for New York's legislature to pass a law allowing the games, said Bennett Liebman, former state deputy secretary for gaming and racing.

New York's Constitution prohibits gambling. The state has carved out some exceptions including horse racing and the state lottery, but each change required amending the constitution. That years-long process requires approval by two successive legislatures, followed by a public vote, he said.