Cosmo! This is a great question. Typically, at casinos, the dealer himself will cut the deck.
The process is pretty simple, and it alleviates all worries about cheating. The dealer first does a wash. This is where he will mix up all the cards on the table and swirl them around so that they are in a completely different order than they were for the previous hand.
Next, he will shuffle a few times, cut the deck a few times, then shuffle again. Finally, the dealer will cut the deck once, putting it face down on a card-sized plastic cover, so that no one can see what the bottom card is, and so that there's no way he could deal from the bottom of the deck. The dealer does this all in the open, so there's virtually no way he could be cheating.
At home games, the dealer responsibilities often change to the person on the left each hand. One person will shuffle and deal, then, when the hand's over, they will pass the deck on to the left, and it will be that person's turn. The way the deck is cut in these situations, is usually the same.The person on the dealer's left will get the option to cut the deck or not, and if they do, the dealer will start passing the cards out to players. If the person on the left does no wish to cut the deck (either because he trusts the other person isn't cheating, or he is superstitious about cutting the deck), then it is up to the dealer to do it himself.
There's not a certain way to cut a deck to make sure there is no cheating going on.Any way it's done pretty much guarantees a safe deck of cards. Casinos are also watched very carefully, and any dealer caught cheating will never get a job dealing anywhere else. Even if cheating in a casino was possible, I doubt anyone would risk it.
Hope this helps!
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