Trump “not happy” with prediction markets

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Federal prosecutors have charged Gannon Ken Van Dyke, an active-duty U.S. Army soldier who the indictment says has served as a U.S. Army Special Forces master sergeant, with allegedly using classified information about a military operation to make more than $400,000 in prediction-market profits.

After months of online discourse around suspected insider trading on Polymarket and Kalshi, the case is a direct test for crypto prediction markets. Prosecutors allege that Van Dyke had access to nonpublic details of Operation Absolute Resolve, the U.S. operation to capture Nicolas Maduro and Cilia Flores, and used that knowledge to trade event contracts before the public announcement.

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The immediate problem is whether markets built to price public expectations can remain credible when the best-informed potential trader is a person involved in the event itself.

In that setting, the price may reflect information, but the information may come from a source the market cannot fairly absorb.

Polymarket said in a reported statement that it identified a user trading on classified government information, referred the matter to the Justice Department, and cooperated with investigators.

That distinction separates Polymarket from the alleged trader while still putting the platform’s surveillance model at the center of the case.

The political overhang sharpened after Trump was asked about suspected insider trading in prediction markets tied to war and replied that “the whole world, unfortunately, has become somewhat of a casino.”

He also said he was “not happy” with prediction markets and did not like them conceptually, which stops short of endorsing the trades but does little to quiet the market’s legitimacy problem.

The suspicion driving online debate is that some successful geopolitical trades may reflect access to restricted government timing rather than better forecasting.

The Washington Post previously reported that knowledge of the Maduro operation was limited to a close circle of national security officials, and quoted Sen. Chris Murphy arguing that such bets appeared likely to come from the White House or from people with inside knowledge, while the White House denied any staff wrongdoing.

That remains inference, not evidence, tying any Trump adviser or official to the trades.

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The alleged edge was classified access

The government’s theory is narrow. The alleged advantage was having advanced knowledge of operational details.

The DOJ announcement says Van Dyke was charged with unlawful use of confidential government information for personal gain, theft of nonpublic government information, commodities fraud, wire fraud, and an unlawful monetary transaction.

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The agency’s release also states that the indictment is only an allegation, a caveat that should shape every reading of the case until a court ruling is issued.

The indictment alleges that Van Dyke was involved in planning and executing Operation Absolute Resolve from at least Dec. 8, 2025, through at least Jan. 5, 2026.

It also says he signed nondisclosure agreements covering classified or sensitive information connected to U.S. Army Special Operations Command work in the Western Hemisphere.

The trading timeline highlights something traders have been talking about on X for months, not just in this case, but across multiple markets. The indictment alleges that Van Dyke created a Polymarket account on or about Dec. 26, 2025, used a VPN, and bought roughly $33,934 of Yes shares across 13 Maduro- and Venezuela-related transactions between Dec. 27 and Jan. 2.

The CFTC complaint alleges that Van Dyke accumulated more than 436,000 Yes shares in the “Maduro out by January 31, 2026?” contract at an average price of about $0.074, for a cost of about $32,538.

When the contract was resolved, Yes, the complaint says he realized more than $404,000 in profit on that contract.

A low-priced event contract became a near-full-payout instrument after the public learned the outcome. The alleged edge was timing.

The CFTC says the Yes price in the January contract stayed below $0.13 from 10:00 a.m. ET on Dec. 29 through 1:15 a.m. ET on Jan. 3, except for a brief spike to about $0.22 around 10:42 p.m. ET on Jan. 2.

After President Donald Trump’s public announcement, the complaint says the price rose from $0.375 at 4:21 a.m. ET to $0.955 at 4:25 a.m. ET.

Put simply, the market repriced almost instantly once the public signal arrived. The allegation is that one trader already had access to the signal.

Why the CFTC case changes the frame

The DOJ case supplies the criminal theory. The CFTC case supplies the market theory.

That distinction is substantive because prediction markets have often been discussed as a hybrid category, part forecasting tool, part wagering interface, part crypto-native market.

The CFTC complaint treats the relevant contract as a commodity-law instrument, and the agency’s press release says this is its first insider-trading case involving event contracts.

It also says the case marks the agency’s first use of the so-called Eddie Murphy Rule to bring charges based on the misuse of government information.

The CFTC is telling prediction-market users that event contracts may sit inside its antifraud perimeter when confidential government information is allegedly misappropriated for trading.

Track Core theory What it tests
DOJ criminal case Van Dyke allegedly misused classified government information and attempted to conceal proceeds. Whether existing criminal and commodities-fraud tools can reach prediction-market insider trading.
CFTC civil case The Maduro-related event contract is treated as a swap-like market subject to CFTC antifraud authority. Whether event contracts can be policed like regulated markets when nonpublic government information affects price.
Platform integrity Polymarket says it identified suspicious trading, referred it to DOJ, and cooperated. Whether after-the-fact detection is enough for markets that transfer value before enforcement arrives.
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The CFTC had already been moving in this direction before the arrest.

In a March 2026 prediction markets advisory, staff described event contracts as derivatives that can fall within swap or futures-like definitions depending on structure.

The same advisory reminded designated contract markets that they must monitor trading, prevent manipulation, and protect market participants from abusive practices.

The advisory also says misappropriation of confidential information in breach of a duty of trust and confidence can fall under CFTC antifraud rules commonly described as insider trading.

That context suggests the Van Dyke complaint fits a framework the regulator had already started building.

Polymarket’s harder test is timing

Polymarket’s reported response is important because it complicates the simplest version of the critique.

The company account is consistent across AP, ABC’s account of the case, and a WIRED report on the Polymarket trades: Polymarket said it identified a user trading on classified government information, referred the matter to DOJ, cooperated with the investigation, and said insider trading has no place on the platform.

That gives Polymarket a defensible first answer. The platform can argue that the system produced a referral rather than silence.

The harder question is what happened before the referral. If the CFTC’s allegations are right, the market transferred a large profit after the relevant information advantage had already been converted into positions.

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