Fort Bragg Soldier Arrested for Polymarket Insider Trading as Trump Calls Markets a Casino
Army Master Sergeant Gannon Ken Van Dyke was arrested for using classified intelligence about the Maduro operation to earn $400,000+ on Polymarket. Hours later, President Trump publicly opposed prediction market expansion, calling the world "something of a casino."
On April 24, 2026, federal authorities arrested Gannon Ken Van Dyke, a master sergeant at U.S. Army Special Operations Command at Fort Bragg, for allegedly using classified military information to generate more than $400,000 in profits on Polymarket. Van Dyke was a participant in a January 2026 operation targeting Venezuelan President Nicolรกs Maduro and allegedly placed trades on the operation's outcome before its details became public. The case is the first known criminal prosecution of an active-duty US military servicemember for insider trading on a prediction market platform.
Polymarket CEO and co-founder Shayne Coplan responded publicly on X, writing that the company was "grateful" to the Department of Justice for publicly acknowledging Polymarket's cooperation. Coplan said the platform "flagged it, referred it and cooperated the whole way." The response reflects Polymarket's long-standing argument that on-chain architecture makes suspicious trading patterns detectable: every wallet address and trade is permanently recorded on the Polygon blockchain. Critics noted that the platform processed hundreds of thousands of dollars in trades before federal prosecutors moved.
On the same day, President Trump remarked that he is not in favor of expanding prediction markets and added that "the whole world has unfortunately become something of a casino." The comment is notable given Trump's career in casino development. His administration had previously been viewed as relatively permissive toward the prediction market industry, given the CFTC's reduced enforcement posture since January 2025, but the public statement signals skepticism rather than support.
The arrest and the presidential skepticism arrived amid a broader regulatory wave. The same week, Wisconsin filed suit against all major US-facing prediction market platforms. New York and Illinois governors issued executive orders restricting insider trading by state employees. Academic researchers published findings estimating $143 million in insider-trading profits on Polymarket over two years. What had been a compliance gray area is now drawing criminal prosecution, gubernatorial orders, and state lawsuits simultaneously.
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