Articles
Casino

Kalshi legal woes grow with Washington state gambling suit

User Image

Par Anonyme

Créé March 29, 2026|2 mins de lecture
Main Image

The Washington attorney general became the latest state authority to sue Kalshi, alleging on Friday that the prediction markets operator violated state regulations.

Kalshi is facing another state-level lawsuit after the state of Washington on Friday filed allegations that the prediction market operator violated state gambling laws with its products.

The Washington Attorney General’s complaint cites the Pacific Northwest state’s existing ban on online gambling and otherwise strict oversight of the gaming market, in claiming Kalshi violated the Washington Consumer Protection Act, Gambling Act, and Recovery of Money Lost at Gambling Act.

"Kalshi’s website and app show consumers a range of events that they can bet on and the odds for those various events, which dictate how much the bettor will be paid out if the event occurs," an announcement from Attorney General Nick Brown said. "This is exactly how sportsbooks and other gambling operations function. Kalshi advertises that they allow consumers to 'bet on anything' by simply calling their service a 'prediction market' rather than 'gambling.'"

The definition of gambling under Washington law is “staking or risking something of value upon the outcome of a contest of chance or a future contingent event,” and Kalshi’s activities fall squarely within that definition, the AG’s announcement said. “Each Kalshi bet risks money, relies in part on chance, and promises a payout to winners.”

Kalshi immediately sought to move the case to federal court, saying in its filing that the issues raised by the Washington suit are already being  litigated in other federal courts and that there had been "no warning or dialogue" from Washington state  prior to the lawsuit.

Related: SEC interpretation on crypto laws ‘a beginning, not an end,‘ says Atkins

A Nevada judge earlier this month temporarily blocked Kalshi from operating in the state, finding that state authorities are reasonably likely to prevail in a legal fight over whether the company’s event contracts violate Nevada gambling laws.

Carson City District Court Judge Jason Woodbury issued a temporary restraining order on Friday, siding with a Nevada Gaming Control Board motion to block Kalshi from operating in the state for 14 days.

Kalshi had argued that its contracts are under the exclusive jurisdiction of the US Commodity Futures Trading Commission, an agency that has backed prediction markets that are fighting in multiple state courts over accusations of offering illegal gambling.

Days earlier, Arizona Attorney General Kris Mayes announced charges against the companies behind Kalshi, alleging that the company operated an “illegal gambling business in Arizona without a license” and offered illegal election wagering.

While Kalshi faces several similar cases filed by gaming authorities in other US states over the platform allegedly offering sports gambling to residents without a license, Arizona was one of the first to file criminal charges.

The state-level cases come as prediction markets are under scrutiny by lawmakers for offering bets on US military actions, citing concerns about insider information in the government.

Magazine: Nobody knows if quantum secure cryptography will even work

Source: CoinTelegraph


D'autres articles publiés récemment

Secret Network bridge exploited for $4.7M with ‘infinite mint’ bug
Secret Network bridge exploited for $4.7M with ‘infinite mint’ bug

Ethereum

An exploit of the Secret Network went undiscovered for a week as the hacker moved the loot into Ethe...

Taiko urges users to withdraw as bridge exploit drains $1.7M
Taiko urges users to withdraw as bridge exploit drains $1.7M

Ethereum

Taiko’s bridge and ERC20 Vault on Ethereum suffered a compromise in its chain state verification m...

Morgan Stanley amends Ethereum, Solana ETFs to reveal record cheap fees
Morgan Stanley amends Ethereum, Solana ETFs to reveal record cheap fees

Solana

ETF analyst Eric Balchunas says Morgan Stanley’s plan to charge 0.14% fees on two upcoming crypto ...

South Korea pushes Travel Rule expansion for smaller crypto transfers
South Korea pushes Travel Rule expansion for smaller crypto transfers

Crypto Market Analysis

South Korea’s FIU is calling for broader crypto transfer reporting rules during FATF talks, citing...

US dollar strength hits highest since May 2025: Five things to know in Bitcoin this week
US dollar strength hits highest since May 2025: Five things to know in Bitcoin this week

Bitcoin

Bitcoin faced a resurgent US dollar index and macro hurdles as it circled $64,000, but July seasonal...

Q2 2026 emerges as most-hacked quarter on record with 83 incidents
Q2 2026 emerges as most-hacked quarter on record with 83 incidents

Crypto Market Analysis

Crypto hackers stole $755 million across 83 cybersecurity incidents, as cross–chain bridges remain...