U.S. Soldier Charged With Using Classified Maduro Raid Intel For $400,000 Polymarket Bets
A U.S. Army special forces master sergeant, Gannon Ken Van Dyke, was arrested and charged in Manhattan for allegedly using classified information from a U.S. raid to place Polymarket bets that netted more than $400,000.
Prosecutors say Van Dyke placed about 13 wagers between Dec. 27, 2025 and Jan. 2, 2026, staking roughly $32,000 to $33,000 and turning the stakes into about $400,000 in profits. He faces counts including wire fraud, commodities fraud, theft of nonpublic government information, unlawful use of confidential government information, and an unlawful monetary transaction. Investigators allege he used multiple Polymarket usernames, including "Burdensome-Mix," and that he moved most winnings first into a foreign cryptocurrency vault and then into a new brokerage account. The Commodity Futures Trading Commission filed a parallel civil complaint seeking repayment, penalties, and a permanent trading ban, and Polymarket says it flagged the trading and referred the matter to the Justice Department.
The episode traces back to a long U.S. effort to hold Venezuelan leaders accountable: a 2020 Justice Department indictment of Nicolas Maduro and rising tensions after Venezuela's disputed July 2024 election. After the 2025 U.S. presidential transition prioritized enforcing that indictment, months of planning culminated in a U.S. special operations raid in early January 2026 that captured Maduro. Polymarket had won CFTC approval to operate in the U.S. in November 2025, prediction-market trading surged to monthly volumes above $20 billion in early 2026, and this case marks the first federal criminal prosecution alleging insider trading in a U.S. prediction market.
Mainstream coverage of the case has shifted as investigators released details. Early reports focused on the arrest and the basic allegation of classified-information trading. Later reporting by outlets including CBS and PBS emphasized the precise timing of the bets relative to the public announcement of Maduro's capture and framed the case as a broader national-security and market-integrity issue. The episode has also renewed debate over platform responsibility and individual culpability, drawn comparisons to recent Israeli arrests tied to Polymarket wagers on Iran, and prompted officials to warn that clearance holders who cash in on secret information will be held accountable.
📊 Relevant Data
Polymarket received CFTC approval in November 2025 to operate as a Designated Contract Market, allowing it to resume US operations after a 2022 enforcement action that had prohibited US users.
Polymarket Secures Amended CFTC Order Clearing Way for Intermediated Trading in US — Yahoo Finance
Prediction markets, including Polymarket, saw monthly trading volume exceed $20 billion in early 2026, with geopolitics driving the majority of activity.
This indictment marks the first federal criminal prosecution for insider trading in US prediction markets, as prior to 2026, no such charges had been filed by the DOJ or CFTC.
Can anyone police insider trading on prediction markets? — NBC News
📌 Key Facts
- The defendant is Master Sgt. Gannon Ken Van Dyke, 38, a U.S. Army Special Forces soldier stationed at Fort Bragg who participated in the U.S. operation that captured Nicolás Maduro (and his wife) in early January; Maduro and his wife are being held in Brooklyn to face federal charges.
- Van Dyke was charged in Manhattan federal court on multiple counts — prosecutors allege five criminal counts including theft/unlawful use of government information, wire fraud, commodities fraud and unlawful monetary transactions — and both the DOJ and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission have filed actions.
- Prosecutors allege Van Dyke used classified operational intelligence to place about 13 well‑timed "Yes" bets on Polymarket markets (including that U.S. forces were in Venezuela and that Maduro would be out by Jan. 31, 2026), placing wagers between Dec. 27, 2025 and Jan. 2, 2026 with roughly $32,000–$33,000 in stake money.
- Those bets are alleged to have produced more than $400,000 in profit (reports variously cite prosecutors’ estimate as "more than $400,000" and as nearly $410,000).
- Authorities say Van Dyke moved most of the winnings first into a foreign cryptocurrency vault and then into a newly created online brokerage account, and that he asked Polymarket to delete his account claiming lost email access.
- Polymarket reportedly implemented enhanced anti‑insider‑trading rules in March, identified a user trading on classified government information, and referred the matter to DOJ; the CFTC is seeking repayment, penalties, a permanent trading ban and an injunction against future violations.
- Senior officials — including U.S. Attorney Jay Clayton and FBI Director Kash Patel — said the case shows federal laws apply to prediction markets and that clearance holders who "cash in" on classified access will be held accountable; President Trump publicly said he was "not happy" about such betting and likened it to a casino.
- The case has intensified scrutiny of prediction markets worldwide, with related examples including recent Israeli arrests over alleged Polymarket bets tied to Iran military operations and an anonymous March Polymarket bet about Iran’s supreme leader that netted roughly $500,000.
📊 Analysis & Commentary (1)
"The column argues that the 1980 Eagle Claw disaster exposed critical flaws that drove the creation and evolution of today's joint special-operations enterprise, and that recent high‑risk raids and recoveries (such as the Maduro operation) demonstrate how institutional learning, rigorous training, and a 'no one left behind' culture have forged a more lethal, disciplined force."
📰 Source Timeline (11)
Follow how coverage of this story developed over time
- PBS segment confirms the soldier is a U.S. Special Forces member stationed at Fort Bragg who helped plan the January Maduro capture operation.
- PBS reports he placed a series of bets on Polymarket specifically about Maduro's removal, netting more than $400,000.
- Segment adds an on-the-record Oval Office exchange in which President Trump, when asked about the case and related Iran-war bets, says he is "not happy with any of that stuff" and likens the situation to the world becoming "somewhat of a casino."
- PBS notes a separate, scrutinized anonymous Polymarket bet in March on the Iranian supreme leader's death that netted about $500,000, cited as another example fueling insider-trading concerns.
- CBS segment reiterates that the charged individual is a U.S. special forces soldier who allegedly placed Polymarket bets using information before the public announcement of Maduro’s removal.
- Confirms continuing national TV coverage focused specifically on the Polymarket angle of the insider trading case.
- CBS reports that federal investigators believe Master Sgt. Gannon Ken Van Dyke placed Polymarket bets specifically before the public January announcement that Nicolás Maduro had been captured.
- The CBS segment frames the timing of the wagers in relation to that January capture announcement as a central element of investigators’ theory of the case.
- The piece adds on‑air explanation from correspondent Nicole Sganga and contributor Elliot Ackerman about how investigators are reconstructing the trading timeline and intent.
- CBS segment frames Van Dyke specifically as a U.S. special forces soldier, emphasizing his special operations role.
- The report reiterates that he allegedly bet on Nicolás Maduro's removal from office before the raid was publicly known, highlighting the timing of the wagers relative to the covert operation.
- CBS confirms that federal authorities are actively investigating Van Dyke over these alleged bets, reinforcing that the probe is ongoing.
- Confirms Maduro and his wife Cilia Flores were captured in a predawn U.S. special operations raid in Caracas in January and are now held at the Metropolitan Detention Center in Brooklyn to face federal charges.
- Adds charging detail that Van Dyke faces five criminal counts, explicitly listing theft of government information, wire fraud, commodities fraud, and unlawful monetary transactions.
- Clarifies prosecutors' profit estimate as "more than" $400,000 from bets totaling upward of $33,000, and that he placed more than a dozen wagers in late December and early January.
- Includes direct on-the-record quotes from U.S. Attorney Jay Clayton calling the conduct "clear insider trading" and from FBI Director Kash Patel warning clearance holders against "cashing in" on classified access.
- Notes that the Commodity Futures Trading Commission filed a formal complaint Thursday seeking repayment, penalties, a permanent trading ban, and an injunction against future commodities-law violations.
- Confirms the soldier's full name and rank as Gannon Ken Van Dyke, a U.S. Army Special Forces master sergeant.
- Specifies that he was charged in Manhattan federal court with commodity and wire fraud.
- States explicitly that he took part in the U.S. operation to capture former Venezuelan leader Nicolas Maduro and used that operational intelligence to time Polymarket bets.
- Notes that Maduro was captured by the U.S. in early January and that the bets concerned Maduro losing power by the end of January.
- PBS/AP piece lists the full set of charges: unlawful use of confidential government information for personal gain, theft of nonpublic government information, commodities fraud, wire fraud, and making an unlawful monetary transaction.
- Article specifies that Van Dyke allegedly placed about 13 bets taking the 'Yes' position on markets about U.S. forces being in Venezuela and Maduro being out by Jan. 31, 2026.
- Story adds service and rank details: Van Dyke joined the Army in 2008, was promoted to Master Sergeant in 2023, and is described as part of the special forces community stationed at Fort Bragg.
- The article notes he allegedly moved most winnings into a foreign cryptocurrency vault and then a new brokerage account, and asked Polymarket to delete his account claiming he lost email access.
- FBI Director Kash Patel is quoted directly saying the case shows clearance holders who cash in their access will be held accountable.
- Provides additional context that the Pentagon referred questions to the Army and DOJ and that U.S. Special Operations Command did not immediately comment.
- Fox article specifies that Van Dyke allegedly wagered more than $33,000 across 13 bets between Dec. 27, 2025, and the evening of Jan. 2, 2026.
- It reports his total profits as nearly $410,000, slightly refining earlier figures that were framed as more than $400,000.
- Article details that Van Dyke allegedly moved most of his winnings first to a foreign cryptocurrency vault, then into a newly created online brokerage account.
- It includes Polymarket's statement that the platform implemented enhanced anti–insider trading rules in March and that it identified a user trading on classified government information and referred the matter to DOJ.
- Story reiterates that Van Dyke was stationed at Fort Bragg and directly involved in planning and executing 'Operation Absolute Resolve' from around Dec. 8, 2025, through Jan. 6, giving a more explicit date range for his operational role.
- Provides additional on-the-record quotes from FBI Director Kash Patel and Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche, stressing that clearance holders will be held accountable and that federal laws fully apply to prediction markets.
- Identifies the soldier as Gannon Ken Van Dyke, 38, stationed at Fort Bragg in North Carolina.
- Specifies that DOJ and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission both filed actions, marking the first U.S. criminal charges tied to prediction market wagers.
- Details alleged use of multiple Polymarket usernames, including 'Burdensome-Mix,' and that about $32,000 in bets produced more than $400,000 in profits.
- Lists the specific counts: wire fraud, commodities fraud, misusing non-public government information and related charges.
- Includes a formal quote from U.S. Attorney Jay Clayton emphasizing that prediction markets cannot be used as havens for classified information-based trading.
- Notes that Polymarket did not respond to NPR's request for comment and that Van Dyke's defense lawyer is not yet publicly known.
- Adds international context: Israeli authorities recently arrested several people on suspicion of using classified information to place Polymarket bets on Iran military operations.
- Identifies the defendant by name as U.S. Army soldier Gannon Ken Van Dyke.
- Specifies that Van Dyke participated in the U.S. operation to capture Nicolás Maduro.
- Clarifies that he is charged with commodity fraud and wire fraud in Manhattan federal court.
- Alleges he used classified information about the operation to place well‑timed bets on Polymarket that Maduro would lose power by the end of January.
- States that the bets produced more than $400,000 in profit tied to Maduro’s ouster.