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Gannon Ken Van Dyke, a soldier stationed at Fort Bragg in North Carolina, helped plan and execute Operation Absolute Resolve, a daring mission that saw the U.S. Army capture former Venezuelan dictator NicolƔs Maduro. His superiors, however, were unaware that Van Dyke had more riding on the mission than just the abduction: He had also secretly placed 13 wagers on the prediction markets site Polymarket that the U.S. would invade or that Maduro would be captured prior to January 31.
Van Dykeās wagers won him $409,881, according to the U.S. Justice Department, but now the soldierās wagers have earned him something else: a series of criminal charges related to insider trading that come with the prospect of decades in prison.
āGannon Ken Van Dyke allegedly betrayed his fellow soldiers by utilizing classified information for his own financial gain,ā said FBI Assistant Director in Charge James C. Barnacle Jr., in a statement announcing the charges, which cited unlawful use of confidential government information for personal gain, theft of nonpublic government information, commodities fraud, wire fraud, and making an unlawful monetary transaction.
According to the Justice Department, Van Dyke used classified information he acquired as part of planning for the mission to place his successful bets. He did so despite signing non-disclosure agreements that forbade him from divulging sensitive information related to military operations.
Polymarket is a platform where users take positions in so-called events contracts that offer shifting odds on a wide variety of real life scenarios ranging from elections to sports games to the weather, and where users take āyesā or ānoā positions on the contract. In the case of Van Dykeās wagers, he took the Yes position on wagers like āU.S. Forces in Venezuela . . . by January 31, 2026ā, āMaduro out by . . . January 31, 2026ā, āWill the U.S. invade Venezuela by . . . January 31,ā and āTrump invokes War Powers against Venezuela by . . . January 31.ā
In the days following Maduroās capture, a series of reports appeared in the press highlighting the unusual wagers. In response, Van Dyke sought to cover his tracks by deleting his account from Polymarket and changing the email account tied to a cryptocurrency exchange where he had initially parked his winnings.
As prediction markets have exploded in popularity, reports of insider trading are becoming more common. In February, for instance, Polymarketās chief rival Kalshi announced it had banned a Mr. Beast employee who had made bets based on insider information tied to his jobs, and this week the company announced it had done the same for several political candidate who had wagered on their races.
This story was originally featured on Fortune.com
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