Arizona has criminally charged prediction market platform Kalshi for operating an unlicensed gambling business in the state, filing 20 counts in Maricopa County that cover everything from sports wagers to election betting. The move directly challenges the federal approval that the company has relied on to expand nationwide.
How Arizona Spent Months Placing $1 Bets to Build a Criminal Case Against Kalshi
When Arizona Attorney General Kristin Mayes filed a 20-count criminal information against Kalshi, she wasn’t relying on whistleblowers or wire transfers. Her office simply opened the Kalshi app and started betting – $1 on a college basketball game here, $2 on a Super Bowl bet there, $5 on an NBA spread and more.
Over three months, from December 2025 through March 2026, Arizona prosecutors quietly built a case.
The news comes as Argentina has just banned Polymarket, classifying it as an illegal gambling platform. The decision follows fresh scrutiny of the prediction market after six suspected insiders netted $1.2 million betting on the U.S.–Iran strike, with newly created wallets placing large positions just hours before military action began.
The Federal vs. State War
Meanwhile, Kalshi’s entire business model rests on a hard-won federal victory. In 2024, the company forced the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) to recognize its event contracts as legitimate financial instruments, not illegal gambling.
The ruling gave prediction markets a regulatory home under federal law and opened the door to markets on everything from elections to sports outcomes.
Arizona’s filing suggests that the federal ruling has limits.
The state is charging both KalshiEx LLC and Kalshi Trading LLC under its betting and wagering statutes. Arizona argues that the CFTC approval does not override state criminal gambling law.
Prosecutors documented wagers on the Washington Commanders beating the New York Giants, a Super Bowl prop on whether a specific wide receiver would score the first touchdown, NBA spread bets, and multi-leg parlay bets on Devin Booker’s point totals.
Four of the 20 counts carry a separate and graver charge: election wagering, a Class 2 misdemeanor under Arizona law.
Bets on JD Vance winning the 2028 presidency, on a Republican capturing the Arizona governorship, and on specific candidates in state primary races are treated not as financial contracts but as direct threats to electoral integrity.
Kalshi has not publicly responded to the lawsuit at press time.
What to Expect Next for Prediction Markets
The charges are misdemeanors, and the individual bets are trivially small. It appears Arizona isn’t pursuing financial damages but it’s pursuing a legal ruling.
The case forces court to decide whether federal approval is enough, or whether fifty state gambling codes can still apply.
The filing also notes that Kalshi wasn’t even registered as a foreign LLC in Arizona. This is a compliance failure that suggests the company’s rapid expansion outpaced its state-level legal groundwork.
If Arizona prevails, every state AG has a template for criminal prosecution. If Kalshi wins, it establishes federal preemption that locks states out entirely. Either way, the American prediction market industry including Polymarket, will be shaped by what happens next in Arizona.
Source: https://coingape.com/arizona-files-criminal-charges-against-kalshi/



