Stock Markets April 28, 2026 06:21 AM

U.S. Army Sergeant Charged Over Bets on Maduro Removal Appears in Manhattan Court

Soldier accused of turning $33,000 in prediction-market wagers into $400,000 using alleged insider information; case marks first DOJ insider-trading action tied to a prediction market

By Ajmal Hussain
U.S. Army Sergeant Charged Over Bets on Maduro Removal Appears in Manhattan Court

A U.S. Army master sergeant accused of using confidential information from a military operation to place bets on the ouster of Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro is scheduled to enter a plea in Manhattan. Prosecutors say the soldier converted roughly $33,000 in wagers on Polymarket between December 27, 2025, and January 2, 2026, into about $400,000 after the January 3, 2026, raid that captured Maduro and his wife. The Department of Justice has brought criminal charges and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission has filed civil charges.

Key Points

  • Gannon Van Dyke, a 38-year-old U.S. Army master sergeant, is due in Manhattan federal court to enter a plea on fraud-related charges.
  • Prosecutors allege Van Dyke used confidential information to place about $33,000 in Polymarket wagers between December 27, 2025, and January 2, 2026, later winning roughly $400,000 after a January 3, 2026, raid captured Nicolas Maduro and his wife.
  • The Justice Department has brought criminal counts - alongside civil charges from the Commodity Futures Trading Commission - marking the first insider-trading prosecution tied to a prediction market; Polymarket flagged the trades and cooperated with investigators.

A U.S. Army master sergeant who prosecutors say used privileged information from a military operation to profit from prediction-market wagers is due to appear in federal court in Manhattan to be asked how he pleads to fraud-related charges.

The defendant, identified in charging documents as 38-year-old Gannon Van Dyke, is scheduled to appear before U.S. District Judge Margaret Garnett at 1 p.m. EDT (1700 GMT). Federal prosecutors allege Van Dyke placed roughly $33,000 in bets on Polymarket between December 27, 2025, and January 2, 2026, predicting that Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro would soon be out of office and that U.S. forces would enter Venezuela.

According to the indictment, markets at the time assigned low probabilities to those events, producing a substantial payout when they came to pass following a January 3, 2026, operation that captured Maduro and his wife, Cilia Flores. Prosecutors say Van Dyke ultimately won about $400,000 from the wagers.

The criminal complaint brings five counts against Van Dyke: unlawful use of confidential government information for personal gain, theft of non-public government information, commodities fraud, wire fraud, and making an unlawful monetary transaction. The Justice Department's filing is notable as the first time it has pursued insider trading charges tied to activity on a prediction market. The Commodity Futures Trading Commission has also initiated civil proceedings against him.

Prosecutors describe Van Dyke as a master sergeant with U.S. Army Special Forces stationed at Fort Bragg in North Carolina and say he was involved in the planning and execution of the January 3, 2026, raid. At an initial hearing in Raleigh, North Carolina, U.S. Magistrate Judge Brian Meyers ordered Van Dyke released on a $250,000 bond. Garnett is expected to oversee the case in Manhattan going forward.

Polymarket notified authorities after flagging the trading activity and cooperated with investigators, according to the court filings. The filings also note that rival prediction market Kalshi previously blocked Van Dyke from opening an account due to its identification requirements.

It was unclear whether Van Dyke was represented by a defense lawyer at the time the charges were made public. The upcoming Manhattan appearance will address how he pleads to the federal indictment and set the next procedural steps in a case that intersects military operations, new forms of online trading, and federal enforcement of fraud and commodities laws.


Legal and market context

The prosecution combines criminal statutes typically used in insider trading and fraud cases with allegations tied specifically to prediction-market activity. Authorities have pursued both criminal and civil avenues, reflecting overlapping enforcement interests in trading platforms that accept wagers on real-world events.

Risks

  • Legal outcome is uncertain - the defendant faces multiple federal criminal counts and separate civil action by a regulator, creating an uncertain timeline for resolution that could affect involved parties and platforms.
  • Regulatory and compliance scrutiny for prediction markets - criminal and civil enforcement actions may prompt closer oversight and compliance burdens for online markets that accept wagers on real-world events.
  • Operational and reputational risk for military-related personnel and platforms - allegations involving a serving member of the military could influence vetting, ID checks, and cooperation protocols at firms handling event-driven trading.

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