April 11, 2026 ChainGPT

Congress Demands CFTC Probe of Polymarket After 50 Suspicious New Wallet Bets on Iran Ceasefire

Congress Demands CFTC Probe of Polymarket After 50 Suspicious New Wallet Bets on Iran Ceasefire
Headline: Congress demands probe into Polymarket after 50 new accounts bet on Iran ceasefire minutes before Trump’s announcement Congress has called for an investigation into Polymarket after at least 50 newly created accounts placed sizable bets on a US‑Iran ceasefire in the minutes and hours ahead of President Trump’s April 9 social‑media announcement. The accounts — many with no prior trading history and no subsequent activity — have raised fresh allegations of possible insider information being exploited on the crypto prediction market. What happened - NPR and analytics firm Bubblemaps report that roughly 50 brand‑new wallets made timely wagers on a US‑Iran ceasefire just before the public announcement. Most of those wallets had no previous bets and no follow‑on trades, a pattern that heightened suspicion. - This activity occurred in the minutes (not just hours) before the announcement, tightening the window of suspicious trades compared with earlier incidents. Political and regulatory fallout - Rep. Ritchie Torres has written to the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) demanding a formal investigation. - Sen. Richard Blumenthal denounced Polymarket as “an illicit market to sell and exploit national security secrets unlike any in history,” calling for scrutiny of how prediction markets handle sensitive information. - Polymarket has not publicly responded to these congressional demands. Context and precedent - This episode echoes a previous controversy in which six Polymarket accounts were accused of using insider information to profit from the timing of earlier US strikes on Iran — reportedly earning about $1 million. That case helped spur legislative proposals such as Senator Adam Schiff’s so‑called DEATH BETS Act. - In that earlier instance, Bubblemaps similarly flagged newly created wallets that placed bets hours before strikes began. Regulatory environment - The CFTC issued an advance notice of proposed rulemaking on prediction markets in March 2026; the public comment window closes April 30. - Since January, more than ten anti‑prediction‑market bills have been introduced in Congress. Separately, six Democratic senators urged the CFTC to ban contracts that resolve on or correlate to an individual’s death. - Polymarket operates primarily outside U.S. jurisdiction and requires only a crypto wallet to trade, complicating enforcement and oversight. Why it matters The recent cluster of last‑minute bets underscores persistent concerns about anonymity, market integrity, and national security risks on crypto prediction platforms. With multiple congressional bills, CFTC rulemaking under way, and renewed allegations of insider activity, prediction markets face increased scrutiny that could reshape how they operate or be regulated going forward. Read more AI-generated news on: undefined/news