The Commodity Futures Trading Commission filed lawsuits against Arizona, Connecticut, and Illinois on April 2, 2026, escalating a jurisdictional battle over which level of government has the authority to regulate prediction markets and event contracts.
The cases, filed jointly by the United States and the CFTC, are captioned as United States, et al. v. Arizona, et al.; United States, et al. v. Connecticut, et al.; and United States, et al. v. Illinois, et al. The U.S. Department of Justice is partnering with the CFTC on all three suits.
Why the CFTC Is Suing Three States at Once
The CFTC said the lawsuits challenge state actions taken against CFTC-registered designated contract markets. Chairman Michael S. Selig framed the suits as a defense of the agency’s exclusive regulatory authority over prediction markets under the Commodity Exchange Act.
The agency is grounding its legal theory in the Commodity Exchange Act’s exclusive-jurisdiction provision, specifically 7 U.S.C. 2(a)(1)(A). That statute, the CFTC argues, preempts state-level enforcement actions against federally registered platforms offering event contracts.
Each state took a different enforcement path. Arizona sent prediction market operator Kalshi a cease-and-desist letter on May 21, 2025, then filed criminal charges against Kalshi on March 17, 2026. Arizona Attorney General Kris Mayes said the criminal filing alleged 20 counts against Kalshi entities, including election wagering and illegal gambling allegations tied to sports and political contracts.
Connecticut’s Department of Consumer Protection issued cease-and-desist letters on December 2, 2025 to KalshiEx, Crypto.com, and Robinhood Derivatives, alleging unlicensed online gambling. The Illinois lawsuit was filed in the Northern District of Illinois as Case No. 26-cv-3659, naming Governor JB Pritzker, Attorney General Kwame Raoul, and Illinois Gaming Board officials as defendants.
AP reported that Arizona’s March 2026 action was the first state criminal prosecution against a prediction market operator, a significant escalation that preceded the CFTC’s decision to sue all three states simultaneously. As stablecoin legislation draws its own regulatory review, the prediction markets dispute adds another front to the widening clash between federal and state financial authorities.
What the Jurisdiction Fight Could Mean for Prediction Markets
At the center of this dispute is a straightforward question: do prediction markets fall under federal commodity regulation or state gambling law? The CFTC says its registered designated contract markets have federal authorization to list event contracts. The states say those same products look like unlicensed gambling operations under their own consumer protection and gaming statutes.
The Illinois complaint illustrates the scale of the market. According to that filing, at least eight CFTC-regulated designated contract markets had self-certified more than 3,000 event contracts as of the filing date.
For platforms like Kalshi, Crypto.com, and Robinhood Derivatives, the outcome will determine whether they can operate nationwide under a single federal license or must navigate a patchwork of state gambling regulations. A ruling in the CFTC’s favor would solidify federal preemption; a loss could expose every prediction market operator to state-by-state enforcement.
Before filing these suits, the CFTC had already taken steps to assert its authority. The agency filed a Ninth Circuit amicus brief on February 17, 2026 defending federal preemption over prediction markets and opened a rulemaking process on event contracts on March 12, 2026.
Why This Case Matters Now
The timing of the lawsuits reflects a rapid escalation. What began as a cease-and-desist letter from Arizona in May 2025 progressed to criminal charges in March 2026, with Connecticut and Illinois pursuing their own enforcement actions in between. The CFTC’s decision to sue all three states on the same day signals a coordinated federal response.
Legal analysts at ZwillGen noted that absent congressional action, the jurisdictional boundary between prediction markets and state gambling law will likely need Supreme Court resolution. That assessment underscores the stakes: this dispute may not be settled by district courts alone, especially as institutional interest in digital asset markets continues to grow.
The CFTC’s simultaneous three-state filing, backed by the DOJ, is structured to create federal court precedent across multiple jurisdictions at once. If the courts side with the CFTC, prediction market operators would gain regulatory clarity under a single federal framework. If the states prevail, operators face a fragmented landscape where each state can classify event contracts as gambling and pursue criminal enforcement.
With the CFTC’s rulemaking on event contracts still underway and state attorneys general showing no signs of backing down, this jurisdictional conflict is positioned as one of the most consequential regulatory battles in the prediction markets space to date.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.





