In an unsurprising twist worthy of a used spaceship salesman, the Massachusetts Attorney General’s Office has decided that KalshiEX LLC, the prediction market platform of dreams and slightly confusing contracts, is actually moonlighting as a sports bookie without a license. Naturally, this has kicked off a lawsuit.
Bay State Claims Kalshi Is Secretly a Sportsbook-But the Law’s Just Sitting There Scratching Its Head
Attorney General Andrea Joy Campbell marched into Suffolk Superior Court’s Business Litigation Session last Friday, waving the case like it was the last towel in the galaxy. Her argument? Kalshi’s charming “event contracts” are, in fact, just sports wagers wearing a clever hat-hence requiring a Massachusetts Gaming Commission license, presumably to cover their hydrocaffeinated coffee addiction.
The legal filing is a masterclass in bureaucratic labeling, confidently asserting that yes/no contracts paying either $1 or $0 are the same as moneylines, spreads, and totals-because when you’re throwing around legal jargon, why not? The state tosses in some public-health doomsaying about problem gambling and financial ruin too, without bothering to explain how Kalshi’s exchange mechanics are anything but an annoying mirror image of licensed sportsbooks doing the exact same routine.
Kalshi drew its first sports market breath on January 23, 2025. Massachusetts promptly rebranded the whole product suite (winners, March Madness lines, parlays) as indistinguishable from your garden-variety sportsbook fare, then slapped the fancy term “exchange wagering” on what’s basically trade-in/trade-out shenanigans. Yet, whether this is a neat legal slam dunk or a painfully awkward airball remains entirely up to the clerk with the gavel.
To beef up its market-share beefcake, the complaint cites a media article claiming sports accounted for over three-quarters of Kalshi’s volume and compares this to DraftKings and FanDuel-which is basically the legal equivalent of saying, “Hey, your kid has a lot of candy too, so send him home.” The AG also grumbles about homepage risk disclosures being sneakily elusive because the page updates as you scroll, which, frankly, sounds like a website doing its best impression of a caffeinated squirrel.
Massachusetts now demands an injunction, civil penalties, and the full cosmic buffet of whatever else the court deems proper. Meanwhile, a Kalshi spokesperson told Coindesk’s Nikhilesh De, “Kalshi offers its users a fair, transparent, federally-regulated and nationwide marketplace. Instead of having a civil chat like civilized entities, Massachusetts is trying to block Kalshi’s shiny new toys with dusty old laws and ideas.”
The Kalshi spokesperson further pontificated:
Prediction markets are a critical innovation of the 21st century, and all Americans should be able to access them. We are proud to be the company that has pioneered this technology and stand ready to defend it once again in a court of law. 🛡️⚔️
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2025-09-14 00:58