Kentucky AG Escalates Prediction Market Fight With Lawsuits Against Kalshi, Polymarket, and VGW
Kentucky Attorney General Russell Coleman filed three separate lawsuits in Franklin Circuit Court on June 17, targeting prediction market platforms Kalshi and Polymarket along with online sweepstakes casino operator VGW over alleged illegal gambling activity in the state. The filings mark a significant escalation in the ongoing legal battle over whether prediction markets constitute regulated financial instruments or illegal sports betting.
The timing of the lawsuits carries particular significance. Just weeks earlier, a group of operators including Kalshi, Crypto.com, and Polymarket had filed their own lawsuit against Kentucky, challenging a state tax that applied specifically to prediction market activity. Now the state has answered in kind, with Coleman’s office arguing that Kentucky has both the jurisdiction and the obligation to regulate these platforms under existing gambling law.
The Central Legal Argument
Coleman’s office filed each lawsuit independently but built them around a single core claim: that residents of Kentucky are placing money on the outcomes of sporting events through these platforms, and that activity constitutes sports betting regardless of how operators classify it. “There’s not a dollar’s worth of difference between prediction markets’ sports contracts and sports betting,” Coleman said when he joined a multistate coalition of attorneys general in May pressing the CFTC to recognize state gambling jurisdiction over prediction market products.
Kalshi and Polymarket have consistently maintained that their products are event contracts regulated by the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission rather than gambling products subject to state licensing requirements. The CFTC has designated both platforms as Designated Contract Markets, a designation the operators argue provides a federal regulatory framework that pre-empts state action. Coleman’s lawsuits directly challenge that argument by asserting state authority in Kentucky court.
What This Means for Bettors and the Industry
For sports bettors and prediction market users in Kentucky, the immediate practical impact of the lawsuits is uncertain. The platforms had already faced access restrictions in the state prior to the filings, and any direct effect on platform availability will depend on how the cases proceed through the courts. Legal proceedings of this kind typically take months or years to resolve.
At a broader level, the Kentucky lawsuits add to a growing body of state-level legal challenges to prediction market platforms. Kentucky is one of roughly a dozen states that have taken some form of formal legal or regulatory action against Kalshi, Polymarket, or both since the start of 2026. The outcome of the Kentucky cases could contribute to a patchwork of state-by-state legal standards that prediction market operators will need to navigate as they continue expanding their user bases. For context on which states currently regulate legal sports betting, the state-by-state sports betting guide at Hello Rookie provides a current overview of the legal landscape across the country.
For Kentucky bettors interested in legal options in the state, reviewing Kentucky sportsbooks remains the most straightforward path to regulated wagering on sports. Prediction market platforms that have received CFTC designation may also be accessible depending on how the litigation develops, though the legal situation remains fluid.
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Matt Brown
Head of Sports Betting and DFS
Matt’s love for sports betting and daily fantasy sports, coupled with a deep understanding of football, hockey, and baseball, shapes his innovative thoughts on Hello Rookie. He has a B.S. in Aeronautical Computer Science and a M.S. in Project Management.



