
The Connecticut Department of Consumer Protection has ordered Kalshi, Robinhood and Crypto. com to stop offering sports-event contracts to state residents and to allow withdrawal of all funds held on their platforms. The move puts Connecticut among a growing number of states rejecting the argument that such contracts constitute federally regulated derivatives rather than gambling.
The cease-and-desist letters cite multiple violations: the trio lacked a Connecticut sports betting licence, were offering wagers to individuals under the state’s minimum age of 21, and were targeting individuals on the state’s self-exclusion list and college campuses. Regulators flagged these practices as unfair and potentially open to insider trading, given the platforms’ broader access to events with widely known outcomes. The state warned of civil or criminal action if platforms did not comply.
The action in Connecticut comes after a series of legal defeats for Kalshi in several states. In Nevada, a federal judge ruled that Kalshi is subject to state gaming laws, rejecting its claim that only the federal Commodity Futures Trading Commission has jurisdiction over its contracts. That decision freed state regulators to enforce gaming rules against the firm. Previously, regulators in Arizona, Maryland, Illinois, Montana, Ohio and New Jersey had also issued similar orders, some of which led to ongoing litigation.
In Nevada, following the judge’s ruling, Robinhood suspended new sports-event contracts effective December 1, with Crypto. com taking a similar step. Kalshi, however, opted to appeal rather than shut down — underscoring a broader conflict over whether state gambling laws or federal derivatives regulation should govern this space.
Arabian Post – Crypto News Network
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