Arizona Legal professional Normal Kris Mayes filed legal costs in opposition to Kalshi Tuesday, charging the prediction markets platform with working an unlicensed playing enterprise and providing election wagering within the state, actions she mentioned violated the state’s legal guidelines.
Mayes charged KalshiEx LLC and Kalshi Buying and selling LLC with 20 counts, alleging the platform accepted bets from Arizona on a variety of occasions in violation of Arizona regulation, together with sports activities and elections, like contracts betting on the outcomes of the 2028 presidential race and 2026 state gubernatorial race.
“Arizona regulation prohibits working an unlicensed wagering enterprise, and individually bans betting on elections outright,” the lawyer normal mentioned in an announcement.
The costs come simply days after the Commodity Futures Buying and selling Fee (CFTC) signaled a extra supportive federal stance towards prediction markets, issuing new steering and launching a rulemaking course of underneath Chairman Mike Selig.
That effort asserted the CFTC’s “unique jurisdiction” over occasion contracts and frames platforms like Kalshi as regulated derivatives venues somewhat than playing operators, establishing a direct conflict with states akin to Arizona that proceed to deal with sports activities and election-related contracts.
“Sadly, a state can file legal costs on paper skinny arguments,” a Kalshi spokesperson mentioned in an announcement. “States like Arizona wish to individually regulate a nationwide monetary alternate, and are attempting each trick within the guide to do it. As different courts have acknowledged and the CFTC affirms, Kalshi is topic to federal jurisdiction. It is completely different from what sportsbooks and casinos provide their prospects, and it shouldn’t be overseen by a patchwork of inconsistent state legal guidelines.”
Totally different courts have dominated in several methods on whether or not prediction market suppliers are topic to state legal guidelines. A federal decide in Nevada dominated final yr that the corporate’s sports-related contracts are topic to state gaming regulators. A Massachusetts state court docket equally discovered that sports-related conduct is likely to be topic to state rules in that state. A federal decide in Tennessee dominated the opposite method earlier this yr, at the least quickly blocking state regulators from imposing a cease-and-desist in opposition to Kalshi.
Notably, most of those contracts and circumstances had been associated to sports activities playing, and never election-related bets, as Arizona’s case is.
In her assertion, Mayes mentioned, “Kalshi could model itself as a ‘prediction market,’ however what it’s really doing is operating an unlawful playing operation and taking bets on Arizona elections.”
She added that state regulation prohibits each unlicensed wagering companies and betting on elections outright.
The costs escalate a widening authorized combat between Kalshi and state regulators. The corporate sued Arizona on March 12 in a preemptive transfer, a part of a broader technique that has lately included litigation in opposition to Iowa and Utah, Mayes’ submitting added. Arizona officers additionally criticized the method, saying Kalshi is trying to bypass state-level playing guidelines by turning to federal courts.
“Kalshi is making a behavior of suing states somewhat than following their legal guidelines,” Mayes mentioned. “Within the final three weeks alone, the corporate has filed lawsuits in opposition to Iowa and Utah, and now Arizona.”
Mayes criticized Kalshi saying that as an alternative of working throughout the authorized frameworks akin to Arizona’s, “Kalshi is operating to federal court docket to attempt to keep away from accountability.”
The submitting additionally cited a latest federal court docket setback for Kalshi in Ohio, the place a decide denied the agency’s request for a preliminary injunction and affirmed the state’s authority to implement its playing legal guidelines.
Kalshi has positioned its occasion contracts as federally regulated derivatives somewhat than playing merchandise, a distinction now being examined throughout a number of jurisdictions.

