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We Got This Covered
Jaymie Vaz

GOP rep Luna demands that the soldier who bet on Maduro’s capture be pardoned, unless DOJ goes after ‘all the crooks in Congress’ too

Representative Anna Paulina Luna is demanding a pardon for U.S. Army Master Sergeant Gannon Ken Van Dyke. He is the soldier currently facing federal charges for allegedly exploiting classified information to profit from a $400,000 bet on the capture of Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro. However, what you should be paying attention to is why she is asking for this pardon.

According to Newsweek, the Florida Republican made a post on X with a sharp critique. “Maybe not a popular take but I am calling for this guy to be pardoned. Unless the DOJ plans on going after all the crooks in congress currently insider trading, this is simply skewed justice.” She also added, “I don’t agree with what he did and he should be required to disgorge all the profits however, unless the DOJ plans on doing Congress next, this is not justice.”

Federal Prosecutors accuse Van Dyke of using his position within a special forces operation to fund a Polymarket account between late December 2025 and early January 2026, to place a series of wagers on Venezuela-related outcomes, including the eventual capture and removal of Maduro. The indictment, unsealed on Thursday, charges him with wire fraud, commodities fraud, theft of nonpublic information, and the unlawful use of confidential government data.

I don’t know if that is really smart or just plain dumb

The situation has sparked a broader debate about the ethics of prediction markets and the role of government officials in these spaces. As noted by AP News, Van Dyke had signed nondisclosure agreements regarding the sensitive nature of Operation Absolute Resolve, the mission that led to the capture of the Venezuelan leader. 

Despite these legal obligations, authorities claim he transferred his winnings into a foreign cryptocurrency wallet. He then attempted to hide his trail by deleting his betting account and changing his contact information as investigators began to look into the suspicious trades.

Polymarket has maintained that the case actually highlights the success of its new integrity protocols. The company stated that after identifying a user trading on classified government information, they proactively referred the matter to the Department of Justice. 

“Last month, we published our enhanced market integrity rules to combat insider trading,” the company noted. “When we identified a user trading on classified government information, we referred the matter to the DOJ & cooperated with their investigation. Insider trading has no place on Polymarket.”

The political fallout is already beginning to widen. Florida GOP Representative Jimmy Patronis also posted to X, expressing a sentiment similar to Luna.

“If the DOJ isn’t prepared to go after every member of Congress who’s profiting off insider trading, then this feels like selective enforcement, not justice,” he said.

President Donald Trump also addressed the situation when asked by reporters at the White House. He compared the soldier’s actions to the infamous case of Pete Rose, who was banned from Major League Baseball for betting on his own team. 

When pressed on the wider trend of betting on geopolitical conflicts, the president suggested, “The whole world, unfortunately, has become somewhat of a casino, and you look at what’s going on all over the world and Europe and every place, they’re doing these betting things.”

The Commodity Futures Trading Commission has also entered the fray, filing a parallel complaint against the master sergeant. The complaint details how Van Dyke moved $35,000 from a personal bank account into a cryptocurrency exchange on December 26, 2025, just over a week before the mission reached its climax. Most of the wagers were placed on the night of January 2, only hours before the operation to seize Maduro began.

FBI Director Kash Patel emphasized the gravity of the charges in a statement, noting that “This involved a U.S. soldier who allegedly took advantage of his position to profit off of a righteous military operation.” He asserted that any clearance holder attempting to cash in on their access would be held accountable. 

As the case proceeds in federal court in New York, the debate over whether prediction markets should be allowed to operate on matters of national security shows no signs of cooling down. For now, Van Dyke remains at the center of a firestorm that challenges the boundaries of both military duty and financial regulation.

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