特朗普为一名因Polymarket内幕交易遭指控的士兵进行不当辩护


2026年4月24日 美国东部时间12:18 / 美国有线电视新闻网(CNN)
亚伦·布莱克 分析

我们首次看到针对特朗普政府重大行动前出现的一系列异常精准的预测市场交易行为追究法律责任。

美国司法部起诉了一名美军特种部队士兵,据称他利用机密信息在Polymarket平台上,凭借1月美国突袭推翻委内瑞拉总统尼古拉斯·马杜罗的行动获利40万美元。

起诉书中的指控似乎证实了外界普遍存在的担忧:政府官员有可能从事本质上属于内幕交易的行为。

但经常对盟友的不当行为视而不见、还赦免了多名知名诈骗犯的唐纳德·特朗普总统,似乎并未对整件事太过在意。

周四被问及对军士甘农·坎恩·范戴克的起诉时,特朗普首先询问范戴克是押注马杜罗被推翻还是押注他继续掌权。

得知这名士兵预测马杜罗会被赶下台后,特朗普将其比作棒球运动员皮特·罗斯赌自己的球队获胜。

1989年,调查发现皮特·罗斯在担任辛辛那提红人队经理期间赌球队比赛,因此被美国职业棒球大联盟终身禁赛。罗斯的支持者辩称,赌自己球队获胜的行为减轻了他的赌博违规严重性。

“这就好比皮特·罗斯赌自己的球队赢,”特朗普说道,还补充道:“当然,如果他赌自己的球队输,那就不行了。但他赌的是自己的球队赢。”

“我会调查此事的,”他最后说道。


2026年4月23日华盛顿白宫椭圆形办公室医疗负担可负担性活动中,唐纳德·特朗普总统在听会
马克·希费尔拜因/美联社

随后有人问及特朗普有关一系列异常精准的伊朗战争押注交易。据美国有线电视新闻网记者马歇尔·科恩上月报道,其中一名交易者押注胜率高达93%——这一成功率极不寻常——最终净赚近100万美元。

发现这些交易的数据分析公司Bubblemaps的首席执行官尼克·韦曼称其“强烈暗示存在内幕交易”。

被问及是否对此感到担忧时,特朗普泛泛地表示自己不太看好预测市场。他说自己“对这类事情一点都不满意”。

但他也表示:“事已至此,无法改变。”

这番表态绝非对这类行为发出有力警告。事实上,皮特·罗斯的类比让一些人猜测特朗普可能会赦免这名士兵,毕竟特朗普曾为罗斯游说。

至少已有几位知名特朗普盟友表示,特朗普应该赦免这名士兵。

但皮特·罗斯的类比并不恰当。

诚然,这名士兵确实押注马杜罗会被推翻,但这并非他所有押注的全部内容。而这些交易之所以获利丰厚,是因为这名士兵知晓将实际发动推翻马杜罗行动的机密情报,其他投注者对此并不知情。


2026年2月5日纽约地铁站内的Polymarket广告
迈克尔·纳格尔/彭博社/盖蒂图片社

根据起诉书,这让该士兵获得了约12倍于其投入3.4万美元赌注的回报。

起诉书中指控范戴克“窃取了美国政府有关美军抓捕尼古拉斯·马杜罗及其妻子西莉亚·弗洛雷斯的机密非公开信息……以此非法获利超过40万美元”。

更关键的是,范戴克不仅被指控押注马杜罗会在1月底前下台,还被指押注美军会在当月月底前进驻委内瑞拉,以及特朗普会针对委内瑞拉启动战争权力法案。

因此,这显然不只是押注自己支持的一方获胜那么简单。


2026年1月5日在纽约市曼哈顿下城直升机场,被抓获的委内瑞拉总统尼古拉斯·马杜罗被押送前往丹尼尔·帕特里克·曼哈顿美国联邦法院首次出庭,面临包括毒品恐怖主义、共谋、贩毒、洗钱等美国联邦指控
亚当·格雷/路透社

考虑到特朗普的儿子涉足该行业,以及民主党人担忧这一问题可能波及政府高层,特朗普这种温和的回应也颇为耐人寻味。

小唐纳德·特朗普去年加入了Polymarket的顾问委员会,他的风投基金还向该公司投入了一笔未披露金额的资金。他还为另一家预测市场公司Kalshi提供咨询。(注:美国有线电视新闻网与Kalshi存在合作关系,可获取其数据,但其编辑人员不得参与预测或事件市场的投注。)小唐纳德·特朗普通过发言人表示,他不会在预测市场进行交易,也未曾代表任何一家公司与联邦政府接触。

特朗普总统周四暗示,他并不太看好如今随处可见的投注行为,但他的家族在该行业有着重大参与。而当前这场争议对该行业而言显然是个大问题。

康涅狄格州参议员克里斯·墨菲等民主党议员已经提出,特朗普政府官员可能利用内幕信息为自己牟利。两周前,美国有线电视新闻网的科恩曾报道,白宫曾警告员工不得在预测市场及其他平台进行内幕交易。

目前除这名士兵外,尚无确凿证据证明其他人存在不当行为。但如果最终有更高层人员卷入这一问题,不难想象特朗普会搬出皮特·罗斯的辩护策略来淡化事态。

Trump’s inauspicious defense of a soldier accused of insider trading on Polymarket

2026-04-24 12:18 PM ET / CNN

Analysis by Aaron Blake

For the first time, we’re seeing some legal accountability for the spate of suspiciously well-timed prediction-market trades ahead of major moves by the Trump administration.

The Justice Department has indicted a US special forces soldier who allegedly used classified information to make $400,000 on Polymarket off the January US raid to oust Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro.

Allegations in the indictment seem to confirm prevalent concerns about the potential for government officials to engage in what’s more-or-less insider trading.

But President Donald Trump — who often shrugs off wrongdoing by allies and has pardoned several high-profile fraudsters — doesn’t sound overly bothered by the whole thing.

When Trump was asked Thursday about the indictment of Master Sgt. Gannon Ken Van Dyke, he inquired whether Van Dyke had bet for or against Maduro’s ouster.

When informed the soldier had predicted Maduro would be ousted, Trump compared it to baseball player Pete Rose betting that his team would win.

Rose was banned from Major League Baseball in 1989 after an investigation found he had gambled on games while managing the Cincinnati Reds. Rose’s defenders have argued that betting that his team would win made his gambling offenses less serious.

“That’s like Pete Rose betting on his own team,” Trump said, adding: “Now, if he bet against his team, that would be no good. But he bet on his own team.”

“I’ll look into it,” he concluded.

President Donald Trump listens during an event on health care affordability in the Oval Office at the White House, Thursday, April 23, 2026, in Washington.

Mark Schiefelbein/AP

Trump was then asked about a series of suspiciously timed winning bets on the Iran war. In one case, CNN’s Marshall Cohen reported last month, the trader won 93% of their bets — an extremely unlikely success rate — and netted nearly $1 million.

Nick Vaiman, the CEO of Bubblemaps, the analytics company which discovered the trades, called it “strong signaling of insider activity.”

Asked if he was concerned, Trump spoke generally about how he wasn’t a big fan of prediction markets. He said he was “not happy with any of that stuff.”

But he also offered: “it is what it is.”

It was far from a forceful warning against that kind of activity. Indeed, the Pete Rose comparison led some to wonder if Trump might pardon the soldier, given Trump’s advocacy for Rose.

At least a couple prominent Trump allies have already said Trump should pardon the soldier.

But the Rose comparison is not an apt one.

While it’s true that the soldier allegedly bet that Maduro would be ousted, that’s not all he bet on. And the trades were lucrative because the soldier knew about the classified operation that would actually try to oust Maduro, while other bettors did not.

A Polymarket advertisement is seen in a subway station in New York, on February 5, 2026.

Michael Nagle/Bloomberg/Getty Images

This allowed the soldier to win about 12 times the $34,000 that he bet, according to the indictment.

The comparison would make more sense if the raid to oust Maduro were a pre-planned event that everyone knew was happening, and others could wager whether it would succeed or fail. But it was not; it was classified.

The indictment alleges Van Dyke “misappropriated classified, nonpublic U.S. Government information about a U.S. military operation to capture Nicolás Maduro and his wife, Cilia Flores … to make more than $400,000 in illegal profits.”

What’s more, Van Dyke isn’t only accused of wagering that Maduro would be out of power by the end of January. He also allegedly wagered that US forces would be in Venezuela by the end of that month — and that Trump would invoke war powers against Venezuela.

So this clearly wasn’t just about betting on your side to succeed.

Captured Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro is escorted, as he heads towards the Daniel Patrick Manhattan United States Courthouse for an initial appearance to face US federal charges including narco-terrorism, conspiracy, drug trafficking, money laundering and others at Downtown Manhattan Heliport, in New York City, on January 5, 2026.

Adam Gray/Reuters

Trump’s somewhat muted response is also interesting given his son’s involvement in the industry and Democratic allegations that this problem might extend to higher levels in the administration.

Donald Trump Jr. joined Polymarket’s advisory board last year, and his venture capital fund has invested an undisclosed amount in the company. He also advises another prediction market company, Kalshi. (Note: CNN has a partnership with Kalshi, which provides it with data. Its editorial employees are not permitted to bet on prediction or event markets.) Trump Jr. has said via a spokesperson that he does not trade on prediction markets and has not interacted with the federal government on behalf of either company.

President Trump signaled Thursday that he didn’t have much regard for the newfound prevalence of betting, but his family has significant involvement in it. And the current controversy would seem to be a significant problem for the industry.

Democratic lawmakers like Sen. Chris Murphy of Connecticut have raised the prospect of Trump administration officials enriching themselves using inside information. Two weeks ago, CNN’s Cohen reported that the White House warned staff not to engage in insider trading on prediction markets and other platforms.

There is no hard evidence of wrongdoing by anyone besides the soldier. But if someone higher up were ultimately wrapped up in this problem, it’s not difficult to see Trump deploying the Pete Rose defense to downplay the situation.

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