Kalshi CEO Fires Again in opposition to Arizona Felony Costs as ‘Complete Overstep‘



The prediction markets co-founder mentioned that the corporate would “abide by courtroom choices“ however signaled that the costs had been based mostly partly on political bias and media consideration.

Tarek Mansour, co-founder and CEO of prediction markets platform Kalshi, has pushed back against criminal charges filed by Arizona authorities this week, claiming that they were a “total overstep” and “not about gambling.”

On Tuesday, Arizona Attorney General Kris Mayes announced charges against the companies behind Kalshi, alleging that the company operated an “illegal gambling business in Arizona without a license” and offered illegal election wagering. Mansour said in a Wednesday Bloomberg interview that Mayes was attempting to “subvert the judicial process” by filing charges without a court decision in Kalshi’s own lawsuit against Arizona authorities last week. 

“We see this as a total overstep and we look forward to fighting it in court,” said Mansour.