DOJ and CFTC end probes into Polymarket, clearing path for potential registration
US federal investigators closed parallel criminal and civil probes into prediction market Polymarket, issuing letters earlier this month that ended inquiries by both the Justice Department and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), as Bloomberg News reported.
The platform enables traders to bet on yes-or-no outcomes using stablecoins on Polygon and has faced scrutiny since a January 2022 CFTC settlement required it to exclude US customers.
Investigators later examined whether American users continued to wager through virtual private networks.
Polymarket processed roughly $2.6 billion in volume during November’s US election season, drawing law‑enforcement attention as trading spiked.
Regulatory reset
Agents escalated the matter eight days after the November vote, raiding CEO Shayne Coplan’s SoHo apartment and seizing his phone.
Coplan denounced the search as an overreach tied to the outgoing Biden team’s stance on digital asset companies.
In a July 15 post on X, Coplan said the platform “cooperated and engaged” with authorities and “has been cleared of any wrongdoing,” adding that “justice prevailed.”
The decision to close the probes aligns with a broader policy shift.
Capitol Hill has labeled the current legislative push “Crypto Week,” and Congress plans a House floor vote that could send the first comprehensive crypto bill to President Donald Trump for signature.
According to the report, the White House has also tapped venture capital executive and former CFTC Commissioner Brian Quintenz to return and lead the derivatives regulator, signaling a friendlier approach to oversight for prediction markets.
Path to licensed US marketplace
With the investigations resolved, the report highlighted that Polymarket can now explore formal re-entry into the US.
Options include applying to operate as a designated contract market or acquiring an entity that already holds a CFTC license.
The firm has recently announced a partnership with X and xAI to deliver on-platform event forecasts, moves that could support expansion under a compliant framework.
Polymarket originally agreed to pay $1.4 million and delist three markets to settle the 2022 CFTC action.
Company engineers then installed geofencing tools, although regulators questioned whether US traders were still accessing its site.
The closure letters indicate that investigators found no evidence of breaches of previous obligations, clearing a significant hurdle before any licensing application.
For now, Polymarket’s clearance removes immediate legal risk while lawmakers discuss new rules.
The post DOJ and CFTC end probes into Polymarket, clearing path for potential registration appeared first on CryptoSlate.
Disclaimer: The content of this article solely reflects the author's opinion and does not represent the platform in any capacity. This article is not intended to serve as a reference for making investment decisions.
You may also like
Zeus unveils institutional-grade MPC infrastructure blueprint at Solana Breakpoint 2025, enabling Bitcoin to enter Solana’s on-chain capital markets
The focus will now shift to building MPC tools and providing support for developers, driving the creation of more native UTXO applications on Solana.

When Belief Becomes a Cage: The Sunk Cost Trap in the Crypto Era
As cryptocurrencies transition from idealism to mainstream finance, participants need to be wary of the sunk cost effect and soberly assess whether they are still striving for a worthwhile future.

Ultiland: The new RWA unicorn is rewriting the on-chain narrative of art, IP, and assets
Once attention forms a measurable and allocatable structure on-chain, it establishes the foundation for being converted into an asset.

