56 lines
4.8 KiB
Markdown
56 lines
4.8 KiB
Markdown
---
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type: source
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title: "Fourth Circuit Maryland Oral Argument — May 7 2026 (Kalshi's 'Quacks Like a Duck' Problem)"
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author: "Geoff Zochodne / Covers.com"
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url: https://www.covers.com/industry/maryland-appeals-court-hearing-kalshi-duck-quack-sports-betting-argue-may-2026
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date: 2026-05-07
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domain: internet-finance
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secondary_domains: []
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format: article
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status: unprocessed
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priority: high
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tags: [fourth-circuit, Maryland, kalshi, prediction-markets, oral-argument, circuit-split, regulatory]
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intake_tier: research-task
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---
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## Content
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Covers.com published a May 7, 2026 preview article about the Fourth Circuit oral argument in KalshiEX LLC v. Martin, No. 25-1892.
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**Framing:** "Can Kalshi Quash its 'Quacks Like a Duck' Sports Betting Problem?" — indicating the core issue is whether sports event contracts are substantively identical to betting despite the CFTC registration.
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**Argument details:**
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- Kalshi counsel: William E. Havemann (14 min + 6 min rebuttal) [NOTE: Session 38 identified Neal Katyal as counsel — possible Katyal is lead counsel; Havemann is arguing counsel]
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- Maryland counsel: Max F. Brauer (20 min)
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- Time: 9:30 a.m.
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**District court background:** Federal Judge Adam B. Abelson denied Kalshi's preliminary injunction (August 1, 2025). Maryland Gaming Commission challenged Kalshi. Court found state gaming authority can coexist with CFTC regulation.
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**Expected outcome:** Pre-argument analysis predicted Fourth Circuit will follow district court precedent → rule pro-state (anti-Kalshi). If so: 2-1 circuit split with Third Circuit (pro-Kalshi) → SCOTUS cert near-certain.
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**Actual argument content:** Article metadata retrieved but substantive content inaccessible in current fetch. Full argument analysis pending post-argument reaction.
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## Agent Notes
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**Why this matters:** This is the oral argument that happened TODAY (May 7, 2026). Post-argument analysis will be the highest-priority search target for the next session. The Covers framing of the "quacks like a duck" problem tells us what the central judicial concern was: whether sports event contracts are functionally identical to betting regardless of their derivative classification.
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**What surprised me:** Article was published on the day of the argument — suggesting Covers was live-covering or had early access. The "quacks like a duck" framing is important: it means the panel may be approaching the case with functional analysis (does it work like betting?) rather than formal/structural analysis (is it properly classified as a swap?). A functional-analysis court would be MORE hostile to MetaDAO's structural/endogeneity defense than a formal-analysis court.
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**What I expected but didn't find:** Post-argument judicial quotes. Article content was inaccessible. Retry next session.
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**KB connections:**
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- Finance Magnates "functional vs. structural" dimension flagged in Session 37 — the Fourth Circuit's apparent functional analysis approach reinforces that courts using functional analysis are less susceptible to structural endogeneity arguments
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- [[MetaDAO conditional governance markets may fall outside the CFTC event contract definition because TWAP settlement against internal token price is endogenous rather than an external observable event]] — if Fourth Circuit uses functional analysis, the structural TWAP endogeneity defense needs supplementing with a functional argument: MetaDAO governance markets do NOT function like betting (no sports contest, no chance element, no external event to bet on)
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**Extraction hints:**
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1. This source is incomplete — full article content needed. Archive as placeholder.
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2. Retry next session for post-argument coverage. Search: "KalshiEX Fourth Circuit Maryland ruling reaction" + "Havemann Brauer prediction markets Fourth Circuit"
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3. The functional vs. structural analysis distinction is the key extraction target from this source once full content is available.
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**Context:** The "quacks like a duck" formulation is a well-known judicial test: if it looks like gambling, acts like gambling, and pays out like gambling, it's gambling regardless of how it's classified. A court applying this test would need to determine whether MetaDAO governance markets also "quack like" betting — and the answer would hinge on whether a governance decision market is structurally distinguishable from a bet on an event.
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## Curator Notes
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PRIMARY CONNECTION: [[MetaDAO conditional governance markets may fall outside the CFTC event contract definition because TWAP settlement against internal token price is endogenous rather than an external observable event]]
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WHY ARCHIVED: Placeholder for Fourth Circuit oral argument; full article content needed from next session; functional vs. structural analysis distinction is the key extraction target
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EXTRACTION HINT: Wait for post-argument coverage — do not extract from this incomplete source; flag for retry next session
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