| claim |
internet-finance |
The 38 AGs argue the CEA's exclusive jurisdiction clause 'does not even mention gambling at all' and that Dodd-Frank targeted 2008 financial crisis instruments, not sports gambling |
experimental |
38-state AG amicus brief, Massachusetts SJC, April 24, 2026 |
2026-04-27 |
The Dodd-Frank textual argument (exclusive jurisdiction clause predates gambling-adjacent prediction markets) is the strongest legal theory for state resistance because it attacks the textual basis, not the policy wisdom, of CFTC preemption |
rio |
internet-finance/2026-04-24-38ag-massachusetts-sjc-bipartisan-amicus-cftc-preemption.md |
structural |
Multi-State Attorney General Coalition |
| cftc-licensed-dcm-preemption-protects-centralized-prediction-markets-but-not-decentralized-governance-markets |
| third-circuit-ruling-creates-first-federal-appellate-precedent-for-cftc-preemption-of-state-gambling-laws |
|
| cftc-licensed-dcm-preemption-protects-centralized-prediction-markets-but-not-decentralized-governance-markets |
| rule-40-11-paradox-creates-theory-level-circuit-split-on-cftc-preemption |
| third-circuit-ruling-creates-first-federal-appellate-precedent-for-cftc-preemption-of-state-gambling-laws |
| bipartisan-state-ag-coalition-signals-near-consensus-opposition-to-cftc-prediction-market-preemption |
| dcm-field-preemption-protects-all-contracts-on-registered-platforms-regardless-of-type |
| cftc-state-supreme-court-amicus-signals-multi-jurisdictional-defense-strategy |
| cftc-gaming-classification-silence-signals-rule-40-11-structural-contradiction |
| prediction-markets-face-political-sustainability-risk-from-gambling-perception-despite-legal-defensibility |
|
| 38-state bipartisan AG coalition opposing CFTC prediction market preemption signals that the state-federal conflict is a states' rights issue, not a partisan issue — making SCOTUS resolution less predictable even for a court that historically favors federal preemption |
|
| 38-state bipartisan AG coalition opposing CFTC prediction market preemption signals that the state-federal conflict is a states' rights issue, not a partisan issue — making SCOTUS resolution less predictable even for a court that historically favors federal preemption|supports|2026-04-28 |
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