Google employee charged in $1.2 million Polymarket insider trading scheme
Michele Spagnuolo, a Google employee, faces federal charges for allegedly exploiting confidential search trend data to secure $1.2 million in illicit gains on the prediction platform Polymarket. Prosecutors claim Spagnuolo used internal insights to place winning wagers on 2025 search outcomes, effectively front-running the public market.

Operating under the pseudonym AlphaRacoon, Spagnuolo drew scrutiny last December when his betting record showed statistical anomalies. The federal complaint highlights a specific wager on a musician named D4vd, whom Spagnuolo correctly identified as a top search trend despite market odds suggesting a near-zero probability of such an outcome. He allegedly manipulated these bets by accessing proprietary Google data regarding traffic spikes, a metric the company uses to calculate its annual search rankings.
Following his arrest in New York, Spagnuolo was released on a $2.25 million bond, facing counts of commodities fraud, wire fraud, and money laundering. Prosecutors allege he took extensive measures to obscure the origin of his winnings once the bets cleared. Google spokesperson Jaclyn Vazquez confirmed the employee has been placed on leave, noting that while the marketing tools used were accessible to staff, leveraging that information for personal financial gain constitutes a severe policy violation.
Polymarket has publicly credited its own integrity infrastructure with flagging the activity, stating they are cooperating with law enforcement. This case arrives amid intensifying regulatory debate over prediction markets. While several states have moved to restrict platforms like Polymarket and Kalshi, the Commodity Futures Trading Commission maintains it holds exclusive authority over these markets, despite growing concerns regarding the prevalence of insider information in decentralized betting environments.
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