# The Assassination Market Is Already Here > Published on ADIN (https://adin.chat/s/the-assassination-market-is-already-here) > Type: Article > Date: 2026-06-01 > Description: On March 1, 2026, a Polymarket account called "Magamyman" collected roughly $553,000. The winning contract predicted the death of Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei. The bet was placed before U.S. and Israeli forces launched strikes on Iran. By the time Khamenei's death was confirmed, the money... On March 1, 2026, a Polymarket account called "Magamyman" collected roughly $553,000. The winning contract predicted the death of Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei. The bet was placed before U.S. and Israeli forces launched strikes on Iran. By the time Khamenei's death was confirmed, the money was already settled on-chain. Blockchain analytics firm Bubblemaps identified six accounts it described as "suspected insiders" who made a combined $1.2 million betting on U.S. strike timing in the hours before the attack. One trader turned $26,000 into over $200,000. Senator Chris Murphy of Connecticut called it "insane this is legal." Senator Ruben Gallego of Arizona was blunter: "insider trading in broad daylight." Insider trading is the tractable charge. The one that doesn't fit neatly into existing law is what the market was doing before anyone placed a single bet. ## The Blueprint In April 1995, a crypto-anarchist and chemist named Jim Bell published the first of a ten-part essay series titled *Assassination Politics*. The immediate inspiration was Timothy C. May's 1994 Cyphernomicon, the cypherpunk movement's sprawling philosophical manifesto, which introduced "assassination markets" into the discourse. May named it. Bell drew up the plumbing. The mechanism Bell described was precise. A prediction market would accept anonymous bets, paid in digital cash through pseudonymous remailers, on the exact date of death of a named individual. The payoff structure was the critical design choice: the market rewarded accurate prediction of the date, not the act of killing. Criminal conspiracy law requires a meeting of minds between parties who agree to commit a crime. Bell's design eliminates that meeting entirely—bettors never communicate, never coordinate, never issue a shared instruction. The incentive, however, needed no coordination to function. A crowd of anonymous bettors placing modest wagers could collectively build a jackpot large enough to attract someone willing to act. Anyone with advance knowledge of an assassination—or anyone planning one—could profit by predicting the date accurately. Bell called this structural plausible deniability. The more clinical description: a financial incentive functionally equivalent to a bounty, with the elements that generate criminal liability removed by design. Bell's target was government corruption. He envisioned the mechanism as a tool to eliminate public officials who "indulge in corruption." The state could arrest a person. It couldn't arrest a market that had no address, no officers, and no membership. He was arrested in 1997 anyway—tax evasion, after spending time surveilling IRS and ATF offices and testing for chemical agents near one. He served federal time again in 2001, and again in the 2010s, for stalking federal agents. Wired called him "the world's most notorious crypto-convict." The essay still circulates freely on cryptoanarchy archives, mailing list mirrors, and academic wikis. Bell spent years in federal prison. The text never did. ## Why the Date Is Everything Bell's insistence on the date of death—not the fact of it—was the load-bearing technical decision. Under a binary "will this person die?" structure, a bettor merely profits from a death that was going to happen regardless. Betting on the precise date is a different claim: to know *when*, in advance, requires either advance intelligence of a planned attack or personal involvement in planning one. Moral hazard is the wrong frame, even though it gets invoked constantly. Economists use the term for situations where someone is insulated from the costs of their risk-taking—the bank that knows its losses will be absorbed, the driver whose insurance covers the fender. Bell's design runs in the opposite direction: it manufactures costs for inaction. The jackpot accumulates. Anyone who knows when the target will die and fails to bet has left money on the table. Anyone capable of determining when the target will die has been handed a financial instrument that rewards acting on that capability. The prediction-market wrapper does not change the underlying incentive. It changes who has standing to complain about it. ## 2026: The Market Finds the Theory The Khamenei contract had precedent. The months before it read as a stress test of the same underlying architecture. In November 2025, a staffer at the Institute for the Study of War edited the organization's conflict map to show Russian control of a key Ukrainian intersection "despite the lack of indications" that any such advance had occurred. A Polymarket contract on whether the town would fall resolved in favor of the edit. Someone made an estimated 33,000 percent return. In January 2026, a trader placed $20,000 on Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro being removed from power before January 31. Approximately two hours later, the Trump administration ordered a military operation that resulted in Maduro's capture. The trader walked away with over $400,000. In early 2026, Polymarket listed a contract asking whether the NASA Artemis II mission would "explode." Senators noted it "directly correlated with crewmember death." The contract traded as high as 8% before being renamed and pulled. Polymarket framed it as a hardware failure scenario. The market did not price it that way. By March 2026, explicit contracts on Khamenei's death, on Trump leaving office, and on U.S. strike timing were live on both Polymarket and Kalshi. The Khamenei contract alone drew more than $58 million in volume on Polymarket. Kalshi's equivalent drew nearly $55 million. Individually, none of these contracts proves assassination market coordination in Bell's sense. As a sequence, they document platforms drifting—through user demand, contract iteration, and the ordinary logic of what generates volume—toward the shape Bell described in 1995. No executive approved a roadmap toward assassination markets. Liquidity did the planning. ## The Harder Problem Senators and regulators have focused on insider trading: someone with classified knowledge of a planned military operation placing bets before the fact. Insider trading law exists for this. Congressional referral, CFTC investigation, potentially a criminal case. The regulatory toolkit is there. What the toolkit was not designed for is the problem that precedes any insider. When a liquid market prices a named person's death at 40% against a $58 million prize pool, it did not merely reflect an existing probability. It raised the stakes for everyone in a position to affect the outcome. The corrupt official, the intelligence operative, the actor inside a hostile state—anyone capable of influencing when a named target dies now has a financial instrument calibrated to reward that influence. They don't need to know about the market in advance for it to change their calculation. The money is there before they look for it. The insiders Bubblemaps identified made $1.2 million because they knew what was already coming. The unanswerable question—and the one Bell's original analysis pointed at—is whether the prize pool changed anything: moved a timeline, tipped a decision, accelerated a plan that was otherwise uncertain. No investigation can establish that. The causal gap between a prize pool and a decision made in a secure facility or a militia council is not something forensic accounting can bridge. Bell treated that gap as a feature, not a limitation. ## Patches Kalshi developed what it calls "death carveouts." Under this approach, if a named individual dies, the contract resolves at the last-traded price before death—preventing bettors from profiting directly from the killing. Co-founder Tarek Mansour described this as standard practice for a CFTC-regulated platform, noting that existing federal rules already prohibit contracts "involving or referencing terrorism, assassination, or war." Polymarket incorporated no such provision in its Trump death contract. The contract resolved "yes" in the event of death. The platform, incorporated offshore and currently navigating its return to U.S. users under the Trump administration's relaxed regulatory posture, did not respond to press inquiries. Both Kalshi and Polymarket list Donald Trump Jr. as an adviser. The Trump administration's nominee for CFTC chair is a former Kalshi board member and shareholder. Mick Mulvaney—Trump's former chief of staff—launched the "Gambling Is Not Investing" coalition to advocate for tighter guardrails, a signal that even within the right flank of U.S. politics the current trajectory has become uncomfortable. In February 2026, six Democratic senators led by Adam Schiff wrote to the CFTC urging it to "clearly reiterate" that the existing ban covers any contract that "resolves upon or closely correlates to an individual's death." The senators gave the agency until March 9. The agency did not respond. Markets stayed open. Volume hit nine figures. The death carveout deserves more scrutiny than it has received, because it concedes the problem at exactly the point where it is most visible while leaving the underlying structure intact. Kalshi's version prevents the most direct extraction of profit from an act of violence—but the contract generating the incentive pool is still live, still liquid, still accumulating. The financial argument for violence exists at every price point before the carveout triggers. The offshore alternative, the version with no carveout, exists for any bettor willing to move jurisdictions. ## My Take: Every Market Is This Bell did not introduce a new class of financial instrument. He identified a property that prediction markets already had, gave it a name, and built a ten-part manifesto around accelerating it. Any liquid prediction instrument that resolves on a human outcome someone can influence carries this property dormant inside it. The death carveout acknowledges the dormancy while treating it as a content moderation problem. It is a structural problem. The CFTC's terrorism and assassination prohibition was written before Polymarket existed at anything near its current scale. The senators who sent the March letter are asking the agency to enforce rules written for a different threat model—one where the platforms they're now regulating didn't exist. My read has always been that every market is an assassination market with the right incentives. The relevant variables are liquidity, anonymity, and the degree to which the bettor can influence the underlying outcome. When all three are high enough, the moral category of the contract becomes irrelevant to the incentive it creates. You don't need to be running an assassination market to have built one. The probable trajectory runs through three phases. In the first, which is the current one, death carveouts spread as a defensive industry standard while offshore platforms absorb the demand that doesn't want them. In the second, something happens that makes the causal chain undeniable—a trade traced back to an operational briefing, a private citizen who dies while their name sits in an active six-figure death contract. In the third, regulated U.S. platforms face categorical bans while the demand migrates on-chain or offshore, where it is substantially harder to police than anything currently running on Kalshi. Bell understood this structure in 1995 and was counting on the third phase. He just didn't anticipate that the platforms completing his missing infrastructure would be funded by Andreessen Horowitz, regulated by a commission whose chair nominee sat on their board, and advertising on the New York City subway. Whether the founders of Kalshi and Polymarket know they built what Bell designed is an interesting question. Whether it changes the incentive is not.