Google employee charged with using confidential search data to make $1.2 million on Polymarket
Source: AP
By WYATTE GRANTHAM-PHILIPS
Updated 11:29 AM CDT, May 28, 2026
Comments 8
NEW YORK (AP) U.S. prosecutors slapped insider trading charges against a Google employee this week, alleging the software engineer used confidential company information to pocket more than $1.2 million from prediction market platform Polymarket with bets on search trends.
In a complaint unsealed in New York, authorities identified the employee as 36-year-old Michele Spagnuolo an Italian citizen residing in Switzerland who has worked for Google since 2014. Under the online name AlphaRaccoon, they alleged, Spagnuolo used the companys 2025 Year in Search data before it was published to enter Polymarket wagers about the most trending Googled people of last year.
This weeks charges reinforce a decades-old message: corporate insiders cannot use confidential business information to turn a profit in our markets, Jay Clayton, U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York, said Wednesday. Insider trading compromises the integrity of our markets, and the American people want this greed-driven conduct investigated and prosecuted.
Spagnuolo allegedly made new Polymarket trades as Googles internal search data evolved, from October into December of last year. For example, per the complaint, Spagnuolo initially wagered that Kendrick Lamar who headlined the 2025 Super Bowl halftime show would top search trends for people last year. But after internal Google data showed that alt-pop singer D4vd was later leading the influx of searches, he placed new bets. D4vd, whose legal name is David Burke, was charged last month with murdering 14-year-old Celeste Rivas Hernandez.
Read more: https://apnews.com/article/google-employee-insider-trading-polymarket-0a16656cd72f1694bf16a781a5b73b8e
sop
(19,486 posts)Smilo
(2,062 posts)& all this administration's crooks.
Yousufi
(11 posts)This is a report about a Google employee allegedly using confidential data to make money on Polymarket. The case is still an accusation and should be verified through official and reliable sources.
mdbl
(8,810 posts)Karasu
(2,122 posts)Ponzi schemes (ex. crypto), and AI companies incestuously propping each other up in ways that you aren't seeing anywhere else in the word, all because we supposedly have to "win" the AI "race" by building as many completely unregulated data centers as fucking possible.