Skip to content
Search

Drake, Adin Ross Used Online Casino Money for Artificial Streams, Lawsuit Claims

New class-action lawsuit alleges a racketeering conspiracy that preyed on consumers

Drake, Adin Ross Used Online Casino Money for Artificial Streams, Lawsuit Claims
Getty Images

A new class-action lawsuit filed by two consumers in Virginia accuses music superstar Drake, streamer Adin Ross, and a third man based in Australia of luring users into real-money gambling on the casino platform Stake.us as part of a racketeering conspiracy that allegedly used proceeds to “artificially inflate streaming counts for Drake’s catalog.”

The lawsuit, filed in federal court in Virginia, claims the three men worked with Stake to “prey upon consumers,” unlawfully expose them to the “substantial risks of gambling addiction,” and jeopardize their financial well-being. The plaintiffs say they were “influenced to participate” in Stake’s “predatorial gambling environment” after viewing Drake’s paid promotion of the site, including live-streamed gambling sessions and giveaways.


According to the complaint, Drake, Ross, and the Australian national, identified as George Nguyen, acted as “zealous promoters” of Stake in exchange for payment and access to the platform, which the lawsuit describes as a covert “money transfer conduit.” (Stake, which is owned by Sweepsteaks Ltd. in Cyprus and operates Stake.us from offices in Dallas, Ross, and Nguyen did not immediately respond to a request for comment. A representative for Drake declined to comment.)

The lawsuit, filed by LaShawnna Ridley and Tiffany Hines, alleges the three men used Stake’s user-to-user “tipping” feature to directly transfer money among themselves. The complaint characterizes the program as “an unlimited and wholly unregulated money transmitter that appears to exist outside the oversight of any financial regulator.” It further alleges the funds were later used to finance fraudulent streams of Drake’s music and “amplification campaigns” that at times targeted competitors with disparaging content.

“At the heart of the scheme, Drake — acting directly and through willing and knowledgeable co-conspirators — has deployed automated bots and streaming farms to artificially inflate play counts of his music across major platforms, such as Spotify,” the complaint alleges, echoing claims made in a recent lawsuit against Spotify. “This manipulation has suppressed authentic artists and narrowed consumers’ access to legitimate content by undermining the integrity of curated experiences.”

Nguyen is identified in the complaint as the owner of the Instagram news-clipping account @grandwizardchatn***a. The lawsuit alleges he served as a “broker and operational facilitator,” receiving cryptocurrency through Stake channels as part of the alleged conspiracy and then “interfacing with bot vendors, supervising coordinated amplification strategies, and integrating paid ‘clipping’ campaigns” on social media platforms including X, formerly Twitter.

The filing claims public posts, chat logs, and leaked communications document Nguyen’s “direct handling of funds through multiple payment platforms, orchestration of narrative surges, and amplification” alongside Drake and Ross. It alleges the scheme dates back to 2022 and “remains an ongoing and imminent threat of racketeering activity.”

“Plaintiffs have been damaged by the false marketing manipulation and abuses of defendants Drake, Ross, and Nguyen, who participate in the marketing of Stake,” the complaint states. It adds that the plaintiffs were “manipulated into signing onto and transacting on Stake.us based upon defendants’ representations.”

The lawsuit seeks to represent Virginia residents who lost one or more wagers using Stake Cash within the last three years. It includes claims that the defendants violated the Virginia Consumer Protection Act, engaged in a racketeering conspiracy, and carried out a pattern of racketeering activity in violation of the federal RICO statute.

The lawsuit is not the first to target Drake, 39, and Ross, 25, over their ties to Stake. Last October, a Missouri man filed a similar proposed class action against the men and Sweepsteaks Limited. A lawyer representing all three defendants successfully moved that case from Missouri state court to federal court last month. (The lawyer did not respond to a request for comment sent Thursday.)

The Missouri and Virginia lawsuits both allege Stake.us uses an unlawful, dual-currency system that bundles virtual, purportedly non-redeemable “gold coins” with a second type of token, called “Stake Cash,” that can be cashed out for real money. This type of dual-currency model is considered a loophole by critics and has faced backlash from legislators. California Gov. Gavin Newsom signed a bill last year to address the problem.

More Stories

Liam Payne’s 9-Year-Old Son Named Sole Inheritor of Singer’s $29 Million Estate
Dave J Hogan/Getty Images

Liam Payne’s 9-Year-Old Son Named Sole Inheritor of Singer’s $29 Million Estate

Liam Payne‘s son Bear, 9, has been named the sole beneficiary of the late singer’s $29,007,998 estate, according to documents obtained by People.

Payne, who died in October 2024 without making a will, shared Bear with his former partner and singer Cheryl, who was named the administrator of Payne’s estate along with music industry lawyer Richard Bray in May 2025. At the time, U.K. records obtained by Rolling Stone stated that the gross value of Payne’s estate was £28,594,888 (about $38 million), while the net value — after debts and expenses are covered — amounted to £24,279,728 (or about $32 million).

Keep ReadingShow less
The Jay-Z Commemorative Library Card is Back for the ‘Reasonable Doubt’ 30th Anniversary

Jay-Z at the 2026 Met Gala.

Theo Wargo/FilmMagic/Getty Images

The Jay-Z Commemorative Library Card is Back for the ‘Reasonable Doubt’ 30th Anniversary

  1. Jay-Z will add to his already overflowing pile of career achievements a second commemorative library card as he celebrates the 30th anniversary of his debut, Reasonable Doubt.

To mark the occasion this month, Jay announced a string of pop-ups around New York City, as well as a fresh partnership with the Brooklyn Public Library. That includes the release of a new limited edition library card, which will be available June 25 — the same day Reasonable Doubt was released in 1996 — at all BPL locations on a first-come, first-served basis, and while supplies last.

This marks Jay-Z’s second time partnering with the Brooklyn Public Library after his Book of HOV exhibit was put on display at the Grand Army Plaza branch in 2023. The launch of that exhibit also included a special promotion that saw the BPL printing a bunch of limited edition library cards commemorating all 13 of Jay’s solo albums.

Keep ReadingShow less
Keith Richards Says the Rolling Stones May Not Tour Again
Mick Jagger, Keith Richards, and Ronnie Wood
Kevin Mazur/Getty Images

Keith Richards Says the Rolling Stones May Not Tour Again

Keith Richards isn’t sure that he’s up to future Rolling Stones tours, but that doesn’t mean the band won’t play live again. With the band’s new album, Foreign Tongues, due July 10, the Stones guitarist raised the idea of the band playing residencies in a new interview with Uncut.

“I don’t know if tours are possible,” Richards, 82, told the magazine. “It’s the travelling that takes it out of you. But I do see the possibility of us doing residency somewhere. Wherever it is, London, New York, Paris, anywhere. I’ll play Rome! But I don’t see why they shouldn’t be able to throw some shows together in a new format.”

Keep ReadingShow less
Olivia Rodrigo Scores Third No. 1 Album With ‘You Seem Pretty Sad for a Girl So in Love’
Olivia Rodrigo performs at Primavera Sound 2026 in Barcelona, Spain.Xavi Torrent/Getty Images

Olivia Rodrigo Scores Third No. 1 Album With ‘You Seem Pretty Sad for a Girl So in Love’

Olivia Rodrigo‘s new album, You Seem Pretty Sad for a Girl So in Love, debuted at No. 1 on the Billboard 200 chart, marking her third No. 1 LP and her biggest sales week ever. It was also largest week of 2026 for any album by a soloist, meaning You Seem Pretty Sad for a Girl So in Love outperformed Drake’s Iceman.

Rodrigo’s album sold 485,000 units in the United States in the week ending June 18, according to Billboard. By comparison, Drake sold 463,000 for Iceman in May. Drake has held the No. 1 spot since then for four weeks, only to be knocked down by Rodrigo.

Keep ReadingShow less
San Antonio Mayor Calls for Cancelation of Kanye West’s July 4th Alamodome Concert

Kanye West in Istanbul, Turkiye, on May 30, 2026

Muhammed Ali Yigit/Anadolu via Getty Images

San Antonio Mayor Calls for Cancelation of Kanye West’s July 4th Alamodome Concert

The mayor of San Antonio has called for the cancelation of Kanye West’s concert at the city’s Alamodome, scheduled for the Fourth of July.

Weeks after Florida senator Rick Scott urged the Tampa Sports Authority to cancel West’s upcoming concerts at Raymond James Stadium, San Antonio Gina Ortiz Jones similarly lobbied against the rapper performing in the Texas city.

Keep ReadingShow less