Drake And Adin Ross Sued In Federal Court Over Alleged Illegal Gambling Promotions
A new federal lawsuit is putting hip-hop, streaming culture, and online gambling under a very bright spotlight.
On
December 31, 2025, a class-action lawsuit was filed in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia, Alexandria Division, accusing Drake, Adin Ross, online gambling platform Stake.us, and co-defendant George Nguyen of promoting what plaintiffs describe as an illegal gambling operation.
According to the complaint, the defendants allegedly used Stake.us’s internal transfer and tipping features to obscure how money moved through the platform, while also financing a scheme designed to “artificially inflate play counts of his [Drake’s] music across major platforms, such as Spotify.”
The lawsuit was brought by plaintiffs LaShawnna Ridley and Tiffany Hines, both identified as “Stake.us users within the United States.” They allege that promotional campaigns involving Drake and other defendants encouraged them and countless others to engage in unlawful gambling practices. The complaint seeks at least $5 million in damages and asks the court to shut down what it calls a predatory operation.
Federal Lawsuit Accuses Drake And Adin Ross Of Promoting Illegal Gambling
At the center of the case is the claim that Stake.us has operated illegally in the United States since at least 2022.
According to the lawsuit, the platform presented itself as a “social casino” that does not allow real-money gambling. Plaintiffs argue that this label was deliberately used to avoid scrutiny under U.S. federal law and Virginia gambling regulations.
The complaint states that Stake.us was, in reality, “one of the largest and most profitable” illegal online gambling platforms operating within the U.S. The plaintiffs allege that Drake, Adin Ross, and other high-profile figures promoted the platform to massive audiences without clearly disclosing the legal risks or how money actually flowed through the system.
“By masking its real money gambling platform as a free and safe ‘social casino,’ Stake and Defendants create a predatorial gambling environment, deliberately misleading consumers and exposing consumers to the risks of gambling addiction and jeopardizing the financial well-being of consumers and their families,” the plaintiffs write.
The lawsuit further alleges that the promotional content failed to disclose critical details. According to the filing, users were not properly informed about how wagers were placed, how winnings were redeemed, or how internal transfers functioned behind the scenes.
For an urban audience that understands how influence moves online, the lawsuit paints a familiar picture. Big names bring attention. Platforms bring access. Regular users absorb the risk.
How Stake.us Allegedly Used “Social Casino” Loopholes
The complaint spends significant time breaking down how Stake.us allegedly structured its operations to stay in a legal gray area.
According to the lawsuit, Stake.us marketed itself as a social casino that uses virtual currency instead of real money. On paper, that distinction matters. Under U.S. law, social casinos that do not involve real money gambling often avoid regulation.
However, plaintiffs allege that Stake.us blurred that line intentionally.
The filing claims that users could purchase virtual currency with real money, gamble with it on casino-style games, and then redeem winnings through indirect methods. Plaintiffs argue this system effectively functioned as real-money gambling while avoiding the regulatory safeguards meant to protect consumers.