
In brief
Drake and popular straemer Adin Ross were among named defendants in a new RICO class-action suit filed in Virginia.
The suit alleges that the defendants used the site’s tipping feature to obscure transmissions of money related to a music botting campaign to boost Drake’s statistics on streaming platforms.
The suit requests no less than $5 million in damages.
Pop culture icon and rapper Drake is at the center of a new class action lawsuit filed in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia, which alleges he used the tipping feature on the crypto casino website Stake to obfuscate money transmissions related to streaming music botting campaigns.Ā Ā
The class action suit, filed on December 31, 2025, also names popular streamer Adin Ross and George Nguyenāan Australian national who allegedly facilitated botting activitiesāalleging RICO violations on all named defendants for actions which violate the Racketeer Influence and Corrupt Organizations Act, which is typically used in organized crime cases.Ā
āThis consumer class action seeks to stop Stake.usāan illegal online gambling platform promoted by Drake, Ross and Nguyen, and used by Drake, Ross and Nguyen to obscure transmissions of money in furtherance of their ongoing music botting campaignsāfrom continuing to prey upon consumers, and to impose civil penalties on all defendants to deter future misconduct,ā the complaint reads.

The class-action filed by Stake.us users LaShawnna Ridley and Tiffany Hines seeks to represent all Virginia residents that created an account on Stake.usāa āsocial casinoā offered by the Stake parent company to those in the United States, where its core offerings are not legal.
It also aims to represent any U.S. residents who made an account and purchased casino tokens called Gold Coins that were bundled with Stake Cashāwhich can be redeemed for cryptoāand those who lost wagers with Stake Cash in the last three years.Ā
āStake.us was created and marketed to U.S. customers as a āsocial casinoā that purportedly does not permit āreal money gambling,ā to bypass applicable United States federal and Commonwealth of Virginia gambling regulations,ā it claims.Ā
āAttempting unsuccessfully to hide behind the facade of a āsafe and free gambling experience,ā Stake.us misrepresents itself to regulators and consumers; in reality, it operates as an illegal online casino,ā the filing adds.
Alleged in the complaint, Drake and Rossāwho are paid to promote the casinoāwagered large sums of money provided by Stake on the platform and, in connection with Nguyen, transferred money between themselves via the platformās tipping feature. The filing calls that feature an āunlimited and wholly unregulated money transmitter that appears to exist outside the oversight of any financial regulator.ā
They also used this feature to finance botting measures that have inflated the play statistics of Drakeās music across streaming platforms, the complaint alleges.Ā
The named plaintiffs, on behalf of the class, requested no less than $5,000,000 in damages and demanded a jury trial.Ā
āPlaintiffs and the class are Stake.us users who have been misled by Stake.usā misrepresentations that Stake.us is a legal, harmless, and safe gaming site, when it is in fact not legal, not harmless, and not safe,ā the complaint continues.Ā
āStake.us preys on consumers in Virginia and nationwide who are lured into real money gambling, exposing consumers to substantial risks of gambling addictions and jeopardizing their and their familiesā financial well-being.ā
The lawsuit is not the first against Drake and Ross for their promotion of Stake. In October, a lawsuit filed in a Missouri county court alleged the pair promoted Stake.us āunder deeply fraudulent pretenses,ā exposing young consumers to financial risk and gambling addiction.
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