Gabriel Perez has run Trump’s teleprompter since 2016, which means he’s usually the last person to see the prepared remarks before they’re delivered, and he’s known to take last-minute edits from Trump himself.
Federal investigators at the Commodity Futures Trading Commission believe he used that access to bet on more than a dozen speeches over three months, including February’s State of the Union, a January address at Davos, and a March Medal of Honor ceremony, sources told ABC News.


The bets ran on Kalshi’s “Mentions” market, where users wager on whether specific words or phrases come up in a public speech. Investigators found instances where Perez backed out of a bet mid-speech when Trump skipped a word he’d wagered would be said.
Kalshi’s surveillance team flagged the trades and referred them to the CFTC. Prosecutors in Manhattan declined to open a criminal case, and regulators are now discussing a settlement that would have Perez return his profits and stop making similar trades.

He’s still operating the teleprompter. It’s the same job he held during the January 6 fallout, when congressional and federal investigators scrutinized the edits made before Trump’s remarks that day.
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