French Authorities Launch Investigation into Alleged Weather Station Tampering for Prediction Market Gains

by Dimitri Dimitrov Published on April 24, 2026
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The French National Meteorological Service has officially called for a criminal investigation following a series of inexplicable temperature anomalies at Charles de Gaulle (CDG) Airport.

The French National Meteorological Service has officially called for a criminal investigation following a series of inexplicable temperature anomalies at Charles de Gaulle (CDG) Airport.

The spikes, which local meteorologists claim defy natural weather patterns, are suspected to be the result of physical tampering intended to manipulate high-stakes outcomes on the decentralized prediction platform, Polymarket.

The “Hair Dryer” Heist: $21,000 from a $120 Bet

The suspicion centers on a Polymarket user identified as “xX25Xx,” who turned a modest $120 investment into a $21,000 windfall.

According to the French National Meteorological Service, the user bet specifically that the temperature at CDG would hit 4°C above forecasted levels on April 15. While surrounding stations recorded a steady 18°C, the CDG sensor reported a sudden leap to 22°C at 9:30 PM, a time when evening temperatures are expected to plummet.

This isn’t an isolated incident. On April 6, another user named “Joaquin” secured $14,000 in profit following a similar 3-degree discrepancy.

The audacity of the alleged manipulation has become a focal point of discussion in betting communities, with one Discord user mockingly asking:

“What weapon did you use on the Paris sensor yesterday? A hair dryer or a lighter?”

Regulatory Loopholes and Technical Shifts

Polymarket data reveals that over $500,000 has been wagered on Paris temperature fluctuations throughout March and April 2026. Because these platforms utilize “oracles” (real-world data feeds) to settle contracts, physical access to the sensors provides a direct path to guaranteed profits.

In response to the breach, Polymarket has shifted its data source for Paris contracts to the more secure Le Bourget Airport station.

While the CFTC in the United States has moved to ban “event contracts” where users can influence the outcome, such as the rules governing Kalshi, Polymarket’s international platform remains a “Wild West” for offshore speculators.

This case marks a new frontier in iGaming crime, where the digital and physical worlds collide to exploit the vulnerabilities of decentralized finance.

Dimitri Dimitrov

Dimitri is an iGaming expert with nearly a decade of experience and a knack for crafting content that speaks directly to the iGaming crowd. He understands affiliate marketing, player psychology, and search algorithms, which enables him to write engaging, data-driven articles.

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