Trader consensus on Polymarket favors "No" at 74.5% implied probability for streamer Clavicular (Braden Eric Peters) receiving a prison sentence, driven by his swift release from Broward County Jail hours after Thursday's misdemeanor battery arrest in Florida—linked to an alleged Airbnb fight—signaling prosecutors' low pursuit of incarceration. This mirrors February's Arizona felony forgery charges, which Maricopa County Attorney Rachael Rollins dropped shortly after booking, boosting no-prison momentum amid his looksmaxxing influencer's rapid viral recoveries and platform unbans on Kick. Key catalysts include upcoming Osceola County court proceedings and potential plea deals, though misdemeanor trajectories rarely escalate to prison in streamer legal dramas.
Résumé expérimental généré par IA à partir des données Polymarket · Mis à jourClavicular sentenced to prison?
Clavicular sentenced to prison?
This market will remain open through December 31, 2026 or until Clavicular is sentenced to time in jail/prison, regardless of any initial sentencing that does not include prison. Any sentencing will qualify, regardless of subsequent appeals or changes to the sentence.
Civil lawsuits, regulatory actions, administrative complaints, investigations without charges, internal employment actions, or public accusations without the filing of criminal charges will not qualify, even if widely reported or described colloquially as “charges.”
If at any point all charges against Clavicular for all criminal cases are dropped for whatever reason, due to a plea agreement without an admission of guilt, a dismissal, or any other situation in which no judgement is rendered or will be rendered by the court, this market will resolve to "No".
The primary resolution source for this market will be official information from the US government and law enforcement; however a consensus of credible reporting may also be used.
Marché ouvert : Mar 27, 2026, 5:30 PM ET
Resolver
0x65070BE91...This market will remain open through December 31, 2026 or until Clavicular is sentenced to time in jail/prison, regardless of any initial sentencing that does not include prison. Any sentencing will qualify, regardless of subsequent appeals or changes to the sentence.
Civil lawsuits, regulatory actions, administrative complaints, investigations without charges, internal employment actions, or public accusations without the filing of criminal charges will not qualify, even if widely reported or described colloquially as “charges.”
If at any point all charges against Clavicular for all criminal cases are dropped for whatever reason, due to a plea agreement without an admission of guilt, a dismissal, or any other situation in which no judgement is rendered or will be rendered by the court, this market will resolve to "No".
The primary resolution source for this market will be official information from the US government and law enforcement; however a consensus of credible reporting may also be used.
Resolver
0x65070BE91...Trader consensus on Polymarket favors "No" at 74.5% implied probability for streamer Clavicular (Braden Eric Peters) receiving a prison sentence, driven by his swift release from Broward County Jail hours after Thursday's misdemeanor battery arrest in Florida—linked to an alleged Airbnb fight—signaling prosecutors' low pursuit of incarceration. This mirrors February's Arizona felony forgery charges, which Maricopa County Attorney Rachael Rollins dropped shortly after booking, boosting no-prison momentum amid his looksmaxxing influencer's rapid viral recoveries and platform unbans on Kick. Key catalysts include upcoming Osceola County court proceedings and potential plea deals, though misdemeanor trajectories rarely escalate to prison in streamer legal dramas.
Résumé expérimental généré par IA à partir des données Polymarket · Mis à jour
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