Key Highlights
- A government audit uncovered 910 public employees who gambled at casinos from January 2024 through June 2025, breaking Chilean legal statutes
- These employees placed combined wagers exceeding 11.49 billion pesos, despite clear legal prohibitions for those handling state resources
- A concentrated group of merely 20 individuals was responsible for 5.39 billion pesos in wagers, including one Air Force official who bet over 1.04 billion pesos
- Prosecutors have received case documentation to evaluate potential criminal prosecution
- Officials at 371 public entities have been instructed to initiate disciplinary action against implicated employees
A sweeping compliance investigation has uncovered a significant breach of public trust in Chile, where nearly a thousand government workers violated statutory prohibitions against casino gambling.
An official report released by the Comptroller General’s Office identified 910 state employees who participated in casino betting activities spanning an 18-month period from January 2024 to June 2025.
The aggregate betting volume from these public servants surpassed 11.49 billion pesos. Under existing Chilean legislation, any individual responsible for managing or safeguarding government funds is expressly prohibited from casino gambling activities.
Investigators discovered the violations by matching information from two separate databases. The first contained records of officials required to post financial security bonds for their roles handling taxpayer money. The second consisted of patron records maintained by the Superintendence of Gaming Casinos.
Legal Prohibitions Against Government Employee Gambling
Chile’s Law No. 19,995 establishes unambiguous restrictions. Public officials entrusted with managing government resources are forbidden from participating in any form of casino wagering, whether personally or via intermediaries.
The legislative intent behind this prohibition centers on safeguarding public assets. Lawmakers designed these rules to distance officials from settings that might jeopardize their professional obligations.
Yet despite these explicit legal boundaries, hundreds of government workers completely disregarded the restrictions.
The audit findings revealed that betting patterns were dramatically skewed toward a minority of offenders. Among the 910 individuals identified, only 181 accounted for 96.8% of all wagers placed.
This subset collectively bet more than 11.1 billion pesos.
The concentration grew even more dramatic within a smaller cohort. A mere 20 officials were responsible for wagers totaling 5.39 billion pesos.
Most remarkably, a single Chilean Air Force official placed bets surpassing 1.04 billion pesos. This extraordinary sum has prompted urgent inquiries into how a government employee could access and gamble such substantial amounts.
Criminal Investigation Launched Following Audit Findings
Officials at the Comptroller General’s Office have indicated this matter extends beyond simple administrative infractions. The magnitude of the gambling activity points toward potential criminal conduct.
Authorities have initiated a formal criminal probe. Documentation and evidence have been transferred to both the Public Prosecutor’s Office and the State Defense Council.
These agencies will now assess whether criminal charges should be filed against the offending officials.
Simultaneously, the Comptroller has notified 371 government organizations employing the individuals named in the investigative report. These entities span law enforcement agencies, military branches including the Air Force, treasury departments, investigative services, and local municipal authorities.
Each organization has received instructions to commence disciplinary procedures against its implicated personnel. Government sources indicate potential penalties ranging up to termination of employment.
The complete roster of 910 violators will additionally be forwarded to the Superintendence of Gaming Casinos. That regulatory body will then evaluate whether enforcement measures against casino operators who permitted these officials to gamble are warranted.
This scandal has highlighted deficiencies in Chile’s oversight mechanisms for public employee conduct. Observers have argued that improved information-sharing protocols among regulatory agencies might have detected these violations much earlier.
The investigation remains active and may ultimately result in criminal prosecutions, employment terminations, and reformed enforcement protocols throughout Chile’s public sector institutions.
