Dane Miller opened a DraftKings account in October 2020, the way millions of Americans did during those strange, locked-down months when sports betting apps felt like one of the few things still moving. He was 26. He had no idea, presumably, that four years later he’d be sitting in a Chicago hospital room with a suicide note in his pocket, having lost more than $2 million, his job, and the wedding fund he and his fiancée had been building together.
Now Miller is suing. And the case, filed June 24 in federal court in Chicago, is the kind of lawsuit that tends to make an entire industry nervous.
The complaint doesn’t just accuse DraftKings of taking his money. It accuses the company of noticing him — really noticing him — and deciding he was worth cultivating. By May 2021, Miller had been crowned a VIP, the lawsuit says, showered with profit boosts, deposit matches, free bets, and tickets to a suite at Soldier Field. A VIP host, the complaint claims, reached out to him almost daily. That’s not the language of an app. That’s the language of a relationship, engineered.
There’s something almost intimate about the way the lawsuit describes DraftKings’ alleged tactics: algorithms that anticipate a user’s “exact moment of emotional vulnerability,” personalized stimuli timed to keep him logged in, systems designed, in the complaint’s words, to exploit “the chemical reward system of users’ brains.” Whether a jury believes any of that is a different question. But it’s hard not to notice how closely this language echoes what’s already been proven against social media companies — Meta and Google were both found liable earlier this year for harming a young user through addictive design. Sports betting may be next in that line of fire.

What makes Miller’s case different from a typical bad-beat story is the timing. DraftKings sent him five separate $200 sportsbook credits, the complaint alleges, just two weeks before he was hospitalized for severe suicidal ideation. If true, it raises an uncomfortable question that courts are only beginning to grapple with: at what point does customer retention become something closer to harm?
It’s worth saying plainly — not every losing bettor has a case. Courts have already pushed back once, with a Pennsylvania federal judge ruling in March that state law doesn’t require sportsbooks to police customers’ habits. That ruling looms over Miller’s lawsuit like a warning. Skepticism here is reasonable. Personal responsibility still matters, and plenty of people online, reacting to early coverage of the case, have said as much.
But the broader pattern is getting harder to wave away. A New Jersey father lost nearly $1 million through similar alleged tactics in 2023. Class actions in Massachusetts now accuse DraftKings and FanDuel of tracking behavior to strike “precisely when they’re most susceptible.” Online sportsbooks now operate legally in 30 states, and studies suggest they’re draining household finances faster than older forms of gambling ever did.
Miller, according to his attorney, has since married, had a child, and rebuilt his career. He says he’s not chasing a payout so much as forcing a reckoning — pushing DraftKings toward real safeguards instead of slogans about “responsible gaming.” Whether this lawsuit reshapes the industry or quietly settles into the same legal graveyard as the Pennsylvania case remains genuinely uncertain. But the questions it raises about what these apps are designed to do to us aren’t going away anytime soon.