Texas's largest poker room is dark. $2 million is frozen. Hundreds are out of work. And the outcome could reshape card rooms across America.
On the night of March 10, 2026, agents from the Texas Alcoholic Beverage Commission — joined by the IRS and other state and federal officers — executed a search warrant on the Lodge Card Club in Round Rock, Texas. The state's largest poker room was forced to close on the spot. Tournament chips were handed back to confused players. A World Poker Tour event was canceled mid-series. Within weeks, roughly $2 million in assets was frozen, 200+ employees were laid off, and the club's three celebrity owners — Doug Polk, Brad Owen, and Andrew Neeme — were publicly named as subjects of a money laundering investigation. As of late April 2026, the Lodge remains dark, and no formal charges have been filed. This is the biggest single story in American poker in 2026, and it's not close.
The Lodge Card Club held a state-issued liquor license from the same Texas Alcoholic Beverage Commission that raided it. That license was renewed in 2024 under the exact same operating model the state is now questioning. To the Lodge's defenders, this is the "witch hunt" Polk has described. To the state, it's alleged illegal gambling dressed up as a private members club.
The ownership group is unusually high-profile. Three of the most recognized faces in modern poker content co-own the club:
3× WSOP bracelet winner · YouTube megaphone · Has repeatedly emphasized he's "just a shareholder"
One of the most-watched poker vloggers on YouTube · Public defender of Polk and the club
Pioneer of modern poker vlogging · Co-founder of the Meet Up Game movement
Majority ownership also includes Jake Abdalla and Jason Levin (who sent the March 24 employee layoff email). The three poker personalities — Polk, Owen, and Neeme — purchased their stakes in January 2022. Owen and Neeme were already well-known for featuring the Lodge in their YouTube content before they became owners, which helped fuel its rapid rise into Texas's biggest poker room.
Agent Douglas Bell with the Texas Alcoholic Beverage Commission begins observing the Lodge from the exterior after receiving a "confidential report of some questionable financial activity." The irony: the TABC had already granted the Lodge a liquor license.
The TABC starts requesting bank records for the Lodge and its affiliated businesses. Covert surveillance of gaming activity and financial transactions continues through January 2026 — a 20-month undercover investigation.
Investigators note that in just the first two months of 2025, approximately $1.35 million was deposited from the Lodge through the Loomis cash vault located inside the club into a bank account held by Tempus Holdings. This becomes a central point of the search warrant affidavit.
TABC agents, with an IRS agent and other state authorities, execute the search warrant. The Lodge closes on the spot. A World Poker Tour festival in progress is immediately halted. Players are handed their chips and told to go home.
The World Poker Tour formally postpones its Lodge festival. Doug Polk — not in the building at the time of the raid — takes to X to publicly call it a "witch hunt" and pledges to personally reimburse all player funds.
The Lodge confirms its assets remain frozen. Still no formal charges. Attorneys advise silence. Polk: "We had no idea what we were even alleged to have done for several days."
The nine-page court document becomes public. It lists five alleged crimes: money laundering, organized crime, and three gambling-related charges. The $1.35M deposit pattern is the centerpiece.
Co-owner Jason Levin sends a devastating email to all staff. "This is the hardest message I've ever had to write." The club will remain closed "for the foreseeable future." All 200+ employees are let go. Levin: "We cannot re-open... Doing so would run the risk that authorities might once again raid the Lodge, seize more cash and assets, and potentially make arrests."
After three weeks of attorney-advised silence, Polk releases a 30+ minute video walking through his history with the club, the legal framework, and his defense. He formally pledges to personally cover player funds if needed — potentially seven figures out of pocket.
The critical legal deadline passes. The state does not file formal charges, but chooses to retain the seized $2M while the investigation continues. The state drops the money-laundering allegation but continues pursuing the illegal-gambling angle. The Lodge's future remains frozen in legal limbo.
The poker world publicly rallies behind the Lodge. Major pros, YouTubers, and industry outlets take Polk's side. A documentary is announced about why poker is legal (and important) in Texas.
Poker in Texas is neither fully legal nor fully illegal. It exists in a carefully-constructed gray zone — and the Lodge case is about whether that gray zone is actually real or just a polite fiction.
The controlling statute is Texas Penal Code 47.04. It provides a defense against gambling charges when three conditions are met:
Texas card rooms — there are about 70-80 of them operating in the state — have all been built on the same interpretation of that statute:
1. What counts as a "private place"? The search warrant specifically cites investigators gaining "direct public access" to the Lodge — meaning undercover agents were able to walk in and play. The state's argument: if anyone can join and play, it's not actually private.
2. What counts as "economic benefit"? The state's implied argument: seat fees and membership dues are economic benefit to the operator, regardless of how they're labeled. Operators reply: these are paid services, not participation in the gambling itself.
The Lodge case will likely force a court to formally rule on these questions — and whichever way it goes, every Texas card room is affected.
After three weeks of attorney-enforced silence, Doug Polk released a 30+ minute YouTube video on March 31 addressing the raid. Key points:
"I didn't know what to do. And after thinking about it, I did what anyone would do in that situation. I texted Ryan Feldman to book my next appearance on Hustler Casino Live." — Doug Polk, after seeing his name next to "money laundering" in the search warrant affidavit
The story also produced one of the sharper public exchanges in poker Twitter this year. When Polk first posted about the raid, former Full Tilt legend Tom "durrrr" Dwan — himself no stranger to debt controversy — replied:
"You made a lot of your brand out of going after people in times like this. I hope you can take a minute to reflect, and realize the negatives of some of those choices. Hope you do stuff like that less in the future." — Tom Dwan on X
Polk, not in the mood, shot back:
"I have personally guaranteed that all player funds will be safe as this witch hunt from TABC plays out. You still allegedly owe tens of millions." — Doug Polk's reply to Dwan
Co-owner Brad Owen jumped in to defend Polk, citing the personal guarantee and detailing how much time and effort Polk has put into the club's operations.
If the Lodge case was only about one card room, it wouldn't be the biggest poker story of 2026. But the implications reach much wider:
The practical reality: this could take years to resolve. Polk himself has acknowledged the timeline. Here's the decision tree:
Florida is not Texas. Florida's poker is fully regulated under the Seminole Compact and exists at licensed pari-mutuels (like the Big Easy) and the Seminole Hard Rock rooms. There are no "private membership" poker clubs in Florida operating in a gray zone — so what's happening to the Lodge can't happen here in the same way.
That said, the Lodge case matters for anyone who cares about poker as an industry. It's a referendum on whether creative state-by-state interpretations of "private gambling" actually hold up. If you travel to Texas for poker (many South Florida players do), you should know that every card room in the state is in some form of limbo right now.
The Lodge Card Club raid is the single biggest poker industry story of 2026. $2 million frozen. 200+ jobs gone. No charges filed — yet. The outcome will shape the legal status of card rooms far beyond Texas. Watch this one closely.