My understanding is that people can have the clerk check their numbers for them, instead of checking their own numbers. In this case, the person got a free ticket with their numbers, but the clerk told them that they didn’t win anything. The clerk then played that free ticket and won the 12.5 million with it - which would have been the customer’s win, had they known about the free ticket and played it (which I think everyone does).
This is accurate, and idiotic. Leaving aside completely the extremely rare win on a random number free ticket issue that the thread started with, what if you’ve already won the multi-million dollar prize? Were it me, that ticket would have been signed well before anyone scanned it and I’d be calling in sick the next morning from Jefferson City so fast it’d make your head swim.
Only if the customer had played the winning numbers on the free ticket they got, right? I mean, the convenience store guy didn’t cheat the customer out of 12.5 million, they cheated the customer out of the value of a free ticket, right?
The Ontario Lottery and Gaming Corporation was paying out a lot more to convenience store owners than one would have expected, indicating that there was a lot of fraud going on in the convenience stores. The provincial government sacked the head of the OLG, and the OLG’s procedures have been tightened up. Ontario Lottery and Gaming Corporation - Wikipedia
I may be misremembering, since it’s been 14 years since I’ve worked in a gas station, but I think I remember that when somebody won a free ticket, they didn’t get to choose the numbers, the lotto machine would just automatically print out a free ticket with random numbers. That was the Iowa Lottery. But, like I said, it’s a vague half memory that could very well be totally wrong.
I do, however, recall the large stacks of lottery tickets I had to scan for people who didn’t check their own tickets. Some people would buy them all the time and keep them stashed in their wallet for months, then bring in a giant stack to be checked all at once. Some people just spent way too much money on the lottery.
The scratch ticket people were the REALLY annoying ones, though.
[rant]Anyone who blocks the line at a convenience store by putzing about using the clerk as a personal casino attendant, making me wait, and wait, and wait to pay for my gas, deserves to have their winning ticket stolen by the clerk.[/rant]
Slight hijack: One of the best conversations I’ve ever heard in my life was outside a 7-eleven between a guy who had stolen some lottery tivkets from a different 7-eleven and tried to cash in a $500 winner at that 7-eleven, and the cop who was called and caught up with the guy in the parking as he tyied to leave the store. Us Sunday morning crowd of coffee and newspaper getters were treated to quite a free show between one of the world’s dumbest criminals and the cop, who obviously was doing it partly for our enjoyment and the criminal['s public humiliation.
I am confused… since this happened in Canada, isn’t it the case that when one Canadian wins the lottery, it is as though all Canadians won the lottery?
Anyone who impedes the swift transactions of other people in a convenience store needs a quick kick in the butt.
I used to work in a convenience store. You would not BELIEVE the number of people who wanted to pay for a $10 transaction in a combination of pennies and nickels. Unrolled.
I spent lunch today listening to a human-rights fellow speak on his experiences in Pot’s Cambodia, Bosnia’s ethnic cleansing, and now the tribal massacres in the Congo. I came away with a profound feeling that all Canadians won the lottery.
When I was working at Kmart, I had a guy write a check for 25 cents. (I can’t remember what he was buying – it might have been a pack of gum). And no, I couldn’t refuse him.
Or how about the idiots who wanted you to look through your drawer for the “state quarters”. GOD, I hated those damned things!
Not an option at many of the pumps around here, including the one nearest my place, and the one in the town I stop at on my way to my sattellite office. Flip side of the coin is that with these old pumps, I can set them to run while I clean the windows, rather than have to stand there holding the trigger.
Since 1996, leading to things like this down at the water: “Mother: “I am from America where we have morals and standards. You people sicken me! They are far too young to be doing that!””