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Earlier, a Cleveland woman, Elecia Battle, 40, filed a police report saying she lost the ticket last week. Police said her story was credible, but the Ohio Lottery said whoever turned in a valid ticket was legally entitled to the winnings.
In the eyes of the law, at least in Georgia, whoever brings the winning ticket to the lottery office is considered the owner. Anyone else has a HUGE burden of proof to contest ownership. It may not be fair, bu the law was written to keep the State Lottery Commission out of sqabbles just like this one. Consider a lottery ticket to be a bearer bond.
In texas, each lotto ticket has a space in the back you can fill out with your name address, etc. I guess once you know it’s a winning ticket, you write your name and then no one but you can redeem it.
I think this has been sorted out over the past few hours. The lady who cashed the ticket had a receipt, and the Ohio lottery people said everything is legit.
The other lady is a fraud and the police are mulling charges against her.
Well, she has a receipt from the store for that time frame, which would be likely if whe was behind the ticket-dropper in line and picked it up. I don’t know why she would, but still.
Assuming that A bought the ticket, dropped it, and it was later picked up by B, just as A says, then A still has no claim to the money, right?
Correct. A lottery ticket is a bearer instrument, and whoever turns it in is legally entitled to the money.
Even if she didn’t have a reciept (and I’ve never had a receipt because usually all I buy is the ticket itself, therefore no receipt), it’s a case of whoever cashes it first wins.