- 修地基的故事 - 可怕的垄断 [2010/01]
- 参加 Boy Scout (美国的童子军)有啥好处?好贵啊 [2010/09]
- 在美国怎么买个补鞋底的胶水都这么难 [2009/09]
- 震惊,我的眼睛就这么完了? [2010/05]
- 上海饭店的骗子还真不少,这是一个mm被骗的经历zt [2010/10]
- 买奶粉记(5)- 美国两种最普遍的奶粉的中文名 [2009/10]
- 请求康州Hartford的朋友提供帮助 [2015/06]
- 有人欺负HOUSTON华夏中文学校,大伙看看怎么办好 [2011/07]
- 今天看眼科医生 [2010/06]
- 自己借给自己钱,天大的好事怎么没人告诉我 [2010/06]
- 我这张帐单要付吗? [2010/09]
- 偷吃我种的菜的罪魁祸首被抓住一个 [2011/02]
- 回国便宜的机票来啦(700刀来回) [2011/02]
- 回国见闻(4)- 漂亮美眉给我洗脚 [2010/07]
- 馋馋你们,看看有多少人认识我的这个菜 [2011/03]
- 郁闷, 一大早拿到一张交通罚单 [2010/03]
- 门外陌生人敲门,你怎么办 [2009/09]
- 百思不解, 为什么中国给外国领事馆配武警岗哨 [2010/04]
- 完蛋,竟会忘了接儿子 [2012/01]
- 想娶美丽的杭州姑娘的小伙子们请看过来 [2009/08]
- 昨天帮一个不认识的美眉买了两个包 [2009/08]
- 今天要吃的菜 [2010/05]
- 美国的手机公司是强盗啊 [2010/07]
- 感动,儿子拿出了他的Piggy Bank 里的钱要帮我付罚单 [2010/03]
德州一哥们中了大奖, 要在奖卷上签名画押,这哥们太牛了, 签个名也要动用 Laser Printer(激光打印机), 结果打印机散发出来的热量把那张奖卷都弄黑了,号码都无法辩认了, 差点领不到奖, 折腾了半年总算拿到了奖金, 想想看,如果是你,你会是啥心情?砸了那台激光打印机吧!
Winner of $48 million lottery in Alvin still a mystery By PEGGY O'HARE
HOUSTON CHRONICLE May 11, 2010, 9:57PM
While the identity of the man who won a $48.8 million lottery prize in Alvin remains unknown to the public, a report released Tuesday by the Texas Lottery Commission shows the steps the agency took to verify the ticket's authenticity after it was damaged in a mishap with a laser jet printer.
The mystery man purchased his Texas Lottery ticket Oct. 18 from a self-service machine at the H-E-B Pantry grocery store in Alvin, where he was shopping with his wife and two children, the report shows. But after he became the sole winner of the jackpot on Oct. 21, he traveled a long road as he waited to see whether the commission would really pay up.
That's because his good fortune soured when he placed his winning ticket in a laser printer to type an endorsement on the back, the report shows. The heat generated by the printer turned the data on the front of the ticket black.
Forensics usedOn Dec. 17, the ticket holder, acting through a group called MAED Trust, presented the damaged ticket — along with a second, non-winning lottery ticket purchased at the same time and place — to the commission to claim his money. The Lottery Operations Division's Security Department did forensic exams and verification efforts on the ticket, while the agency's Enforcement Division investigated the facts surrounding its purchase and damage.
Forensics analysis found some data still visible on the damaged ticket, including a partial retailer number, but some digits on the ticket were missing.
“Other than the damage to the front of the ticket making portions unreadable, visual inspection did not reveal any inconsistencies or evidence that should not have been present on a ticket for the prize claim,” the commission's report states.
Enforcement investigators also took written sworn statements from the ticket purchaser; his attorney, Frank Putman of Houston; Putman's assistant; and a friend of the winner, who were all familiar with the circumstances of the case.
The purchaser and his friend were at the gym together the day after the lottery drawing when the ticket holder saw a TV report displaying the winning numbers. The numbers matched a ticket the man had, and he showed it to his friend, investigators learned. The ticket holder later contacted Putman, who called the commission.
The ticket holder also handed over photos of the winning ticket that he had taken before it was damaged, even though photos are not by themselves “acceptable evidence” to submit instead of an actual ticket as a claim for the lottery prize, the report shows. But the ticket data visible in the pictures were consistent with the ticket data reconstructed by forensic analysts.
Enforcement investigators also viewed H-E-B's security camera recordings showing the man buying the ticket at the time the transaction was recorded on the central computer system. They also examined a receipt showing the ticket holder's purchase of groceries at the store around the same time. Furthermore, the tear line between the damaged winning ticket and the non-damaged ticket he purchased matched, investigators found.
Security officials then performed a query for all transactions recorded on the self-service machine at the H-E-B on the date of purchase. They found only two of the 12 transactions made on the machine that day were for wagers, both being for Lotto Texas tickets. The serial number for the first transaction matched the non-winning ticket submitted by the purchaser, while the winning ticket was purchased eight seconds later, the report shows.
Investigators also found the serial numbers found on the back of the tickets indicated the roll stock paper used was assigned to an H-E-B store 9 miles away in nearby Santa Fe. Representatives for both H-E-B retailers confirmed the roll stock paper had been transferred from the Santa Fe store to the Alvin store when the latter location ran out of paper for its self-service lottery ticket machine.
Paid on MondayOn May 3 — more than six months after the ticket's purchase — the commission agreed to pay the money to the ticket holder. Although the total jackpot was for $76 million, the winner collected $48,877,977.02 because he had chosen the “Cash Value Option,” allowing him to collect a lesser amount in one lump sum instead of opting for a 25-year payout.
The winner collected his money on Monday. His name has not been released .
The names of people connected to MAED Trust also remained a mystery Tuesday. Officials with the Texas Department of Banking and Texas Secretary of State say they have no paperwork on file for a trust by that name. R. Sells Neuhaus is listed as the trust's vice president, but he is not the man who bought the winning lottery ticket.