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Missing lottery ticket? (Breaking news -- found!)

Posted: Tue Jan 06, 2004 9:51 am
by GalvestonDuck
I don't play often, but aren't you supposed to sign the back of your ticket before you do anything else with it?? That way, it is easier to claim it's your ticket, if it's lost or stolen. She's already claimed to have purchased a ticket with the winning numbers (which almost anyone could do). She also purchased it from the store that did sell the winning ticket (a second plus for her). Now, if the ticket is ever found and she had signed it, there would be no doubt. But the way it stands now, I'm not so sure she has enough proof.

http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=s ... ost_ticket


Ohio Woman Claims She Lost $162M Ticket
By JOE MILICIA, Associated Press Writer

CLEVELAND - A $162 million Mega Millions lottery jackpot belongs to a woman who says she lost the winning ticket, even if someone else finds it, her lawyer argued Tuesday.

Several people have searched through the snow in a convenience store parking lot where Elecia Battle said she lost the ticket. Battle intends to make a case that the winning ticket for the 11-state game is her lost property, said lawyer Sheldon Starke.

"This is a question of lost property, not abandoned property," he said. "If there is one type of property that is not presumed to be abandoned, it's money ... Anyone who finds it is not the owner."

Battle, 40, of Cleveland, filed a police report saying she dropped her purse when she left the Quick Shop Food Mart last week after buying the ticket at the store in suburban South Euclid. She said she realized after the Dec. 30 drawing that the ticket was missing.

The Ohio Lottery confirmed that the winning ticket was sold at the store.

Starke said she plans to hold a news conference Wednesday. Starke, who said his specialty is entertainment law, would not say if Battle intends to offer a reward.

"I'm praying that someone finds the ticket, brings it forward and gets rewarded and from there we all live happily ever after," said Battle, who cried as she talked to The Associated Press at her home Monday night.

Starke initially said Battle would hold a news conference Tuesday to announce a reward, but he said they postponed that because "we have a lot of legal things to tie up, a lot of formalities."

After news of Battle's police report spread Monday night, people armed with flashlights trudged through the snow trying to find the ticket in the parking lot.

"I decided to come back to see if I could find the winning ticket," said LaVerne Coleman, 57, who said she would keep the winnings if she found the ticket.

Police Lt. Kevin Nieter said the family may be out of luck if someone else found the ticket.

"Whoever has the ticket has the right to stake the claim to the winning jackpot. You can file all the police reports you want, but it's not going to help," he told WEWS-TV on Monday.

Ohio Lottery spokeswoman Mardele Cohen said that if someone else came in with the ticket, Battle could try to get a temporary restraining order in court to block the winnings from being paid.

Police said Battle was in tears when she filed her report Friday and did not hesitate when asked to write down the winning numbers.

"We don't believe that she's fabricating it, but there's no real way of knowing other than going on her word," Nieter said.

Nieter said information Battle knew about when the ticket was bought and how the numbers were picked make her story credible. She told police that the numbers — 12, 18, 21, 32 and 46 and Mega Ball 49 — represented family birthdays and ages.

The Ohio Lottery said the winning ticket was sold to someone who chose the numbers rather than letting the computer make the choices.

Battle's husband, Jimmy Battle, has two jobs. The couple have seven children, some from previous marriages.

If the jackpot isn't claimed by June 27, the money goes to Ohio and 10 other states that participate in the game.

Posted: Tue Jan 06, 2004 10:33 am
by GalvestonDuck
Now it's gonna get interesting!

http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,107454,00.html

Winning $162M Lottery Ohio Ticket Turned In

Tuesday, January 06, 2004

CLEVELAND — Someone turned in a valid ticket for the $162 million Mega Millions (search) multistate lottery jackpot, the Ohio Lottery (search) said Tuesday, a day after a Cleveland woman claimed she lost the winning ticket outside the convenience store where it was sold.

Ohio Lottery spokeswoman Mardele Cohen said the winner would be revealed at an 11:30 a.m. press conference. Cohen would not comment on whether the winner was Elecia Battle (search), the woman who filed a police report saying she lost the ticket last week.

About 30 people with flashlights searched for the ticket Monday night outside the suburban Cleveland store after the police report Battle filed became public.

The Ohio Lottery says the ticket is a bearer note, which means whoever turns in a valid ticket is legally entitled to the winnings.

Cohen said Monday night that the bearer status makes the ticket "like cash."

But Battle intends to make a case that the winning ticket from the 11-state game is her lost property, said her lawyer, Sheldon Starke.

"This is a question of lost property, not abandoned property," he said Tuesday. "If there is one type of property that is not presumed to be abandoned, it's money ... Anyone who finds it is not the owner."

Battle, 40, of Cleveland, filed a police report saying she dropped her purse as she left the Quick Shop Food Mart last week after buying the ticket. She said she realized after the drawing last Tuesday that the ticket was missing.

The Ohio Lottery said the winning ticket was sold at the store in South Euclid, about 15 miles east of Cleveland.

Posted: Tue Jan 06, 2004 10:51 am
by wx247
lol That will be interesting. When I play I always sign mine as soon as I can. The signature always ends up being worth more than the ticket though.

Posted: Tue Jan 06, 2004 11:37 am
by GalvestonDuck
Okay, this is weird. I searched Cleveland news on Yahoo and found these from December (before the woman claimed to have lost the ticket):

http://www.newsnet5.com/money/2734586/detail.html

which says the winner was a male, and this:

http://www.newsnet5.com/money/2735914/detail.html

which describes the winner as a male.

I guess we'll see shortly when they have the news conference.

Posted: Tue Jan 06, 2004 11:40 am
by blizzard
She has no case whatsoever IMO, anyone could have made those claims jsut to try and dupe someone else. The lottery ticket is in fact a "bearer" note. So, you are right GD, I sign my lottery tickets immediately after purchasing them, just in case....*wishful thinking*

Posted: Tue Jan 06, 2004 11:44 am
by Josephine96
People always wanna make a case for the news.. I don't believe this woman's story either.

I hope to God's name that she gets in trouble.. lol..

Posted: Tue Jan 06, 2004 12:16 pm
by stormraiser
Well, I don't hope she gets in trouble, but I don't trust her as far as I can throw her, either.

Posted: Tue Jan 06, 2004 12:48 pm
by Josephine96
LOL Anthony.. I wouldn't trust her either.. She was stupid enough not to sign her lottery ticket lol

Posted: Tue Jan 06, 2004 1:30 pm
by JCT777
I don't think she will see 1 cent of that money.

Posted: Tue Jan 06, 2004 6:28 pm
by CajunMama
ok...the next lottery drawing is Wednesday. Let me buy a ticket, find out which store sold the winning ticket and then claim to have bought it and lost it. Gee...that's pretty easy! LOL

Posted: Tue Jan 06, 2004 7:11 pm
by mf_dolphin
Now the "lost" ticket woman has filed suit. I hope they put her under the jail :-)