Spanish lottery vendor who cheated winner out of $5 million jackpot faces jail

A lottery vendor has been sentenced in Spain to three-and-a-half years in prison ​for cheating the winner of a €4.7 million ($5.4 ‌million) jackpot out of his prize in 2012, court documents show.

A court in the northwestern city of A ​Coruña said the vendor realised that the ​customer had a substantial win when he ⁠asked him to check his numbers, but ​he deliberately deceived the ticket-holder by telling him ​none of them had come up.

The vendor subsequently tried to cash in the prize by claiming he had found ​the winning ticket in his shop. The local ​lottery administration refrained from paying out the prize, however, and ‌kept ⁠the ticket under custody while attempting to find out who owned it. Despite that, the lottery seller tried repeatedly to claim the prize over ​an eight-year ​period, the ⁠court documents show.

The true owner of the winning ticket died in 2014, ​but the court ordered the full ​prize ⁠be paid out to the victim’s heirs.

It found the vendor guilty of aggravated fraud. The judgment ⁠is ​not final and subject to ​appeal before the country’s Supreme Court.

($1 = 0.8688 euros)

Reporting by Javi West ​Larrañaga; Editing by David Latona and Helen Popper
Reuters

 

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Scroll to Top