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McDonald’s worker wins $105 million jackpot… but refuses to share it

Alamaking

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Employees at a McDonald’s in Maryland are outraged at a co-worker who claims she won a $105million Mega Millions jackpot which she is not planning on sharing - despite the fact they had pooled their money for tickets.

Workers at the fast food outlet bought a number of tickets together for the biggest lottery in world history but Mirlande Wilson, 37, claims she separately bought one of the three tickets nationwide that will split a record $656 million payout.

'We had a group plan, but I went and played by myself. [The ‘winning’ ticket] wasn’t on the group plan,' Wilson told The New York Post.

'I was in the group, but this was separate. The winning ticket was a separate ticket,' the single mother of seven said as she and her fiancé left her home.
The Haitian immigrant who has seven children claimed she had hidden the winning ticket and would present it to lottery officials today.

But later she started to backtrack saying she wasn't sure whether she had won or not.

'I don’t know if I won. Some of the numbers were familiar. I recognized some of them,' she said. 'I don’t know why' people are saying differently. 'I’m going to go to the lottery office today. I bought some tickets separately.'

With winning tickets also sold in Illinois and Kansas, a single Maryland winner would get an after-tax lump sum of $105 million, or $5.59 million a year for 26 years.

Wilson’s co-workers — who make little more than $7.50 an hour — are furious at her claims she bought the winning ticket with her own money.

'She can’t do this to us!' said Suleiman Osman Husein, a shift manager and one of 15 members in the pool. 'We each paid $5. She took everybody’s money!'
A man identifying himself as the boyfriend of a McDonald’s manager named Layla, who was part of the pool, said Wilson bought tickets for the group at the 7-Eleven in Milford Mill, where the winning ticket was sold.

The group’s tickets — along with a list of those who contributed to the pool — were left in an office safe at the fast food outlet, said the man, who gave only his first name, Allen, as he stood next to Layla. She declined to comment.

Then, late Friday, before the night’s drawing, the owner of the McDonald’s, Birul Desai, gave Wilson $5 to buy more tickets for the pool on her way home from work, and she went back to the 7-Eleven and bought them, Allen said.

Wilson took those tickets home with her, Allen said.

But the mother-of-seven insisted yesterday that the batch with the winning ticket in it was bought separately by her while she was with a friend.
According to the Post, when she found out she had the winning ticket, she called coworkers and told them she - rather than they - had won.

'I won! I won!' she told a colleague.
McDonald's worker Davon Wilson said he was there when Wilson called.

'She said, "Turn on the news". She said she had won. I thought it was a joke or something. She doesn’t seem like a person who’d do this,' he said.
Allen told the Post he and Layla then went to Wilson's home to question her about the winning ticket. Though she first refused to come out, they banged on her door for 20 minutes until she finally relented.

'These people are going to kill you. It’s not worth your life!' Allen said he told her.

'All right! All right! I’ll share, but I can’t find the ticket right now,' she said, according to Allen.

A clerk at the 7-Eleven where Wilson bought the tickets said they believed it was a man who had bought the winning ticket and doubted that Wilson's story was actually true after lottery officials reviewed the store’s CCTV footage.

Carole Everett said they had no information about the Maryland winner and whether it was a man or a woman who bought the winning ticket.
She said: 'Right now, everything is just speculation and gossip. Until someone comes through that door and hands over the winning ticket we will not know who the winner is.'
 
Oh, i see lawyers, i see law suits, i see many years of nightmares for them. Another group of people ruin by lottery.
 
CURSE OF THE LOTTERY WINNERS
Previous lottery winners have found that winning an eye-popping jackpot wasn't exactly the dream come true they hoped it would be. In fact for some, it turned into a nightmare.

In 2006, truck driver Abraham Shakespeare won a $31 million Florida lottery prize. He was reportedly hounded by friends and relatives asking for money. A year later, he was in court defending himself from an accusation of theft by a trucker who accused him of stealing the winning ticket from him. In 2008, his new girlfriend Dee Dee Moore stole $1.8million from him. He was found dead on January 28, 2010, and police later arrested Moore for the shooting.

Jack Whittaker, a West Virginian who won $315 million in 2002, was robbed at a strip club shortly after he won and then started drinking to excess. He was arrested in 2003 for DUI. His granddaughter died of an apparent drug overdose shortly after her boyfriend died under similar circumstances. In 2005 his wife divorced him and by 2007, he said his bank accounts were largely empty. He told reporters: 'I wished I'd torn that ticket up.'

Rick Camat was one of 13 Starbucks co-workers who split an $87 million California Lottery jackpot in 2000, each winning $6.6 million share. In October 2004, Camat was shot and killed by Seattle police officers responding to a disturbance outside a nightclub where a number of people, including Camat, were involved in a fight.

Jeffrey Dampier won a $20 million Illinois Lotto in 1996, he used the money to bring his family closer together, relocating his parents and family to Florida to enjoy his new prosperity. Soon after his wife divorced him. In 2005, his sister-in-law and her boyfriend lured him to their home under false pretenses before kidnapping and shooting him.
 
After you win, just keep quiet. Do not tell anyone and put up a normal act. slowly make plans to act like you have done well in business and sold the business...

That will be a good discreet act to prevent trouble.

Or just live a normal life and buy some good items you enjoy, dun spend too much in a short time, slowly ... set up a small business and show that it did well and you earn the cash deservedly.

Must be smart to stay away from trouble..
 
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CURSE OF THE LOTTERY WINNERS
Previous lottery winners have found that winning an eye-popping jackpot wasn't exactly the dream come true they hoped it would be. In fact for some, it turned into a nightmare.

In 2006, truck driver Abraham Shakespeare won a $31 million Florida lottery prize. He was reportedly hounded by friends and relatives asking for money. A year later, he was in court defending himself from an accusation of theft by a trucker who accused him of stealing the winning ticket from him. In 2008, his new girlfriend Dee Dee Moore stole $1.8million from him. He was found dead on January 28, 2010, and police later arrested Moore for the shooting.

Jack Whittaker, a West Virginian who won $315 million in 2002, was robbed at a strip club shortly after he won and then started drinking to excess. He was arrested in 2003 for DUI. His granddaughter died of an apparent drug overdose shortly after her boyfriend died under similar circumstances. In 2005 his wife divorced him and by 2007, he said his bank accounts were largely empty. He told reporters: 'I wished I'd torn that ticket up.'

Rick Camat was one of 13 Starbucks co-workers who split an $87 million California Lottery jackpot in 2000, each winning $6.6 million share. In October 2004, Camat was shot and killed by Seattle police officers responding to a disturbance outside a nightclub where a number of people, including Camat, were involved in a fight.

Jeffrey Dampier won a $20 million Illinois Lotto in 1996, he used the money to bring his family closer together, relocating his parents and family to Florida to enjoy his new prosperity. Soon after his wife divorced him. In 2005, his sister-in-law and her boyfriend lured him to their home under false pretenses before kidnapping and shooting him.

I am surprise these people kill for money. There are many fun and exciting way to earn money and they miss such fun.

I know there is a sg guy who won a lottery and set up a shipping firm and become very prosperous. Not all lottery stories are bad.
 
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After you win, just keep quiet. Do not tell anyone and put up a normal act. slowly make plans to act like you have done well in business and sold the business...

That will be a good discreet act to prevent trouble.

Or just live a normal life and buy some good items you enjoy, dun spend too much in a short time, slowly ... set up a small business and show that it did well and you earn the cash deservedly.

Must be smart to stay away from trouble..

Its hard to keep a secret lah, once your relatives knew, siao liao......
 
http://www.oddee.com/item_97101.aspx

1) Callie Rogers - The teenager girl who spent all her money on clothes, parties and silicone

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Callie Rogers was once the world's luckiest teenager. At the tender age of 16, Ms. Rogers won £1.9million lottery. That was, at the time, about $3 million. Now it's all gone. The ecstatic girl spent her winnings on vacations, homes, shopping, friends, and even a couple of breast improvements. Six years and two attempts of suicide later, Rogers is a 22-year-old single mother of two. She now works as a maid to sustain herself and her family. She is paying off debt induced by her spending

2) Janite Lee – The Missourian who gave away her money to politics, education and the community and ended up with nothing left

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Sometimes, even good intentions can get wildly out of hand -- as was the case for Janite Lee, the 52-year-old woman, who landed an $18 million payout from the Missouri Lottery back in 1993. The South Korean immigrant immediately began to contribute chunks of her wealth to various educational programs, community services and political organizations. Besides the usual million-dollar house and cars, Lee reportedly donated more than $1 million to Washington University, where her namesake reading room commemorates the occasion. She reportedly donated $277,000 to Democratic political candidates, earning herself meals with Bill Clinton, Al Gore, and even the President of South Korea. She didn't stop there. $30,000 went to the family of a South Korean church pastor who passed away. The St. Louis Korean American Association received a house from her. Another Korean adoption-related association also benefited. Lee's philanthropy was expensive. But combined with her gambling habit—she lost $347,000 in a single year—bank loans, and credit card debt, it harkened disaster. She filed Chapter 7 bankruptcy in 2001. (Link)

3) "Jack" Whittaker Jr - The once biggest lottery winner who lost $114 million in four years

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Whittaker did some good, but his bad deeds make his story. He was arrested twice, once for drunk driving and once for threatening a bar manager. A woman sued him after he groped her at a dog racetrack. Thieves took $545,000 in cash from Whittaker's car while he was visiting a strip club. About a year later, thieves again stole $200,000 from his car. Caesars Atlantic City sued him for bouncing $1.5 million in checks. His wife divorced him. Then, there were the dead bodies. In 2003, Whittaker's granddaughter's boyfriend was found dead of an overdose inside Whittaker's home. His 17-year-old granddaughter, whom he had been giving a $2,100 weekly allowance, fatally overdosed months later, at a different location. His daughter—mother of the dead granddaughter—died this year of as-yet-undetermined causes. When reached for comment, Whittaker, now with no family and no fortune, said "I wish I'd torn that ticket up." (Link 1 | Link 2)

4) Ken Proxmire – The machinist who won $1 million, went into car business and bankrupt in 4 years

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Ken Proxmire was a machinist when he won $1 million in the Michigan lottery. He moved to California and went into the car business with his brothers. Within five years, he had filed for bankruptcy. "He was just a poor boy who got lucky and wanted to take care of everybody," explains Ken's son Rick. "It was a hell of a good ride for three or four years, but now he lives more simply. There's no more talk of owning a helicopter or riding in limos. We're just everyday folks. Dad's now back to work as a machinist," says his son.

5) Evelyn Adams – The woman won the lottery twice and now lives in a trailer

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Everyone knows the odds of winning the lottery once are astronomical. But Evelyn Adams beat those odds -- twice. The New Jersey resident hit the jackpot in 1985 and 1986 to the sum of $5.4 million. But Adams was a heavy gambler. And with Atlantic City being located in New Jersey, it wasn't long before Adams had lost all her money. Twenty years later, Adams is broke and living in a trailer. (Link)

6) Jeffrey Dampier – The man who won 20 million in the lottery and was murdered by his greedy in-laws

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Think your in-laws are a pain in the ass? Consider the case of Jeffrey Dampier who won $20 million in the Illinois Lottery in 1986. Upon receiving his prize, the generous winner immediately began showering friends and family with expensive gifts, including cars, houses and trips to exotic places. Unfortunately, that wasn't enough for Dampier's sister-in-law, Victoria Jackson. On the night of July 26, 2005, Jackson and her boyfriend, Nathaniel Jackson (not related), kidnapped the millionaire and shot him once in the back of the head, killing him instantly -- jealousy was deemed the motive. Both were charged with Dampier's murder and sentenced to life in prison. (Link)

7) Suzanne Mullins – The woman who won $4.2 million and yet needed a loan to pay her bills

a97101_g060_7-suzane2.jpg


Mullins won the lottery back in 1993 and opted for yearly payouts instead of a lump sum. She planned on splitting the 20 annual payments of $47,800 with her husband and daughter. However, within five years, she found herself in debt and used her future payouts as collateral for a $200,000 loan. Mullins later switched to a lump sum payout but never paid back her debts. The loan company filed suit and won judgment for a $154k settlement but they haven't collected anything because Mullins reportedly has no assets. She blamed the debt on the lengthy illness of her uninsured son-in-law, who needed $1 million for medical bills. (Link)

8) Billy Bob Harrell Jr. - The preacher who won $31 million, lent it all, lost his money and wife and later committed suicide

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A Pentecostal preacher working as a stockboy at Home Depot hit the $31 million jackpot back in 1997. At first, life was good with Billy Bob buying a ranch, six other homes, and some new cars. Like many others who win the lottery, he was unable to simply say "NO!" when people asked him for a handout. Later in life he divorced his wife and eventually committed suicide, the stress was apparently too much to handle for this lottery winner. (Link)

9) Michael Carroll –The garbage man who won the lottery, lost it all with party and prostitutes and now is applying for his old job

a97101_g060_9-garbage-man.jpg


Want to know how to fritter away a multi-million lottery fortune? Ask Michael Carroll: The unemployed 26-year-old Brit has blown a £9.7 million jackpot he won in 2002 (approximately $15 million at the time) and is currently hoping to get his old job back as a garbageman. At first, Carroll lavished gifts on friends and family, but soon started spending on less admirable causes: Cocaine, parties, cars, and, at one point, up to four prostitutes a day. Only a year after his winning, he was smoking £2,000 of crack cocaine every day and hosting drug and drink fuelled parties at his £325,000 home, the notorious Grange in Downham, Norfolk. After his wife left him, Carroll turned to prostitutes. He boasted about sleeping with four a day - a total of 2,000 at a cost of £100,000 over eight years - in order to sate his sexual appetite. He also lost £1million on the dogs and horses and even injected £1million into his favourite football team, Rangers. He was down to his last £500,000 cash in 2008 and last year sold his £400,000 fleet of luxury cars and spent the proceeds.

Now he is collecting a £42 a week in jobseeker's allowance. According to him it's easier to live off £42 dole than a million." (Link)

10) Vivian Nicholson – The famous lottery winner who said she would ‘spend, spend, spend' and so she did

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Vivian Nicholson famously claimed she would “spend, spend, spend” after winning £152,300 (worth about £3 million in today's money) when playing the Castleford football pools in 1961.

And Viv Nicholson was as good as her word, blowing her massive jackpot in less than five years. Since then she has been widowed, married five times, suffered from a stroke and has been treated for alcoholism, deported from Malta, became a Jehovah's Witnesses, tried to commit suicide and spent time in a mental institution. She spent her winnings on Harrods dresses, luxury cars and holidays and was the subject of the West End production of her life, aptly called “Spend, Spend, Spend”, with Barbara Dickenson playing her role. She is now living on a week pension of £87. (Link)
 
Illegal immigrant wins Houston County lottery ticket lawsuit


BEAU CABELL/THE TELEGRAPH Erick Cervantes confers with his attorney Kelly Burke on Thursday before a Houston County jury returned to award Jose Antonio “Tony” Cua-Toc $25,000 in punitive damages in a lawsuit about a winning lottery ticket.


PERRY -- After deliberating only 35 minutes Thursday, a Houston County jury awarded ownership of a $750,000 lottery ticket to an illegal immigrant who claimed he was taken advantage of by the man he had worked for as a day laborer.

Jose Antonio “Tony” Cua-Toc, 27, a native of Guatemala who entered the country illegally in 2000, had filed a lawsuit against Erick Cervantes, a Fort Valley business owner who claimed the winning Jingle Jumbo Bucks lottery ticket from Georgia lottery officials.

Cua-Toc’s winnings after taxes total $517,500, according to his attorneys. A jury also awarded him $207,000 in attorney’s fees, as well as $25,000 in punitive damages.

Cua-Toc purchased the winning ticket Nov. 17, 2010, from the OM Food Mart at 700 Feagin Mill Road in Warner Robins. But because Cua-Toc was undocumented, Erick Cervantes claimed the winnings on Cua-Toc’s behalf but then kept the money. Cervantes had claimed he was the rightful owner of the ticket, having given Cua-Toc $20 to purchase the ticket for him.

Juror Shannon Milanek, a 41-year-old nurse from Warner Robins, said the jury’s verdict came down to surveillance video from the store where the ticket was purchased. The video shows a smiling Cua-Toc raising his hands in the air after the winning ticket is validated by the store owner.

During closing arguments, Charles R. Adams III, of Fort Valley, one of Cua-Toc’s attorneys, had played the video again for jurors. The video also shows Cua-Toc hugging and kissing his girlfriend. He also sends photos of the winning ticket to his friends from his cell phone.

Adams asked jurors while the video played, “Is this the reaction of somebody who bought a ticket for someone else and is going to have to give it to his boss tomorrow?”

The jury did not have any law to go on regarding whether the ticket belonged to the person who purchased it or the person who provided the money to purchase it, Milanek said. Ultimately, jurors decided that the ticket was Cua-Toc’s because he made the purchase, Milanek said.

Kelly Burke, one of the Warner Robins attorneys representing Cervantes, had argued that the civil case heard in Houston County Superior Court was about “Mr. Cua-Toc’s desperate grab to get a hold of some money.”

Adams expressed gratitude for the jury’s verdict.

“Only in America can this sort of justice be done,” Adams said.

Punitive damages

After the verdict, the court recessed for lunch and then returned for the same jury to hear arguments during a separate hearing on the amount to award in punitive damages.

Jeff Lasseter, the other attorney representing Cervantes, sought “compassion” from jurors -- noting testimony during the trial that Cervantes was a generous man and had three children. Lasseter pleaded with jurors not to pile on punitive damages -- noting the verdict was punishment enough and asking jurors to award only $1 in damages.

But Adams asked jurors to send “a definite, sharp message and a lasting reminder not only to Erick Cervantes but to all the Erick Cervanteses everywhere.”

He argued Erick Cervantes and then-wife Sonia Cervantes were living the American dream and spending the lottery ticket winnings while Cua-Toc sat in jail on a falsified terroristic charge. Cua-Toc, who testified during the four-day trial through court interpreter Nancy A. King, denied threatening the Cervantes family.

Adams, who did not ask the jury for a specific amount to be awarded, did detail about $223,000 in lottery revenues that had been spent by Erick and Sonia Cervantes -- including a $41,489 house payment, $47,000 in legal fees to attorneys, a $24,923 van payment, a $43,000 payment to the IRS, a $10,000 gift to the parents of Sonia Cervantes, a $10,000 loan to a friend and other gift amounts to relatives and friends.

Adams told jurors about $300,000 remains of the lottery funds that were frozen by the court Dec. 31, 2010, after the filing of the lawsuit by Cua-Toc against Erick and Sonia Cervantes. Sonia Cervantes was dismissed from the lawsuit during the trial by mutual agreement of attorneys, Burke said.

The aftermath

After the court proceedings, Burke expressed disappointment with the verdict but respect for the jury and the jury system.

He said grounds for appeal are being explored. But Burke also said he has already reached out to Adams about a settlement amount.

Adams said it would be inappropriate to talk about a settlement. Another court hearing is expected to be scheduled on the amount of lottery funds that should be awarded based on Cua-Toc’s attorneys’ estimate of $517,500 after federal taxes compared with the estimate of $460,000 that also includes the deduction of state taxes as estimated by attorneys for Cervantes.

In instructions to jurors for deliberations, Judge George F. Nunn stated that Georgia law does not prohibit the sale of a lottery ticket to a foreign national over the age of 18. Testimony during the trial indicated that Cua-Toc believed he did not have the proper documentation to receive the ticket proceeds on his own.

Cua-Toc, who had been living in Fort Valley after an Atlanta immigration attorney won him the right in September to stay in the country for the civil case, is currently serving 44 days in the Houston County jail on a Jan. 31 drunken driving conviction.

A U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement hold was placed against Cua-Toc Jan. 31. Generally, ICE holds are not activated until after adjudication of a local criminal case, which includes sentencing, according to ICE spokesman Vincent Picard.

Cua-Toc was initially jailed Nov. 27, 2010, in Houston County on a terroristic threats charge for allegedly threatening Cervantes and his family. District Attorney George Hartwig previously has stated he does not expect to proceed with the case if Cua-Toc returns to Guatemala. But if Cua-Toc were to remain in the country, Hartwig said, “It’s certainly still on the table. The charges are still pending.”

Hartwig could not be reached immediately late Thursday afternoon for additional comment in light of the jury’s verdict.
 
Too Be honest,,if she really cheats her workers,,,she will suffer the curse of the lottery winners..

to be honest..if you win keep quiet about it,,put the money in trust,,,get it drawn bit by bit,,,I mean draw down 1 million a year still got spare change wat,,,

also do not tell anyone...buy things for family,...just buy small simple stuff,,,maybe blanjah family more often,,,bring them to good restaurants etc...dont be stingy but dont be over generous...CNY give bigger ang pao to those who were good to you...

win have to 'redistribute' but have to do it wisely,,,now with this woman face splash in the international media,....she is bound to loose it...
 
Too Be honest,,if she really cheats her workers,,,she will suffer the curse of the lottery winners..

to be honest..if you win keep quiet about it,,put the money in trust,,,get it drawn bit by bit,,,I mean draw down 1 million a year still got spare change wat,,,

also do not tell anyone...buy things for family,...just buy small simple stuff,,,maybe blanjah family more often,,,bring them to good restaurants etc...dont be stingy but dont be over generous...CNY give bigger ang pao to those who were good to you...

win have to 'redistribute' but have to do it wisely,,,now with this woman face splash in the international media,....she is bound to loose it...

Think the problem with the west is that lottery winners are pictured in the papers. No road to run. Not like Singapore where it is totally anonymous. I agree with most suggestions put up here.

For me, I would just go collect my money, throw it inside a bank and wait for three months to let myself cool down. In the meantime, just spend a bit more. Also will never ever tell anyone. Go into business and claim that biz is good.
 
Think the problem with the west is that lottery winners are pictured in the papers. No road to run. Not like Singapore where it is totally anonymous. I agree with most suggestions put up here.

For me, I would just go collect my money, throw it inside a bank and wait for three months to let myself cool down. In the meantime, just spend a bit more. Also will never ever tell anyone. Go into business and claim that biz is good.


So in the West cant the winners choose to remain anonymous? I mean if u tell the lottery commission you chose to be anonymous,,they cant print yr details out as they have strong privacy laws,,,your ideas on hiding the winnings is good too,,hope I am lucky enough to use it in future..:)
 
Too Be honest,,if she really cheats her workers,,,she will suffer the curse of the lottery winners..

to be honest..if you win keep quiet about it,,put the money in trust,,,get it drawn bit by bit,,,I mean draw down 1 million a year still got spare change wat,,,

also do not tell anyone...buy things for family,...just buy small simple stuff,,,maybe blanjah family more often,,,bring them to good restaurants etc...dont be stingy but dont be over generous...CNY give bigger ang pao to those who were good to you...

win have to 'redistribute' but have to do it wisely,,,now with this woman face splash in the international media,....she is bound to loose it...


Was watching CNBC & they recommended that for someone who has $50 million to put it in bonds & they would at least have $1 million plus each year in perpertuity.
Many of those with sad stories are the poor who have never had any spare cash in their life & when they get all that $$$ they don't know how to handle.
 
If you've won... then show us the ticket! Mega Millions boss skeptical of $105m jackpot 'winner'
McDonald's worker Mirlande Wilson, 37, claimed she bought winning ticket... and co-workers furious as they put up money


The mystery surrounding the Mega Millions winners deepened as lottery executives said until the lucky three came forward with tickets, any claims to have scooped the top prize were nothing but speculation and rumour.
Three ticket-holders in Maryland, Kansas and Illinois will split the record $656 million payout. No winner has yet come forward to lottery officials in the states to claim their multi-million dollar share.
Rumours were swirling around Mirlande Wilson, 37, a McDonald's employee from Maryland who claimed to hold one of the winning slips. However she had yet to produce a ticket and has disappeared, leaving Mega Millions officials skeptical.

Lucky winner? Mirlande Wilson, said she bought the winning ticket with her own money rather than the pooled money with co-workers at McDonald's in Maryland

Not lovin' it: Davon Wilson, left, and Suleman Ousman Husein - McDonald's workers who were in the Mega Millions pool with 13 colleagues, including Mirlande Wilson
Stephen Martino, Maryland lottery director, told ABC: 'We don't know any more than the public or media does and it's all speculation and we're not going to get involved in that.'
Another official added: 'It's probably not this person.'
Winners in Maryland and Illinois have six months to claim the money - Kansas's newest multimillionaire has up to a year.


Both Maryland and Kansas will allow winners to remain anonymous but the lucky ticket-holder in Illinois will be identified.
Ms Wilson had enraged her co-workers with claims of her scoop after she revealed to the New York Post that she was not planning on sharing the millions - despite the fact they had pooled their money for tickets.
Workers at the fast food outlet bought a number of tickets together for the biggest lottery in world history but Ms Wilson claimed she separately bought one of the three winning tickets.
'We had a group plan, but I went and played by myself. [The ‘winning’ ticket] wasn’t on the group plan,' Wilson told The New York Post.


Celebration: The Milford store is proudly displaying that they sold one of the winning tickets though the person who bought it has yet to come forward
'I was in the group, but this was separate. The winning ticket was a separate ticket,' the single mother of seven said as she and her fiancé left her home.
The Haitian immigrant claimed she had hidden the winning ticket and would present it to lottery officials today.
WHAT ARE THE CHANCES...?
A Kansas man was struck by lightning hours after buying three Mega Millions lottery tickets on Thursday, proving in real life the old saying that a gambler is more likely to be struck down from the sky than win the jackpot.
Bill Isles, 48, bought three tickets in the record $656 million lottery Thursday at a Wichita, Kansas grocery store.
On the way to his car, Isles said he commented to a friend: 'I've got a better chance of getting struck by lightning" than winning the lottery.
Later at about 9:30pm, Isles was standing in the back yard of his Wichita duplex, when he saw a flash and heard a boom -- lightning.
'It threw me to the ground quivering," Isles said in a telephone interview on Saturday. 'It kind of scrambled my brain and gave me an irregular heartbeat.'
Isles said doctors wanted to make sure his heartbeat was back to normal. He suffered no burns or other physical effects from the strike, which he said could have been worse because his yard has a power line pole.
But later she started to backtrack saying she wasn't sure whether she had won or not.
'I don’t know if I won. Some of the numbers were familiar. I recognized some of them,' she said.
'I don’t know why people are saying differently. 'I’m going to go to the lottery office today. I bought some tickets separately.'
With winning tickets also sold in Illinois and Kansas, a single Maryland winner would get an after-tax lump sum of $105 million, or $5.59 million a year for 26 years.
Wilson’s co-workers - who make little more than $7.50 an hour - are furious at her claims she bought the winning ticket with her own money.
'She can’t do this to us!' said Suleiman Osman Husein, a shift manager and one of 15 members in the pool.
'We each paid $5. She took everybody’s money!'
A man identifying himself as the boyfriend of a McDonald’s manager named Layla, who was part of the pool, said Wilson bought tickets for the group at the 7-Eleven in Milford Mill, where the winning ticket was sold.
The group’s tickets - along with a list of those who contributed to the pool - were left in an office safe at the fast food outlet, said the man, who gave only his first name, Allen, as he stood next to Layla. She declined to comment.
Then, late Friday, before the night’s drawing, the owner of the McDonald’s, Birul Desai, gave Wilson $5 to buy more tickets for the pool on her way home from work, and she went back to the 7-Eleven and bought them, Allen said. Wilson took those tickets home with her, Allen said.

Empty: The Brooklyn, Maryland, home where Ms Wilson is thought to live with her seven children, though no one was home today when reporters called

Store: Wilson told the New York Post she stopped by the Milford Mill 7-Eleven after work to buy tickets for herself with a friend and not with the pooled money from work
But the mother-of-seven insisted yesterday that the batch with the winning ticket in it was bought separately by her while she was with a friend.
According to the Post, when she found out she had the winning ticket, she called co-workers and told them she - rather than they - had won.
'I won! I won!' she told a colleague.
McDonald's worker Davon Wilson said he was there when Wilson called.
MEGAMILLIONS IN NUMBERS

'She said, "Turn on the news". She said she had won. I thought it was a joke or something. She doesn’t seem like a person who’d do this,' he said.
Allen told the Post he and Layla then went to Wilson's home to question her about the winning ticket.
Though she first refused to come out, they banged on her door for 20 minutes until she finally relented.
'These people are going to kill you. It’s not worth your life!' Allen said he told her.
'All right! All right! I’ll share, but I can’t find the ticket right now,' she said, according to Allen.
A clerk at the 7-Eleven where Wilson bought the tickets said they believed it was a man who had bought the winning ticket and doubted that Wilson's story was actually true after lottery officials reviewed the store’s CCTV footage.
Carole Everett said they had no information about the Maryland winner and whether it was a man or a woman who bought the winning ticket.
She said: 'Right now, everything is just speculation and gossip.
'Until someone comes through that door and hands over the winning ticket we will not know who the winner is.'
If Wilson won, and if it was with a pooled work ticket, the situation would be very similar to that of New Jersey man Americo Lopes, who was sued by his former colleagues after he claimed he was the sole winner of a $38.5 million Mega Millions lottery jackpot.
The five construction workers say they and Lopes were members of a weekly lottery pool, each person contributing $2 and Lopes would buy the tickets.
He claimed he played the lottery both by himself and as a member of the pool and that the winning ticket in the November 2009 drawing was one he bought for himself. Lopes chose the lump-sum payment option and received $24 million.

A woman buys Mega Millions lottery tickets at a shop on New York City's upper west side of Manhattan
A jury found that he wrongly refused to share the lottery win with his friends and ordered that he pay them $4million each.
The three jackpot-winning tickets were purchased in Red Bud, Illinois, Baltimore County, Maryland, and Kansas, where state lottery officials have said only that the ticket was sold in the northeast part of the state.
In Illinois, the Chicago Tribune said a second jackpot winner, who also has yet to step forward, bought a quick-pick ticket at a gas station and convenience store in Red Bud, a community of about 3,700 in southwestern Illinois.
There were also some big consolation prizes. Lottery officials said 161 ticket holders won $250,000 each by matching the first five numbers, and 897 people won $10,000 by matching four numbers plus the stand-alone Mega Ball.
The Maryland and Kansas winners are allowed to remain anonymous because of state laws, but in Illinois, the winner has to be publicized.
Though lottery officials say they encourage winners to come forward and enjoy their 15 minutes of fame.
A donut shop worker in California quit his job after winning $228,000 from Friday's draw.
It took Lazaro Ramos less than an hour to hand in his resignation after he discovered he was among 29 Californians to match five of the six winning numbers in Friday's drawing.
He plans to return to his home country Guatemala to open up his own restaurant.
The winning numbers in Friday night's drawing were 02-04-23-38-46, and the Mega Ball 23.
 
Was watching CNBC & they recommended that for someone who has $50 million to put it in bonds & they would at least have $1 million plus each year in perpertuity.
Many of those with sad stories are the poor who have never had any spare cash in their life & when they get all that $$$ they don't know how to handle.

Wah that is a good man,,1 million per year,,and compound interest,,every is a bigger year,,,than after year 2,,,use that 1 mill each year to buy one house,,,,if house prices stay the same,,,every year get 1 house,,,if not it appreciates will get more too,,its a win win situation,,,but if place in bonds,,,can get insurance to protect the 'principle'???
 
Wah that is a good man,,1 million per year,,and compound interest,,every is a bigger year,,,than after year 2,,,use that 1 mill each year to buy one house,,,,if house prices stay the same,,,every year get 1 house,,,if not it appreciates will get more too,,its a win win situation,,,but if place in bonds,,,can get insurance to protect the 'principle'???

meg millions chance is 1 in 170 millions, 20 times the odds of being strike by lighting. you can dream of buying 1 house each year, but only dreams.
 
Yeah such odds are really next to impossible,,but must buy ticket to win,,dont buy how to win?
 
Wah that is a good man,,1 million per year,,and compound interest,,every is a bigger year,,,than after year 2,,,use that 1 mill each year to buy one house,,,,if house prices stay the same,,,every year get 1 house,,,if not it appreciates will get more too,,its a win win situation,,,but if place in bonds,,,can get insurance to protect the 'principle'???

If you worry about security you can always invest in Spore bonds:p

With that much money you can invest in a basketful of bonds & minimise the risk of default. Bonds are considered the safest but the returns are not as high as equities. I'd probably diversify into bonds, equities, etc. Nowadays even growth company are giving dividens e.g. Apple
 
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