JEDI
Lifer
http://www.cnn.com/2016/02/05/us/man-claims-winning-lottery-ticket-feat
u cant see the barcode.
heck, you cant even see the numbers!
u cant see the barcode.
heck, you cant even see the numbers!
For $63.1 million, they can do a very advanced document recovery proving it.
Only if it runs on Unix.Haven't these idiots heard of Visual Basic?![]()
but the lottery now holds and refuses to return the original ticket.
lulz
I'm not sure what to make of this story, the Cali. lotto Rep. says he has no record of any claim being filed but although the bar-code is unreadable the numbers on it ( in the middle of the ticket) are readable and since the state's computer has a record of where/when every ticket is purchased he should be able to state the day/time/location of the winning ticket.
Those aren't the numbers of the draw. They're probably something to ID the roll of lotto tape. The date and location of the winning ticket sale is already public knowledge.
It's very unlikely that a ticket is too damaged to verify. More likely that verification does not fit into whatever procedure the gaming commission has established to use. There is probably pressure to let the prize lapse, which is why awarding lapsed prizes to another body (rather than make-up prizes) is a bad policy no matter how well-intentioned. Support for school boards or whatever should be built in to the lottery, not considered a windfall.
In Canada they try very hard to find winners. I'm fairly sure they have awarded prizes with no ticket at all if a complete circumstantial case can be built. With computerized sales they know exactly where and when the ticket was sold, and sometimes will have video proving who bought it.
Lottery is big business, probably stores selling tickets should be asked to keep video until whatever the window would be to contact them about having sold a winning ticket (maybe a rolling 2-week period or something like that).
Too many armchair questerbacks! The bottom line is if you can`t read the tickey -- no money!!
Those aren't the numbers of the draw. They're probably something to ID the roll of lotto tape. The date and location of the winning ticket sale is already public knowledge.
But those numbers should match the roll that was in the machine when the ticket was sold, if its the winning ticket.
If they match then pay out, esp if there is video. If not then they have a case to not pay. But seeing that have not said that and they will not even return he ticket they are making it look bad for themselves.
Define: read.
They can read the verification numbers. One only has to run that against the computer which tracks when and where the winning ticket was printed. They shouldn't even need to confirm video of who bought it - possession of the winning ticket (with signature match IIRC) is all that is necessary for lottery redemption. If that ticket is deemed a winner by way of matching the ID code printed on it, then they must payout.
They're trying to essentially get away with not awarding the prize by claiming it fails procedure, much as they would if the deadline to claim had passed.
If the money was otherwise destined for another draw, why refuse to investigate properly to prove the authenticity of the ticket? The issue here is that someone has something to gain by not paying out the jackpot.Unless Canada's the nicest place on the earth, I doubt the award with no ticket thing. And there would be too many what if's even if they had video of someone with no ticket. What if I had given you the money to buy me a ticket, so it was my winning ticket. Paying out a winning ticket without the actual ticket would open a shit storm of potential law suits. A Friend hit at the casino for $35k a few years back. He had to sit at the machine and wait for the manager to come so he could get paid, the attendant told him if he got up from the machine for anything he wouldn't get the money as it hadn't been verified by the floor manager yet. No problem, except he had to piss like a race horse and he ended up having to sit there for a little over an hour before they showed up. He told me he was close to pissing himself 25 minutes in. Obviously if $35k's on the line if you couldn't help it, you'd piss yourself.
Lottery and casinos will look for any reason to not pay out a jackpot.
Define: read.
They can read the verification numbers. One only has to run that against the computer which tracks when and where the winning ticket was printed. They shouldn't even need to confirm video of who bought it - possession of the winning ticket (with signature match IIRC) is all that is necessary for lottery redemption. If that ticket is deemed a winner by way of matching the ID code printed on it, then they must payout.
They're trying to essentially get away with not awarding the prize by claiming it fails procedure, much as they would if the deadline to claim had passed.
If that's the picture of the actual ticket, the verification numbers are absolutely 100% unreadable. I'm not sure how it works for the jackpot, but at my store if we can't scan a tickets barcode, as long as we can input the ticket # and it verifies it. The person will still get paid. Of course on a jackpot it's not going to be that simple. The only thing I see on that ticket that's readable is the lot number for the roll the ticket was printed off of. They could track that to the store, but beyond that it's of no use here since the bar code & ticket # are both FUBAR'ed
Sorry, I was referring to the lot/ticket number.
Wouldn't the machine that printed the winning ticket, or some database at least, have a connection between what was printed on what lot number? The lot /ticket number counts per every predetermined section on the roll. I'd think there would be a connection between somewhere between those numbers and what was printed. But perhaps not, I guess? Does the lottery system actually not track those numbers? I would have thought those numbers would match date and time they were printed from the system unless that is not recorded at all.