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  • The lottery is rigged

    By Chicago Tribune


    Eddie Tipton looks over at his lawyers before the start of his trial in Des Moines, Iowa. The former security director of the Multi-State Lottery Association, accused of tampering with lottery drawings to rig jackpots in four states, was convicted of fraud in the attempt to claim a $16.5 million jackpot in Iowa. (Brian Powers/AP)

    The allegations read like a movie plot: a lottery industry insider installs undetectable software giving him advance knowledge of winning numbers, then enlists accomplices to play those numbers and collect the jackpots. And they secretly enrich themselves for years — until a misstep exposes them.

    Eddie Tipton, former security director of the Multi-State Lottery Association, has been convicted of fraud for fixing one jackpot in Des Moines, but prosecutors say his high-tech scheme extended far beyond Iowa. He's accused of tampering with lottery drawings in four states over six years, and investigators are expanding their inquiry nationwide.

    Investigators have asked states to review jackpots produced by the number-generators Tipton had access to, and whose winning numbers were specifically requested by the ticket buyer. They hope to talk with anyone aware of such payouts being collected by someone other than the person who ends up with the money, said Rob Sand, a state prosecutor in Des Moines who is leading the probe.

    The inquiry is sending a chill through state governments that depend on public confidence in contests that generate $20 billion annually in lottery revenue.

    "It would be pretty naive to believe they are the only four" jackpots involved, said now-retired Iowa deputy attorney general Thomas H. Miller, who oversaw the investigation for 2½ years. "If you find one cockroach, you have to assume there are 100 more you haven't found."

    Thirty-seven states and U.S. territories use random-number generators from the Iowa-based association, which administers games and distributes prizes for the lottery consortium. So far, Colorado, Wisconsin, and Oklahoma have confirmed paying jackpots valued at a total of $8 million allegedly linked to Tipton and associates.

    Tipton, 52, was sentenced to 10 years but is free pending appeal after being convicted at trial of trying to claim a $16.5 million jackpot in Iowa. He's also charged with criminal conduct and money laundering involving the other three state lotteries. His brother, Tommy Tipton, and his best friend, Robert Rhodes, are under investigation as possible accomplices.

    Rhodes' attorney did not respond to messages. Tommy Tipton, who resigned his elected judicial position in Texas last month, did not return calls. Eddie Tipton's attorney, Dean Stowers, says his client is innocent.

    "There's just absolutely no evidence whatsoever that he did anything to alter the proper operations of the computers that were used to pick those numbers, absolutely no evidence. It's just all speculation," Stowers said.

    Prosecutors say Tipton installed software known as a root kit that enabled him to manipulate numbers without a trace. What tripped him up, investigators say, was his decision to buy the winning ticket himself at a service station near the headquarters of the association, whose workers are prohibited from trying their luck.

    Iowa got suspicious in 2012 after a New York lawyer representing a newly created trust tried to claim the $16.5 million Hot Lotto jackpot on behalf of a Belize-registered corporation, turning in the ticket hours before a one-year deadline. The trust eventually withdrew the claim rather than identify the ticket purchaser.

    Investigators initially suspected the buyer was merely trying to hide the winnings from a former spouse or creditor. Still, who would walk away from $16.5 million?

    The case took an even more dramatic twist after authorities sought the public's help, releasing surveillance video showing a stocky, hooded man buying the winning ticket and hot dogs at a service station in December 2010. Lottery colleagues were stunned, stepping forward to say the man looked and sounded like Tipton.

    Eddie Tipton had worked at the association since 2003, after a career in information technology, including at a Rhodes-owned firm in Houston called Systems Evolution. He was promoted in 2013 to security director, a job that included protecting the integrity of the computer programs that generate winning numbers.

    Investigators allege that Tipton passed the winning ticket to Rhodes, a businessman in Sugar Land, Texas, who was his classmate at the University of Houston. Rhodes then passed it to a Canadian offshore banking expert who gave it to the New York lawyer who tried to collect, they said. Rhodes is now fighting extradition to Iowa, where he was charged early this year.

    Testifying at Eddie's trial in July, brother Tommy insisted the video shows some other, larger man. Besides, he added: "Eddie's not a hot dog guy."

    Colorado authorities are now investigating a $4.5 million jackpot split by three winners in 2005. Authorities say Tommy Tipton, who resigned last month as a Fayette County justice of the peace in Flatonia, Texas, received $537,000 in a cash payout after giving a friend 10 percent for claiming the prize on his behalf. Colorado lottery officials have not identified the three winners, citing the ongoing investigation.

    In Oklahoma, investigators are reviewing a $1.2 million Hot Lotto jackpot claimed by a Texas construction company owner in 2011. Iowa investigators say Eddie Tipton is linked to that drawing but haven't spelled out how.

    "This is kind of an eye-opener," said Oklahoma Lottery director Rollo Redburn. "It reaffirms the fact that we've got to be constantly vigilant against people trying to defraud the system."

    In October, Iowa authorities alleged that Tipton and Rhodes worked together to claim a prize in Wisconsin as well. The same day, Wisconsin Lottery Director Mike Edmonds asked the state's Department of Justice to investigate the $2 million Megabucks jackpot that Rhodes had a law firm claim on his behalf in 2008. Rhodes sued to have the money go to his limited liability corporation instead of him directly, although he did sign the ticket.

    On Friday, Edmonds resigned after 12 years in the job.
    Last edited by dlevere; 01-14-2016, 01:04:30 PM.
    The Hackmaster

  • #2
    That sucks. So I spose some "winners" are gonna have their monthly payouts frozen.

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    • #3
      Powerball official quits as jackpot fixing investigation spreads to more states

      A prominent lottery official who has run the Powerball game since its inception was quietly removed from his 28 year post leading the Multi-State Lottery Association after a jackpot-fixing scandal inside his organization had spread, according to a document obtained by The Associated Press.

      Charles Strutt, executive director of the association since its 1987 founding, was stripped of his duties in October by the group's board, which includes directors of lotteries in 37 states and U.S. territories. The move came days after prosecutors said their investigation of jackpot-fixing by the association's former security director, Eddie Tipton, had expanded nationwide.

      The association, which operates multi-state games such as Hot Lotto and Wild Card in addition to Powerball, has kept the leadership change quiet. It didn't announce its decision and its website lists Strutt as executive director. Idaho Lottery director Jeff Anderson, the board's chairman, said Monday he couldn't comment on a "personnel matter."

      But in an Oct. 15 email provided to the AP through an open records request, Anderson told board members that Strutt had been placed on indefinite administrative leave and that his longtime deputy, Bret Toyne, was appointed interim executive director.

      "He accepted the decision of the MUSL Board and was helpful in sharing his thoughts on what was necessary for the future," Anderson wrote of Strutt. He said that Toyne "will be an effective leader who can guide the future of the MUSL."

      Strutt declined comment, saying Anderson is the group's spokesman during "internal reviews." Investigators have said the evidence so far shows Tipton was the only lottery official involved in the scheme.

      The Urbandale, Iowa-based association has been rocked by the case against Tipton, who was convicted in July of fraud for working with associates to attempt to claim a fixed $16.5 million Hot Lotto jackpot. Strutt testified for the prosecution, saying he believed a person shown on video buying the winning ticket in Des Moines was Tipton.

      On Oct. 9th, investigators announced they had uncovered new evidence showing Tipton worked with associates to fix jackpots and claim prizes worth millions of dollars in Colorado and Wisconsin. Since then, the case has expanded to include jackpots in Oklahoma and Kansas.

      Investigators allege Tipton used his access to the association's random number generators to know winning combinations in advance, then he and his associates played those numbers and shared the prizes.

      Tipton, who denies the allegations, is scheduled to face a second trial next month. The association fired the 11-year security employee after his January arrest, replaced machines he worked on and strengthened its security measures.

      Strutt, 63, retains support among some board members and hopes to return to his position when the Tipton case concludes, said Dawn Nettles, a Texas based lottery watchdog who said she spoke with Strutt about his leave in October.

      "The truth is, the lotteries voted Chuck out. They're holding him accountable for the actions of that security guy," Nettles said. "But they don't want anybody to know."

      Strutt was its first employee when six states formed the association to offer the nation's first multi-state game, Lotto America. The group launched Powerball in 1992, and the game has since generated some of the world's largest jackpots and billions of dollars in revenue for 44 states that now participate. Strutt also helped establish the association's other games, which collectively surpass $5 billion in annual sales. He earned $322,000 in compensation in 2013.

      Nettles, a fierce lottery critic, said she's known Strutt for years and found him to be the most honest, open lottery administrator in the country.

      "I'd be disappointed for Chuck's career to end on this note," she said.

      The Associated Press contributed this report.

      Source
      The Hackmaster

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      • #4
        Where there is money there is power and not too far following is corruption.
        "Roll The Bones" - Rush
        Patreon.com/nensondubois Twitter #nensondubois_Youtube.com/user/nensondubois

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        • #5
          It's never too hard to imagine people trying to rig the lottery, there's MILLIONS of dollars. That's unbelievably hard temptation for likely 99% of the people on this planet. With millions you might not ever need to work another day in your life. Would you risk rigging/conning a million dollar game with the results being either jail time vs never working another day of your life and financially being able to afford anything you want any time? The fact these games exist is kind of a embarrassing sign for humanity at all, why not make better use of the money by investing maybe helping the poor or donating it to some good cause rather than put people at each other's throats and rob them by making them pay to hopefully get it? The greedy people that started this made the world a worse place and the saga continues to this day. There might be a point in time when humanity looks back at this in the history books and they'll vilify everybody involved, not that the villains will care with all of the money they rob people of doing it.
          July 7, 2019

          https://www.4shared.com/s/fLf6qQ66Zee
          https://www.sendspace.com/file/jvsdbd

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          • #6
            This level of corruption doesn't surprise me. People have been cheating the system since long before the word "cheat" even existed. There's even a "cheaters' row" near the ruins of many ancient Roman and Greek sports arenas and stadiums. They were the equivalent of today's "Hall of Shame" concept.

            However, in today's world, cheating to get huge sums of money can cost you even more than the money you "won" is worth. As in...years of jail time, a felony on your permanent record, and extreme difficulty getting a job anywhere, due to that felony, as well as the bad reputation you earned by cheating.
            Tempus fugit, ergo, carpe diem.

            Time flies, therefore, seize the day.

            Comment


            • #7
              No Powerball winner, Jackpot may reach $1.3 billion

              By Cara Richardson



              Lottery fever is here to stay, at least for now.

              No winning ticket was drawn in Saturday night's record Powerball jackpot of nearly $950 million, which pushes the giant pot even higher — to an estimated $1.3 billion, according to lottery officials.

              The winning numbers were 16-19-32-34-57 and the Powerball number 13. All six numbers must be correct to win, although the first five can be in any order. The odds to win the largest lottery prize in U.S. history were one in 292.2 million.

              The next Powerball drawing is Wednesday.

              When last week's Powerball drawing also failed to produce a winner, Powerball frenzy went into high gear. And as more and more players daydream about what their riches could buy and load up on $2 tickets, the jackpot has soared even higher.

              The slim odds — around one in 292 million — have hardly been a deterrent. And the giant jackpot is just what officials with the Multi-State Lottery Association, which runs the Powerball game, were hoping for when they adjusted the odds last fall. (Previously, it was about one in 175 million.)

              The whopping new jackpot started out Nov. 4 at a mere $40 million. Drawing after drawing, there has been no winner — and the pot, which has rolled over 18 times, has swollen to eye-popping levels. A winner Saturday night would have been a record; the estimated pot for Wednesday's drawing has blown past that. The previous record Powerball of $590.5 million was won by a single player in Florida in 2013.

              The U.S. saw sales of $277 million on Friday alone and more than $400 million were expected Saturday, according to Gary Grief, the executive director of the Texas Lottery, the Associated Press reported.
              The Hackmaster

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              • #8
                I knew that Powerball would eventually reach the billion-dollar mark someday. I didn't realize that it would take THIS long. If it goes ANOTHER week without a winner, then if a single person actually wins, it WILL be the first time--EVER--that someone will have become a billionaire from buying a lottery ticket, even after taxes and lump-sum fee are taken into account.

                If I were to win such a jackpot, I'd only spend enough to make sure my immediate family were well off and set for life, and give the rest to various charities. Money can do strange things to people, and I wouldn't want to succumb to "billionaire fever"--the urge to buy outlandish luxury items like yachts, mansions, and even private islands.

                I'm satisfied with just a cottage below; a little silver, and a little gold...
                --opening words to "Mansion Over the Hilltop", a classic church hymn
                Tempus fugit, ergo, carpe diem.

                Time flies, therefore, seize the day.

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                • #9
                  Don't forget the Helder charity to support my daily habits of the thing called life lol.
                  Spoiler Alert! Click to view...

                  THE BAD GUY!!!!!!

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                  • #10
                    Advice for whoever wins the $1.4 billion Powerball lottery

                    By Libby Kane


                    (Pool / Pool / Getty Images) Mark and Tiffany Cuban.

                    The Powerball lottery has reached a record high of $1.4 billion.

                    On Wednesday night, someone might win the jackpot and — even if they don’t actually take home $1.4 billion — become incredibly rich in a matter of moments.

                    Billionaire Mark Cuban has some idea of what that’s like.

                    Cuban recounted the moment he became a billionaire on an episode of James Altucher’s podcast: “I was sitting in front of a computer, naked, hitting the refresh because we were close — waiting until my net worth hit that billion when the stock price got to a certain point, and then I kinda screamed and jumped around and then got dressed."

                    Years later, what would he advise a newly minted multimillionaire or billionaire?

                    Business Insider reached out to Cuban to ask about his tips for potential lottery winners, and he shared the advice he gave his local paper, the Dallas Morning News:
                    • [The first thing you should do is] hire a tax attorney.
                    • Don’t take the lump sum. You don’t want to blow it all in one spot.
                    • If you weren’t happy yesterday, you won’t be happy tomorrow. It’s money. It’s not happiness.
                    • If you were happy yesterday, you are going to be a lot happier tomorrow. It’s money. Life gets easier when you don’t have to worry about the bills.
                    • Tell all your friends and relatives no. They will ask. Tell them no. If you are close to them, you already know who needs help and what they need. Feel free to help SOME, but talk to your accountant before you do anything and remember this, no one needs $1 million for anything. No one needs $100,000 for anything. Anyone who asks is not your friend.
                    • You don’t become a smart investor when you win the lottery. Don’t make investments. You can put it in the bank and live comfortably. Forever. You will sleep a lot better knowing you won’t lose money.


                    He also shared one last bonus tip with Business Insider: "Be nice. No one likes a mean billionaire."
                    The Hackmaster

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                    • #11
                      $1.6 billion Powerball jackpot goes to 3 winners in 3 states
                      The Hackmaster

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                      • #12
                        edit
                        Last edited by dlevere; 01-14-2016, 01:06:04 PM.
                        The Hackmaster

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                        • #13
                          Good thing I only wasted $4. Went to a gas station though and someone was buying $200 worth of tickets. Determined winner there.
                          Chat @ https://discord.gg/r5khQqf

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                          • #14
                            A bizarre statistic is this: often lottery winners are NOT the ones who buy 200 bucks worth of tickets on a weekly or even daily basis. It's somebody who just, on a whim, buys a ticket for the first time or for the first time in a long time...and wins.
                            Tempus fugit, ergo, carpe diem.

                            Time flies, therefore, seize the day.

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