| Posted: July 12, 2008, 4:27 pm - IP Logged |
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Though the issue with the Cash Blast game was a one-time problem — and the game has since been discontinued — the lottery continues to be criticized about issues with scratch-off games. The specific concern with those games is that tickets continue to be sold after top prizes have been won.
This is one thing that won't change though. All state lotteries do this, because if they didn't, they would have to stop offering the scratch-off games.
It's all based upon odds, and there are a finite number of tickets printed for each game. Say they print $500,000 in prizes and each ticket costs $5 to buy, and the top prize is $50,000. If that ticket gets sold the first day, let's say its the the one hundredth ticket sold.
The lottery has then made a gross of $500 worth of income and has paid out $50,000 on the game (or more if any of the other 99 tickets was a smaller prize winner). So they'd be in the hole for $49,500 if they had to stop selling the game just because the top prize was awarded.
Meaning that if the court decided (decides) that they can't sell tickets after the top prize is awarded, they would stop selling scratch-offs of any kind in the future. They couldn't take the chance that they would be losing money. And if that gets decided as such In Indiana, it would quickly apply to all other states.
No more scratch-offs.
Life is short. So PAY ATTENTION !