Follow-Up: Couple’s lottery 5-week winning streak was simple luck

Jul 24, 2005, 2:13 pm (27 comments)

Wisconsin Lottery

When Jeffrey Hintz won the Wisconsin Lottery’s second-chance drawing five weeks in a row, some in state government got a little suspicious.

Turns out, Hintz just got lucky, an investigation concluded.

Investigators with the state’s Department of Revenue found no signs of fraud in his five-week winning streak in March and April.

Hintz and his wife, Lisa, have won almost $73,000 in cash prizes from the state lottery since 1999. More than $65,000 came from drawings.

But the couple’s five-week winning streak in the lottery’s weekly second-chance drawing raised suspicions of fraud and prompted Rep. David Cullen, D-Milwaukee, to request the investigation.

Given how many tickets they were sending in for the drawing, the odds of their winning five times in a row were 1 in 14,397, auditors said.

Jeffrey Hintz told auditors he spent thousands of dollars on lottery tickets every week and countless hours stamping envelopes with the lottery’s address so he could enter losing tickets in the weekly drawings.

Auditors estimated Hintz sent in 500 entries for the drawings each week. People are allowed to enter the drawings as often as they want, but each entry must include at least $5 worth of tickets. That means Hintz was sending in at least $2,500 in tickets a week, and postage alone would have cost $185 a week.

“It doesn’t necessarily surprise me that that someone would be that lucky,” Cullen said. “It surprises me that someone would (enter that often). They’re spending a lot of time and resources on the lottery.”

Auditors said Hintz bought most of the tickets he sent in, but players do not have to purchase all the tickets they enter. One retailer said Hintz sometimes picked up discarded tickets off the floor.

Another retailer said Hintz typically buys $30 to $100 in tickets a day. A grocery store employee said Hintz would buy $70 a day over his lunch break, and he sometimes spends $400 at a time on tickets.

Hintz told auditors he made up stamps with his name and address and with the lottery’s address on them so he could more quickly enter batches of tickets in the second-chance drawing. He said he sent the entries on different days and from different locations because he believed it would boost his chances of winning.

Hintz told auditors he was no longer entering the drawings because of news coverage. The Hintzes did not return a message left at their home Saturday by The Associated Press.

AP

Comments

JAP69's avatarJAP69

 

Win to often you get investigated WHHEEEEEEEW

Maverick's avatarMaverick

 

Win to often you get investigated WHHEEEEEEEW

You said it! Crazy

SirMetro's avatarSirMetro

Rep. David Cullen, D-Milwaukee <=== Guess some politicians just can not stand the thought of somebody being more of a crook then they are huh?

SirMetro's avatarSirMetro

 

Win to often you get investigated WHHEEEEEEEW

well...guess it's better then getting your legs broken and left in the desert like it use to be in the old Vegas huh?

LOTTOMIKE's avatarLOTTOMIKE

Let It All Out

Rip Snorter

I suppose that must mean that if a person figured out a consistent way to predict what numbers were going to hit, and if he entered freqently to use the system, it would be considered fraud?

I'm betting those folks won't be winning again for a while, even if they have a system.  Never seen a fortune cookie with a 'Get out of jail free' card inside.

Jack

Badger's avatarBadger

I suppose that must mean that if a person figured out a consistent way to predict what numbers were going to hit, and if he entered freqently to use the system, it would be considered fraud?

I'm betting those folks won't be winning again for a while, even if they have a system.  Never seen a fortune cookie with a 'Get out of jail free' card inside.

Jack

But everyone seems to passover the following: "

Auditors estimated Hintz sent in 500 entries for the drawings each week. People are allowed to enter the drawings as often as they want, but each entry must include at least $5 worth of tickets. That means Hintz was sending in at least $2,500 in tickets a week, and postage alone would have cost $185 a week. "

 

That's INSANE spending !

Rip Snorter

Depends on whether it was really all a matter of luck, and whether they won more than they lost.  Or whether, if they lost, they didn't lose their shirt.

Nice thing about the lottery is that it's something the family can do together that doesn't involve talking heads and rap music, or whips and handcuffs.  These folks must have spent all their time filling out slips.  If they have kids, they won't remember pop sitting around watching football and slugging down beer and chips.  They'll remember 'doing' things with mom and dad.

J

DoctorEw220's avatarDoctorEw220

Quoting the article, "Jeffrey Hintz told auditors he spent thousands of dollars on lottery tickets every week and countless hours stamping envelopes with the lottery’s address so he could enter losing tickets in the weekly drawings."

 And once again, "Another retailer said Hintz typically buys $30 to $100 in tickets a day. A grocery store employee said Hintz would buy $70 a day over his lunch break, and he sometimes spends $400 at a time on tickets."

 

I'm not too worried about  possibility of fraud with them winning that much that often.  I'm more worried if they will break even seeing how much they play. 

orangeman

How dare someone actually win the lottery!

Bad lottery player!

Bad lottery player!

Orangeman                            Chair

LOTTOMIKE's avatarLOTTOMIKE

i agree,its silly that if we win too much they do that.even if one person starts winning a lot it isn't like that one person is gonna make the lottery commission go broke,if anything the lottery ought to advertise it and that will make more players play.turn a positive into a positive.

Tnplayer805's avatarTnplayer805

Quoting the article, "Jeffrey Hintz told auditors he spent thousands of dollars on lottery tickets every week and countless hours stamping envelopes with the lottery’s address so he could enter losing tickets in the weekly drawings."

 And once again, "Another retailer said Hintz typically buys $30 to $100 in tickets a day. A grocery store employee said Hintz would buy $70 a day over his lunch break, and he sometimes spends $400 at a time on tickets."

 

I'm not too worried about  possibility of fraud with them winning that much that often.  I'm more worried if they will break even seeing how much they play. 

I hope he has enough money to cover all of that plus his bills too.  That sounds like a lot to me BUT it all depends on income.

LOTTOMIKE's avatarLOTTOMIKE

it does come out to be a lot of money spent.....

Badger's avatarBadger

Depends on whether it was really all a matter of luck, and whether they won more than they lost.  Or whether, if they lost, they didn't lose their shirt.

Nice thing about the lottery is that it's something the family can do together that doesn't involve talking heads and rap music, or whips and handcuffs.  These folks must have spent all their time filling out slips.  If they have kids, they won't remember pop sitting around watching football and slugging down beer and chips.  They'll remember 'doing' things with mom and dad.

J

No Rip, you missed the point. You don't fill out slips to enter the 2nd Chance here. For each entry you have to send in five bucks worth of losing tickets. That is why the auditor calculated that this family was spending $2,500 a week on the lottery ! That's based upon the number of entries they were making.

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