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if you were handed a filled out jackpot slip from a bent over old person and told to play it to win.
I wouldn't play the winning numbers for every drawing even if I had them. That would put the lotteries out of business pretty quickly. I'd win 2 big ones 6 months or a year apart -- keep one for me and donate one to my favorite non-profit. Buy 4 or 5 two million dollar tickets for gifts for friends. Then I'd be done with it. If you did win every drawing, I'm not sure if you'd be arrested first, or if the lottery would be broke and out of business before that happened. But honestly, I doubt th
Jun 1, 2013, 2:31 pm - HoLeeKau - Lottery Discussion Forum

How much would you spend? [POLL]
Yea, I call it ticket me red Unless its a corvette then its arrest me red LOL
Jun 24, 2012, 3:47 pm - haymaker - Lottery Discussion Forum

I Almost Won 30 Million Ten or So Years Ago
ticket car. be sure to order it in arrest me red' or maybe ,thats standard ? my masirati does 185 lost my lic. now i don't drive '
Nov 9, 2011, 10:35 pm - haymaker - Lottery Discussion Forum

you and me, but I'am not to sure about you
What says they didn't? What says some of their leadership isn't part of it? Consider the Border Patrol being told not to do their jobs. Consider LAPD being told not to arrest any illegals they pull over on traffic stops, etc...etc...
Nov 6, 2011, 5:58 pm - Coin Toss - Lottery Discussion Forum

Your Dream Car
arrest me red but i repeat myself. nice ride.
Sep 27, 2011, 11:17 pm - haymaker - Lottery Discussion Forum

so when you say "validate" a ticket
Yes, absolutely. They not only check the ticket to make sure it's genuine. They also run a background check on the winner to make certain there aren't any outstanding arrest warrants, liens (tax, etc.), or other judgements (child support). If a person was due to receive $1,000,000 from a state lottery commission but had an IRS lien outstanding for $200,000 on their record, they'd only get a check for $800,000 - with the remainder sent to the IRS. BTW, and I suspect it's changed, but at one ti
Aug 14, 2008, 12:51 pm - AlecWest - Lottery Discussion Forum

convicted felons and lottery winnings
Quote: Originally posted by bellyache on July 1, 2006 People may disagree with me but I beleive if you have served your time and you are free you should be able to collect lottery winnings. Why not? If they are still allowed to put a dollar in then they should be able to collect if they win. If people don't want convicted felons to play make it a law that they can't legally purchase tickets and collect winnings. I didn't respond at first because I wasn't sure if the question refers to peo
Jul 3, 2006, 12:36 pm - justxploring - Lottery Discussion Forum

Online Lottery Soon to be Illegal/new law
If its already illegal then people who already won and had money placed in their bank accounts could still be arrested in the future at some date. And even if a person reports their winnings for tax purposes, wouldnt that be like admitting that you broke the law by even playing the online casino lotteries? That would be like turning yourself in for breaking the law. They might round everybody up later I'm sure they keep tabs. All I wanna know is how much time do we have left before its over,
May 12, 2006, 8:55 am - Brett - Lottery Discussion Forum

A New Way Of Picking 6 Numbers:
Quote: Originally posted by Maverick on February 25, 2005This is what I found through Google:Time runs out for would-be time travelerMichael Marcum, 21, made off with six 350-pound electrical transformers from a power company in Stanberry, Missouri, in January 1995. His motive? What else? To build a time machine so he could transport himself a few days into the future, learn the winning lottery numbers and then return to buy the matching tickets. Obviously Marcums job as a laborer in a toilet-pa
Feb 26, 2005, 8:11 am - Badger - Lottery Discussion Forum

A New Way Of Picking 6 Numbers:
This is what I found through Google:Time runs out for would-be time travelerMichael Marcum, 21, made off with six 350-pound electrical transformers from a power company in Stanberry, Missouri, in January 1995. His motive? What else? To build a time machine so he could transport himself a few days into the future, learn the winning lottery numbers and then return to buy the matching tickets. Obviously Marcums job as a laborer in a toilet-paper-tube factory provided him with the expertise to tampe
Feb 25, 2005, 11:26 pm - Maverick - Lottery Discussion Forum

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