Couple recovers $50 million lottery ticket

Jun 3, 2014, 8:19 am (57 comments)

Canada Lotto Max

TORONTO — A Canadian couple endured a roller-coaster ride of emotions when a lottery ticket worth $50 million went missing only to be found and returned by someone at their church.

Hakeem Nosiru won the Jan. 17 Lotto Max draw and was one day away from claiming the money when the signed ticket, which he taped to the inside his wife's purse for safekeeping, was missing after they attended church.

That sparked a frantic search of their home, with garbage bins being upended and their contents picked through, an effort that left Nosiru and his wife — who are originally from Nigeria — empty handed and feeling "miserable.

But that despair turned to joy after a fellow member of the congregation discovered the ticket and reunited it with them on April 1 — a return made possible because Nosiru signed the ticket with their address.

But the saga wasn't over yet, as Nosiru gave the ticket to Ontario Provincial Police, who were investigating the matter for Ontario Lottery and Gaming to ensure there were no further snags.

Everything checked out and Nosiru and his wife Abiola were beaming for the cameras at the OLG prize center Monday, telling reporters they were planning on travelling the world and helping out their family.

Abiola Nosiru said that when she realized her husband's winning ticket had disappeared from her purse "I had a fly in my stomach and I couldn't sleep for days. I couldn't eat. I was devastated."

"We just wanted to see the reality. And the reality is right here now," she said, fighting back tears.

She wasn't sure what they'll do for the woman who ended the ticket's exodus, but told her "I just want to say thank you."

AP

Comments

whiteballz's avatarwhiteballz

congrats! No tax for Canadian lotteries is great! I wish the US lotteries didn't have tax too.

Goteki54's avatarGoteki54

That lady deserves far more then a simple thank you that's for sure. I would give the lady $250,000 to $500,000. I wouldn't even miss it out of $50 million

Drenick1's avatarDrenick1

If it were me that had lost that ticket I would be so appreciative and would reward the lady who found the ticket . She was a fellow church goer so that is the least I would do.

$50 million in Canada is like winning a $150 million jackpot here in the states.

noise-gate

There are a few things you never ever do..

(1) Taking a lottery ticket to Church, your mind is not on the Sermon and you know it.

(2) Never tape a winning ticket to the inside of a purse, any purse.

Nevertheless- Congratulations and Welcome to the Millionaire's club Mr & Mrs Nosiru!

dr65's avatardr65

Where was that ticket the whole time? Was it on someone's conscience - what was the hold up from Jan to Apr?

Pita Maha's avatarPita Maha

Quote: Originally posted by noise-gate on Jun 3, 2014

There are a few things you never ever do..

(1) Taking a lottery ticket to Church, your mind is not on the Sermon and you know it.

(2) Never tape a winning ticket to the inside of a purse, any purse.

Nevertheless- Congratulations and Welcome to the Millionaire's club Mr & Mrs Nosiru!

Agree. I don't know how they could sit through a sermon knowing they've got a winning lottery ticket on their hands.  If it were me, I'd be checking my purse every 4.5 seconds to make sure it was still there, so there's no way I'd be hearing any sermon or anything.  Wonder how it fell out?  She must have pulled something out and the ticket came out with it. 

A simple thank you to the woman who found their ticket?  Hmmm, hope they change that to a nice fat check later.  I'd give her no less than $1million.

mrcraft's avatarmrcraft

Quote: Originally posted by dr65 on Jun 3, 2014

Where was that ticket the whole time? Was it on someone's conscience - what was the hold up from Jan to Apr?

Congrats!

I wonder too.  There's a gap in this story.

I also think a "thank you" around $500,000 to $1 million sounds appropriate.  Without her returning the ticket, this couple would have ZERO dollars for their win.

Thegreenpirate

OH BULL...............

DDOH937's avatarDDOH937

As a regular lotto player, besides the hope of winning the big draw one day, there's nothing i love more than a good lotto story. But this is NOT one of them. I HATE stories like this just as much as i hate the stories about unchecked tickets that are winners and end up being unclaimed. So this family KNOWS they have a winning $50 MILLION (tax free) ticket and what do they do...THEY PASTE IT INSIDE A PURSE AND TAKE IT TO CHURCH AND THEN WHEN THEY GET HOME REALIZE ITS GONE?????????? ARE YOU KIDDING ME?????

I'm supposed to be happy for them and in other circumstances I generally am, no really, i love a good rag to riches story but i really cant stand these DUMB stories anymore. Its almost like the universe has this crazy plan about who it'll let win these jackpots just to infuriate the rest of us.

That being said.....good luck to them and all the best to them and their new found wealth. AND STOP BEING SO SILLY YOU TWO!!!!!!!

(and they better give the person that returned the ticket AT LEAST $1 MILLION out of it)

dallascowboyfan's avatardallascowboyfan

Congratulation to the winners. WTG to the woman that turned the ticket in she definitely deserves a reward like others said Hurray!

DDOH937's avatarDDOH937

Quote: Originally posted by dallascowboyfan on Jun 3, 2014

Congratulation to the winners. WTG to the woman that turned the ticket in she definitely deserves a reward like others said Hurray!

The person who returned the ticket did so for ONE reason....because he/she spent the entire time between Jan and April trying to figure out if there was a way for them to collect the money for themselves. After realizing that because it was signed there was really no way to collect it, decided to simply turn it in to the rightful owners and hoped/bargained for a reward.

Still deserving of something though I'd say. Had i been the winner, I'd say a cool $1 Million should do the trick.

golfer1960's avatargolfer1960

Quote: Originally posted by mrcraft on Jun 3, 2014

Congrats!

I wonder too.  There's a gap in this story.

I also think a "thank you" around $500,000 to $1 million sounds appropriate.  Without her returning the ticket, this couple would have ZERO dollars for their win.

I agree with you Mr. Craft. There is a gap in this story.

How did the ticket get taken from her purse? Was it stolen? Did they tell someone at the church that they had the winning ticket in her purse? Where was it found? Who took it? Why did it take so long for this woman to return the ticket to the couple who signed it?

Why did they take it to church instead of a safety deposit box?

This story is frustrating. Three things are for sure:

1. God is great.

2. Beer is good.

3. And people are CRAZY!

golfer1960's avatargolfer1960

Quote: Originally posted by DDOH937 on Jun 3, 2014

The person who returned the ticket did so for ONE reason....because he/she spent the entire time between Jan and April trying to figure out if there was a way for them to collect the money for themselves. After realizing that because it was signed there was really no way to collect it, decided to simply turn it in to the rightful owners and hoped/bargained for a reward.

Still deserving of something though I'd say. Had i been the winner, I'd say a cool $1 Million should do the trick.

I agree with you DDOH. Someone stole it from them at the church (they must have told someone) and woman realized she couldn't cash a signed ticket.

Drenick1's avatarDrenick1

I agree that this story has many gaps in it. It doesn't mention when the ticket was actually lost and only gives a recovery date of April 1st. For all we know, the couple may have been taking their time contemplating what to actually do with their new found wealth. $50 million net is a mind boggling experience most of us could only hope for.

If perhaps the ticket was lost in February then there are issues but until we know the exact time frame we are all just speculating.

Pita Maha's avatarPita Maha

Their story is on the CBC (Canada's national network) and it mentions the couple searched for their ticket for 4 months before it was returned.  I think DDOH's theory has a lot of merit then - somebody hung onto the ticket trying to figure out a way to cash it themselves.  Or something else just as dodgy.

mrcraft's avatarmrcraft

Just speculating, but the article mentions, "...was one day away from claiming the money..."  Jan 17th was a Friday, and I assume they attended church that Sunday and was planning to visit the lottery office on Monday.  I think it was lost early on.

There's more from the Toronto Sun.  He apparently ran through the aisles of the convenience store yelling with joy after he found out he won, so people knew that he had won the jackpot.  BUT, before the ticket making its way to his wife's purse, he put the ticket in an envelope and duct-taped it to his stomach for safe-keeping!

RedStang's avatarRedStang

Quote: Originally posted by noise-gate on Jun 3, 2014

There are a few things you never ever do..

(1) Taking a lottery ticket to Church, your mind is not on the Sermon and you know it.

(2) Never tape a winning ticket to the inside of a purse, any purse.

Nevertheless- Congratulations and Welcome to the Millionaire's club Mr & Mrs Nosiru!

Never tape a winning ticket to the inside of a purse, any purse.

Yea that was stupid. I would of stapled it to my chest.

Pita Maha's avatarPita Maha

Quote: Originally posted by mrcraft on Jun 3, 2014

Just speculating, but the article mentions, "...was one day away from claiming the money..."  Jan 17th was a Friday, and I assume they attended church that Sunday and was planning to visit the lottery office on Monday.  I think it was lost early on.

There's more from the Toronto Sun.  He apparently ran through the aisles of the convenience store yelling with joy after he found out he won, so people knew that he had won the jackpot.  BUT, before the ticket making its way to his wife's purse, he put the ticket in an envelope and duct-taped it to his stomach for safe-keeping!

"...He apparently ran through the aisles of the convenience store yelling with joy after he found out he won, so people knew that he had won the jackpot..."

Brilliant move. Confused  Most of us are trying to figure out how to stay under the radar if we won, and this fool goes around yelling the news to the general public before he even has the money in his hands. 

What seemed like a heart-warming good news story at first now frustrates me as I hear more about it.  I wonder how much they'll have left in 5 years. If it takes that long.

mypiemaster's avatarmypiemaster

Quote: Originally posted by mrcraft on Jun 3, 2014

Just speculating, but the article mentions, "...was one day away from claiming the money..."  Jan 17th was a Friday, and I assume they attended church that Sunday and was planning to visit the lottery office on Monday.  I think it was lost early on.

There's more from the Toronto Sun.  He apparently ran through the aisles of the convenience store yelling with joy after he found out he won, so people knew that he had won the jackpot.  BUT, before the ticket making its way to his wife's purse, he put the ticket in an envelope and duct-taped it to his stomach for safe-keeping!

Not a very smart move, especially for somebody from his country{always fly under the radar}. Next thing you know, some of his relatives will be held for ransom. This is just the beginning of the story. Let me say it again..NO PUBLICITY!!!.

mypiemaster's avatarmypiemaster

Quote: Originally posted by dr65 on Jun 3, 2014

Where was that ticket the whole time? Was it on someone's conscience - what was the hold up from Jan to Apr?

ABSOLUTELY!!!. You hit the nail right on the head. Good thing they still had one. The ticket could have been made to vanish into thin air. The best thing they did{having done everything else wrong}, was that THEY SIGNED THE BACK OF THE TICKET.

dallascowboyfan's avatardallascowboyfan

Quote: Originally posted by DDOH937 on Jun 3, 2014

The person who returned the ticket did so for ONE reason....because he/she spent the entire time between Jan and April trying to figure out if there was a way for them to collect the money for themselves. After realizing that because it was signed there was really no way to collect it, decided to simply turn it in to the rightful owners and hoped/bargained for a reward.

Still deserving of something though I'd say. Had i been the winner, I'd say a cool $1 Million should do the trick.

Where did it say that the woman had the ticket?

OldSchoolHits

The only thing that ticket would have been taped to is me. The ticket would go into a sealed plastic sleeve, and then I would duct tape it around my midsection until I got to lotto headquarters. It would be the most joyous removal of tape in the history of hair-removing duct tape.

magic 007

I hope this couple realise that the ONLY reason they "found" this ticket was because it was signed. WTG by sigining the ticket, but then they drop the ball by taking it to church Bash . WHAT THE HELL!!!

HaveABall's avatarHaveABall

Quote: Originally posted by RedStang on Jun 3, 2014

Never tape a winning ticket to the inside of a purse, any purse.

Yea that was stupid. I would of stapled it to my chest.

LOL, RedStang, staples probably more secure. Thumbs Up

noise-gate

Quote: Originally posted by mypiemaster on Jun 3, 2014

Not a very smart move, especially for somebody from his country{always fly under the radar}. Next thing you know, some of his relatives will be held for ransom. This is just the beginning of the story. Let me say it again..NO PUBLICITY!!!.

Mr Nosiru looks a lot like the guy from the East coast who won and whose intentions are to quit his job, buy his wife a house & a Bentley for himself with less than $7 million. Maybe its the shape of their heads..

Just saying...

bluetung1

Rags to riches, from Nigeria no less. Congrats to you and yours mate.

Artist77's avatarArtist77

Quote: Originally posted by DDOH937 on Jun 3, 2014

The person who returned the ticket did so for ONE reason....because he/she spent the entire time between Jan and April trying to figure out if there was a way for them to collect the money for themselves. After realizing that because it was signed there was really no way to collect it, decided to simply turn it in to the rightful owners and hoped/bargained for a reward.

Still deserving of something though I'd say. Had i been the winner, I'd say a cool $1 Million should do the trick.

I would not give a dime to the woman until she could explain why she held onto the ticket for so long. So someone keeps it for a while then realizes they'd better turn it in (since it was signed) in hopes of getting some $. I might instead make a large donation to a charity of her choice. Rewarding wrong doing is not right...and they would have been in litigation with her if he had not signed it.

Mattapan

Quote: Originally posted by DDOH937 on Jun 3, 2014

The person who returned the ticket did so for ONE reason....because he/she spent the entire time between Jan and April trying to figure out if there was a way for them to collect the money for themselves. After realizing that because it was signed there was really no way to collect it, decided to simply turn it in to the rightful owners and hoped/bargained for a reward.

Still deserving of something though I'd say. Had i been the winner, I'd say a cool $1 Million should do the trick.

I absolutely agree! The husband was running down the aisle in the store yelling that he had won, so i'm sure he would've had no problem telling folks at his church also. The person who "found" the ticket probably called every attorney in Canada to see if there was a way to cash this ticket, but in the end gave up and decided to hope for a reward.

Stack47

Quote: Originally posted by dr65 on Jun 3, 2014

Where was that ticket the whole time? Was it on someone's conscience - what was the hold up from Jan to Apr?

It's never news when someone ordinary wins the lottery and validates their ticket within a week. Nope the story must be dramatic, a Nigerian couple lose their ticket in church and it was returned three months later.

noise-gate

Quote: Originally posted by DDOH937 on Jun 3, 2014

The person who returned the ticket did so for ONE reason....because he/she spent the entire time between Jan and April trying to figure out if there was a way for them to collect the money for themselves. After realizing that because it was signed there was really no way to collect it, decided to simply turn it in to the rightful owners and hoped/bargained for a reward.

Still deserving of something though I'd say. Had i been the winner, I'd say a cool $1 Million should do the trick.

The lesson that has to be learned here is this: Just because someone in church is swaying back and forth with you, using the Lord's name and raising their palms up to the heavens, does not mean we dealing with sheeplike people, some are Wolves in sheep clothing.When confronted with exposing one's sins over greed, things can change for the better- how else does one explain this " change of heart"  to come forth with the ticket after many months- their conscience ate away at them. Sin & Greed spells Doom!

DDOH937's avatarDDOH937

Quote: Originally posted by dallascowboyfan on Jun 3, 2014

Where did it say that the woman had the ticket?

FOLLOW THE FOLLOWING and you'll see what you clearly missed the first time around: 

 

1.) Hakeem Nosiru won the Jan. 17 Lotto Max draw and was one day away from claiming the money when the signed ticket, which he taped to the inside his wife's purse for safekeeping, was missing after they attended church.

2.) But that despair turned to joy after a fellow member of the congregation discovered the ticket and reunited it with them on April 1 — a return made possible because Nosiru signed the ticket with their address.

3.) She wasn't sure what they'll do for the woman who ended the ticket's exodus, but told her "I just want to say thank you."

 

WHO do you think had the ticket then and WHAT do you suppose they were doing with that ticket for almost FOUR months?????

lottoguysocal's avatarlottoguysocal

This is a good story.  Glad to see that there are still good people in the world!

noise-gate

Quote: Originally posted by DDOH937 on Jun 3, 2014

FOLLOW THE FOLLOWING and you'll see what you clearly missed the first time around: 

 

1.) Hakeem Nosiru won the Jan. 17 Lotto Max draw and was one day away from claiming the money when the signed ticket, which he taped to the inside his wife's purse for safekeeping, was missing after they attended church.

2.) But that despair turned to joy after a fellow member of the congregation discovered the ticket and reunited it with them on April 1 — a return made possible because Nosiru signed the ticket with their address.

3.) She wasn't sure what they'll do for the woman who ended the ticket's exodus, but told her "I just want to say thank you."

 

WHO do you think had the ticket then and WHAT do you suppose they were doing with that ticket for almost FOUR months?????

Who indeed.

Unless we made to believe that the church closed its doors immediately after the Nigerians attended and this observant woman "found" the  ticket very  much like Gollum finding the Ring of Sauron.

weshar75's avatarweshar75

Maybe I will never win the lotto but this couple is so lucky that the women had found it and returned it after she could not cash it herself.  Good going that he wrote his personal info. on the back of the ticket so no one else could cash it.  That is the only reason after three months of waiting this church member came forward and returned the ticket.  Even though the church member is shady I still would give her a cash reward for finding the ticket because who's to say that the ticket is not thrown away when the church gets cleaned every week.-weshar75

US Flag

belle$star3!

Quote: Originally posted by Goteki54 on Jun 3, 2014

That lady deserves far more then a simple thank you that's for sure. I would give the lady $250,000 to $500,000. I wouldn't even miss it out of $50 million

Yes, this lady deserves more than a thank you.  She should get a large amount of money from this lottery winner, like you said about $500, 000 and they would not miss it out of $50 million.

Gleno's avatarGleno

What a story. What a lesson, sign those tickets right away if it's a winner . Never thought of putting my address on one but it makes a lot of senses.

Coffee

Saylorgirl's avatarSaylorgirl

I am still confused as to how the ticket that was "duct taped" inside her purse managed to fall out?  If it was just loose I can understand it could fall out if you pulled something out, but by duct taping it that baby isn't going anywhere.  She had to have put her purse down and someone had to physically removed it from her purse.

savagegoose's avatarsavagegoose

i would have put in an envelope and posted it directly to lotto HQ

Arrowhead's avatarArrowhead

Quote: Originally posted by belle$star3! on Jun 4, 2014

Yes, this lady deserves more than a thank you.  She should get a large amount of money from this lottery winner, like you said about $500, 000 and they would not miss it out of $50 million.

I'd pay off all her debts--whatever that amount is--and a bonus of $250,000 on top of that.

One-Day

We all know that the ticket was returned because it was "signed", in other words, "useless"... right?  right? right?  I'd give her $5000, a thank you note and that's it. 

Regarding signing the ticket, I'm still on the fence on this one as your info. will be on it when you try to claim the prize "anonymously" through a corp, trust or whatever.  I might write something stupid on the ticket, some unique mark or something and make a copy of the ticket.  I certainly wouldn't carry a winning ticket around like this couple.  I might bury the original and copy in different crystal jars in the backyard; cheaper than a SD box for those broke as a church bell.

noise-gate

Arrowhead- if you read this story, what is important is what is not being said. 

For instance "we" do not know what was being said between these parties when the ticket was returned, did the owner of the ticket ask this person " where did you find the ticket, how long have you had it in your possession? "

These are important facts that are not discussed. ..so before one goes off half-<snip>ed and says " pay off this & give the person that- l would want Answers! Its no wonder the owner of the ticket is saying " Thank You" for now. But to each his own l guess.

This post has been automatically changed by the Lottery Post computer system to remove inappropriate content and/or spam.

Masone

Look at all the Cam Jansens in this thread.

noise-gate

Quote: Originally posted by Masone on Jun 4, 2014

Look at all the Cam Jansens in this thread.

I think Cam would be asking the same questions- who, when, what, how. Its a $50 mil mystery. I think the Nigerians know the answer.

Drenick1's avatarDrenick1

Now that we know the ticket was lost in January and returned April 1st it is obvious the founder was contemplating what to do with it. I am fairly certain that after exhausting all her possibilities, she decided to return the ticket to the person who had endorsed it.

Bottom line is that she could have been evil and done absolutely nothing and burn the ticket but the possibility of getting a small reward is better than nothing.

As much as I don't agree with the time frame in which she finally returned the ticket I still think she should get a small reward even though I don't think she deserves it.

noise-gate

Quote: Originally posted by Drenick1 on Jun 4, 2014

Now that we know the ticket was lost in January and returned April 1st it is obvious the founder was contemplating what to do with it. I am fairly certain that after exhausting all her possibilities, she decided to return the ticket to the person who had endorsed it.

Bottom line is that she could have been evil and done absolutely nothing and burn the ticket but the possibility of getting a small reward is better than nothing.

As much as I don't agree with the time frame in which she finally returned the ticket I still think she should get a small reward even though I don't think she deserves it.

What is percolating through my mind Drenick1 is the fact that the owners of this " lost " ticket could have visited that church on a regular basis after the ticket event, spoken to that person on many occasions after the fact, without that person saying a darn thing- laughing & smiling and then months later saying " by the way this belongs to you!"

 

...and then they said unto him- what caused the evil?- Master & Commander.

Get paid's avatarGet paid

If the couple had the ticket tape inside her purse,how did finders keeper find the ticket.Sounds a little strange to me.Signing the ticket saved the day.

OldSchoolPa's avatarOldSchoolPa

Quote: Originally posted by Artist77 on Jun 3, 2014

I would not give a dime to the woman until she could explain why she held onto the ticket for so long. So someone keeps it for a while then realizes they'd better turn it in (since it was signed) in hopes of getting some $. I might instead make a large donation to a charity of her choice. Rewarding wrong doing is not right...and they would have been in litigation with her if he had not signed it.

I Agree!  I would meet with the lady who returned it in an undisclosed location with my attorneys and ask her to describe her experience in finding the ticket and what transpired from the time she found it until she returned it.  If there is any indication she had sought ways to claim jackpot for herself, then I would simply say I thank you for your honesty...I had been prepared to reward finder $500,000 however, since you would have claimed the prize had I not signed the back of the ticket, I will donate $490,000 to a nationally known and legitimate charity of your choosing and reward you $10,000 for the act of returning the ticket.  In this way, it is still a win-win situation for all involved...just not as much of a win for the lady. 

Also, many wonder why they taped the ticket to the inside of a purse and took it to church.  Folks who don't go to church or who have not ever been to Africa should realize that a good number of African people attend churches that preach a type of prosperity gospel. The notion is one should tithe at least a tenth of income and also give sacrificially to the church. The practice of money tithing is not espoused by the Bible, but pastors today take various scriptures out of context to justify the practice.  It is the same as slave masters using the Bible to justify their cruel treatment of slaves during that shameful era of our country.  So I imagine they took the ticket to church to give thanks and praise the Lord, and in the act of reaching in to give money during a "throw your sacrifice on the altar" the ticket probably fell out at their pew. Of course, I fully expect them to say they are going to give tithe.  One would have also thought that someone who goes to church would have contacted them within the week of finding the ticket, but I am well aware that some of the most conniving people actually go to church every week.

Yes, the true story will be how long this money lasts!

addai1516's avataraddai1516

Good thing they signed it and put thier addreses on it first before it went missing am not sure they will have got it back without signature and address ..Happy for them and a good srory..

Teddi's avatarTeddi

Quote: Originally posted by lottoguysocal on Jun 3, 2014

This is a good story.  Glad to see that there are still good people in the world!

I really do wish I could see the good only, without being suspicious of all the ways I think the finder was up to no good, but I cannot ignore the breadcrumbs pointing me in that direction.

I do not believe this ticket was floating around on the church grounds for 3 months and that this woman miraculously happened upon it and turned it over. 

I do believe that this couple is smarter than we give them credit for. Not only did they sign the ticket and put their address on it (so many people don't), they didn't immediately say (like so many here) that they were going to give the woman a large financial settlement. In the end, whether they will or not, it seems likely that they suspect the woman wasn't being all that altruistic.

I know others say that she could have destroyed it, so she deserves a reward because she didn't. That's ridiculous. Why would she destroy the ticket knowing the couple would be pressured into giving her a reward? Zero dollars vs thousands of dollars.

Pita Maha's avatarPita Maha

From the video of their winnings presentation at the lottery office:

 

https://ca.news.yahoo.com/toronto-area-couple-reunited-50m-lottery-ticket-lost-202227477.html

 

She said her grandchildren were playing in her purse!  Brilliant move.  You've got a massive prize winning lottery ticket in your purse, and you let kids play with it???  Wow.

I dunno, maybe they're just incredibly dumb but it does seem strange, I'm suspicious.  And she didn't want to give much detail about the return of the ticket, just saying it was returned with the person telling her "April Fool".  I think there's more to the story than that.

mrcraft's avatarmrcraft

They should have just left the ticket duct-taped to his stomach until Monday... and only when they got to the lottery office parking lot should he have removed it.  It was actually a safer place to keep the ticket than his wife's purse.  Wink

KY Floyd's avatarKY Floyd

Quote: Originally posted by Drenick1 on Jun 4, 2014

Now that we know the ticket was lost in January and returned April 1st it is obvious the founder was contemplating what to do with it. I am fairly certain that after exhausting all her possibilities, she decided to return the ticket to the person who had endorsed it.

Bottom line is that she could have been evil and done absolutely nothing and burn the ticket but the possibility of getting a small reward is better than nothing.

As much as I don't agree with the time frame in which she finally returned the ticket I still think she should get a small reward even though I don't think she deserves it.

"it is obvious the founder was contemplating what to do with it"

No, it's not. We know when it was lost and when it was returned, but we don't know when it was found, and we don't know where in the church it was lost. It's possible that it was found shortly after it was lost, but it's also possible that it was found shortly before it was returned and in a place that wasn't obvious.

eddessaknight's avatareddessaknight

Quote: Originally posted by KY Floyd on Jun 5, 2014

"it is obvious the founder was contemplating what to do with it"

No, it's not. We know when it was lost and when it was returned, but we don't know when it was found, and we don't know where in the church it was lost. It's possible that it was found shortly after it was lost, but it's also possible that it was found shortly before it was returned and in a place that wasn't obvious.

There's many a slip 'twixt the cup and the lip is an old English proverb. It implies that even when the outcome of an event seems certain, things can still go wrong.

A Latin form is found in Erasmus's "Adagia," I.iv.1 ("Multa cadunt inter calicem supremaque labra") which appears to derive from an epigram by Palladas in The Greek Anthology (X, 32).

In any language......

FORTUNA
EddessaKnight

mypiemaster's avatarmypiemaster

According to YAHOO!News,"But that despair turned to joy after a fellow member of the congregation discovered the ticket and reunited it with them on April 1 — saying "April fools" — a return made possible because Nosiru signed the ticket with their address". That woman has balls, what nerves. I guess she was just holding it for them for safekeeping.

Drenick1's avatarDrenick1

Quote: Originally posted by KY Floyd on Jun 5, 2014

"it is obvious the founder was contemplating what to do with it"

No, it's not. We know when it was lost and when it was returned, but we don't know when it was found, and we don't know where in the church it was lost. It's possible that it was found shortly after it was lost, but it's also possible that it was found shortly before it was returned and in a place that wasn't obvious.

I highly doubt that the lady recently found the ticket and returned it shortly after. Upon returning the ticket and uttering "April Fool's" I think many would agree that she exhausted her sources of possibly redeeming the ticket.

Almost three months had passed and there is a good chance that the church was cleaned several times in that interval plus the couple who had lost the ticket most likely scoured the church and entire surrounding area.

DaExpert

i leave mine at home, its safe and i never loose any !

just don't tell the whole world you won something

beaudad's avatarbeaudad

Quote: Originally posted by dr65 on Jun 3, 2014

Where was that ticket the whole time? Was it on someone's conscience - what was the hold up from Jan to Apr?

Precisely DR....you have once again....Solved A Mystery !!!!!   (AL)

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