23-01-2016 11:13 AM
23-01-2016 11:19 AM
23-01-2016 11:21 AM
If she's correctly identified the right shop where it was bought, it's probable that she's genuine. Mind you, having the barcode and date illegible does look a bit suss?
It's life Jim, but not as WE know it.
Live long and prosper.
23-01-2016 11:34 AM
I really hope it's not true - if she genuinely has the right ticket but cannot prove it and doesn't get her winnings then she is really going to suffer a load of grief
23-01-2016 12:32 PM
I hope it is true for her sake in many ways. I hope it gets sorted.
I remember ages ago a couple won and could not find their ticket anywhere. They had a big battle with Camelot. They lost. In the end the stress of it all broke their marriage and the man ended up severely depressed. No idea what happened to his wife. It's a long time ago that I read it so forgot all the inns and outs. Maybe someone else remembers the story.
Some people can't deal with the amount of money they get and end up losing their partners and/or friends and family and some can't deal with not getting it when they had the right to it with the same results. It must feel devastating.
I would feel sick if it would happen to me, I'm sure.
23-01-2016 12:34 PM
lets hope theres cctv in the shop
23-01-2016 2:55 PM
When I do the lotto, I do it online, so no ticket to lose or launder
26-01-2016 8:54 AM
26-01-2016 11:05 AM
@marg*e wrote:https://uk.news.yahoo.com/hundreds-claim-winning-33m-ticket-015035148.html
Chancers crawling out of the woodwork left right and centre.
26-01-2016 11:37 AM
I don't think they've had hundreds claiming the latest prize. I think they meant that over time, they've had hundreds trying to claim.
It's life Jim, but not as WE know it.
Live long and prosper.
26-01-2016 11:39 AM
Would be funny if Camelot had paid someone out and then the real ticket winner just came back from holiday to claim their prize. Now that would cause some trouble in paradise.
26-01-2016 11:50 AM
Not by this.
Hundreds of people have come forward to claim they are the winner of a £33m National Lottery jackpot prize.
Lottery operator Camelot has refused to comment on the cases - which include claims of lost, damaged or stolen tickets.
26-01-2016 11:55 AM
I read it differently. It sounded like it was the reporters take that it meant this particular prize. They'd have to be pretty well on the ball to get a scam paid out?
"Given the interest in the missing £33m ticket-holder, we have received hundreds of claims of this nature."
It's life Jim, but not as WE know it.
Live long and prosper.
26-01-2016 12:04 PM - edited 26-01-2016 12:05 PM
This is the link I read before I saw Marge's post. Sounds fairly straightforward to me.
26-01-2016 12:21 PM
The actual info coming from Camelot was just the same as in the other link and I too read that before the other.
I can't see how hundreds of people could try to claim that prize when initially, no-one knew the ticket had been bought somewhere in Worcester.
It's life Jim, but not as WE know it.
Live long and prosper.
26-01-2016 12:27 PM
It was only after Worcester was revealed as the source of the winning ticket that the rest of the claimants came forward, I would think the majority of them are Worcester residents. Like I said, a bunch of chancers.
28-01-2016 11:47 AM
28-01-2016 3:59 PM
They know who the real winner is..
http://www.express.co.uk/news/uk/638882/WINNER-announced-for-33m-Lottery-jackpot