Sohh we playing the Lottery tonight? $530 Million

xCivicx

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Because you're trying to make yourself feel better about not winning by coming up the ridiculous idea that lottery winners are miserable :mjlol:

Lottery winners generally only make the news when shyt goes bad for them which is why you only have a certain number of stories even though thousands win every year. Or when they do something extremely noble -

- Here's what N.J. family that won $429M jackpot is doing with its money


They are from Trenton, why didn't the wolves descend upon them :mjgrin:
When did I ever say that all lottery players are miserable??

My first post was about her not being smart for going public immediately

Then I posted many reasons why being a public lottery winner causes problems...
 

xCivicx

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Why would you all be so scared? Do you know how many wealthy people live in this country and world? All over TV everyone knowing where they live. The way everyone in here is talking nba games should be played with masks and fake names.

:heh:
Exactly

And most of them go out of their way to remain anonymous

Why do you think that is?
 

Malta

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Nah breh, this pasty bytch is dumb as fukk! She could've formed a trust and had her lawyer collect the lottery prize without disclosing her identity. :snoop:


Again, nationally nobody remembers these people after 2 weeks, they aren't celebrities.

Some people aren't that paranoid about showing their face. I'd claim it without a care in the world, because I have a small family, and I wouldn't stay here if I won. You think somebody is going to recognize me in a month while I'm in Capetown ? :russ:
 

InfinateOpulance

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Again, nationally nobody remembers these people after 2 weeks, they aren't celebrities.

Some people aren't that paranoid about showing their face. I'd claim it without a care in the world, because I have a small family, and I wouldn't stay here if I won. You think somebody is going to recognize me in a month while I'm in Capetown ? :russ:

You never know who's watching you
:demonic:
 

lotteryplaya

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Can you show up wearing a mask? I would. Mask with full body costume.
This woman hired professional makeup artists to disguise her identity. She is a pharmacist was paranoid about lawsuits from former customers saying they got the wrong medication or bad advice from her. I think a winner can argue that unless that state says you have to show your face at the required press conference then you can answer questions from reporters wearing a Black Panther Halloween mask. The lottery officials saw your face and ID to match it up and vet you when you turned in your ticket so there is no reason the press has to see your bare face unless its in the rules ahead of time.


Lottery winner demonstrates the right way to claim a big jackpot
Mar 20, 2008, 5:14 pm


The Illinois woman knew on Dec. 18, the winning lottery ticket she held would change her life.

On March 19, she was claiming an oversized check from the state and answering questions from news media.

That the winner picked up the $81.5 million prize, her half of a $163 million Mega Millions jackpot drawing, is a big deal.

That it took three months is a rarity. She spent the time to work with lawyers and financial advisers to maintain anonymity and protect assets — something the state lottery agency wants other potential winners to note.

Sporting large sunglasses, the winner, a pharmacist, came forward, but she refused to provide her name or where she lived. An occasional player, she bought the winning ticket at a gas station at 851 S. Sutton Rd. in Streamwood.

"I came back home. My husband said, 'Let me check your ticket,' " she said. A quick confirmation through an Internet site and the two were screaming in delight. "It was a shocking moment."

The first step wasn't to get the money. A family member referred them to Wood Dale attorney Terry Zimmer, who assembled an advisory team, including estate planner Richard Kuenster.

"I told her get an unlisted number A.S.A.P.," Kuenster said.

The team helped the family create the JYS Family Limited Partnership and put together entities to keep the winner's identity from the public, and shield the money from some taxes, creditors and frivolous lawsuits while providing for her, her husband, children and any future grandchildren, Kuenster said.

"We're so proud of them for taking that time," said acting Illinois Lottery Superintendent Jodie Winnett. "What a sharp winner we have in Illinois and we hope that the rest of our community will hear this and that they'll take a deep breath and consider protecting themselves."

2008032001.gif



Lottery winner demonstrates the right way to claim a big jackpot | Lottery Post
 

O.G.B

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Again, nationally nobody remembers these people after 2 weeks, they aren't celebrities.

:rudy:

@ thinking no one is going to remember, recount, research, discuss or continually publicize the winner of largest single lottery jackpot ever in the United States in the 21st century during the age of worldwide social media.

:mjlol: :pachaha:


Some people aren't that paranoid about showing their face. I'd claim it without a care in the world, because I have a small family, and I wouldn't stay here if I won. You think somebody is going to recognize me in a month while I'm in Capetown ? :russ:


Look, I get your point. However, you still have to take into account that we're in a digital society where now more than ever, it's easier to gather intelligence to seek out or track down people. So why even take the risk of possibly exposing yourself or your families identity/personal information to unsuspecting nefarious criminals & trifling beggars when you have the option of collecting your lottery winnings anonymously?

:jbhmm:
 
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Malta

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:rudy: @ thinking no one is going to remember, recount, research, discuss or continually publicize the winner of largest single lottery jackpot ever in the United States in the 21st century & during the age of worldwide social media.

:mjlol: :pachaha:





Look, I get your point. However, you still have to take into account that we're in a digital society where now more than ever, it's easier to gather intelligence to seek out or track down people. So why even take the risk of possibly exposing yourself or your families identity/personal information to unsuspecting nefarious criminals & trifling beggars when you have the option of collecting your lottery winnings anonymously?

:jbhmm:


Off the top of your head without googling it, what do the people who won the $1.3 billion look like and what are their names? That happened last year, and I put up money that if you passed by them in the street you wouldn't recognize them.

Breh, it's really not that easy to track down someone who doesn't want to be found, especially if they don't plan on using the US as their primary residence. The cops with access to more means than the average person have trouble finding broke folks on the run :russ: Just because you see her on TV doesn't mean she can't set up a trust after, I'm telling you what I'd do and are beggars really going to hop on a plane to come find me in Brazil, South Africa or Angola?

Not everything is like the movies, lottery winners who show their faces are fine more often than not.
 

O.G.B

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Off the top of your head without googling it, what do the people who won the $1.3 billion look like and what are their names? That happened last year, and I put up money that if you passed by them in the street you wouldn't recognize them.

Breh, it's really not that easy to track down someone who doesn't want to be found, especially if they don't plan on using the US as their primary residence. The cops with access to more means than the average person have trouble finding broke folks on the run :russ: Just because you see her on TV doesn't mean she can't set up a trust after, I'm telling you what I'd do and are beggars really going to hop on a plane to come find me in Brazil, South Africa or Angola?

Not everything is like the movies, lottery winners who show their faces are fine more often than not.


We can agree to disagree. But, "more often than not" isn't good enough when my (or my families) lively-hood could be in jeopardy. So if there was an option which allowed me to obtain my lottery prize unidentified with no fanfare, I'm doing it without hesitation.
 

Arithmetic

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Powerball winner already broke one rule. What else not to do
  • The winning ticket, purchased in Massachusetts, snagged a $758.7 million jackpot.
  • Putting a team of pros in place is key to protecting her money.
  • An estate plan should be implemented as soon as possible.
Sarah O'Brien | @sarahtgobrien
Published 16 Hours Ago | Updated 13 Hours AgoCNBC.com
PLAY VIDEO

For 53-year-old Mavis Wanczyk, the newly minted winner of Wednesday night's $758.7 million Powerball jackpot drawing, life is about to get crazy. And that might be putting it mildly.

"She better get ready. She's going to be hit up for investment opportunities, charity requests, even people she knows are going to come to her," said Jason Kurland, an attorney at Certilman Balin Adler & Hyman, a law firm in East Meadow, New York.

"She has an insane amount of money now."


Wanczyk's lucky windfall — the odds of matching all six numbers is 1 in 292.2 million — marks the largest win on a single ticket in U.S. history. Almost 10 million additional tickets won prizes totaling more than $135 million.

Although Massachusetts law requires lottery winners to be made public, some recipients in the past have created a trust and had a trustee accept the winnings to protect their anonymity.

By choosing to come forward so quickly — the state allows lottery winners a full year to claim their winnings — Wanczyk, of Chicopee, Massachusetts, has already made what many experts would call a mistake by not protecting her identity.

Kurland said the best thing she can do at this point is immediately hire an attorney who can shield her as much as possible from the onslaught of attention she's in for from money-seekers.

"Her life will be much easier if she can hide behind someone else, so to speak, when she gets all these calls and questions," Kurland said.

There also are a few other things she needs to do, he said. For one, because she chose the $480.5 million lump suminstead of 30 payments over 29 years, she should alert her financial institution that it's about to get a deposit of hundreds of millions of dollars.

"She's now one of the world's wealthiest people and she has to start acting like it."-Jason Kurland, attorney with Certilman Balin Adler & Hyman
An estimated $120.1 million will go to Uncle Sam and $24 million to Massachusetts state coffers, according to USAMega.com estimates, before Wanczyk gets her take of about $336 million.

She also needs to set up a team of professionals, which would include a financial advisor and accountant in addition to an attorney, to help guide her through the steps necessary to protect her wealth. Even estate planning — putting a will and other documents in place to ensure that if something unfortunate happens to her tomorrow, her wealth is protected — needs to be on her radar screen immediately.

"She's now one of the world's wealthiest people and she has to start acting like it," Kurland said.
 

Malta

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Now who else wanna fukk with Hollywood Court?
We can agree to disagree. But, "more often than not" isn't good enough when my (or my families) lively-hood could be in jeopardy. So if there was an option which allowed me to obtain my lottery prize unidentified with no fanfare, I'm doing it without hesitation.


Breh, I have absolutely no fear about getting unsolicited calls or random strangers sending me mail asking me for money, because I wouldn't care and phone numbers can change. This isn't South America, lottery winner families aren't being abducted left and right, people have been showing their faces for decades and the overwhelming majority of them are fine.


I'd be out there like -

tumblr_onvasvB2ZM1vciti6o1_400.gif


Literally a day later in front of a big as check with absolutely no fear because I'm not coming back to the same address and my immediate family is small. I mean seriously, we all know how much athletes & public figures are getting, they're winning the powerball/mega millions every single year and their salaries are being broadcasted to the world.
 

lotteryplaya

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Mass. police ramp up patrols near $758.7M Powerball winner’s home

  • Massacusetts police ramp up patrols around $758.7 million Powerball winner Mavis Wanczyk's home
    Mass. police ramp up patrols near $758.7M Powerball winner’s home
    THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
    Updated: Saturday, August 26, 2017, 1:30 PM
    powerball-jackpot.jpg

    Mavis Wanczyk won the largest undivided Powerball jackpot.
    (Josh Reynolds/AP)
    THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
    Updated: Saturday, August 26, 2017, 1:30 PM
    CHICOPEE, Mass. — Police are providing extra patrols around the home of a Massachusetts woman who won the $758.7 million Powerball prize.

    Mavis Wanczyk, a hospital worker from the western Massachusetts town of Chicopee, was announced Thursday as the winner of the biggest undivided lottery jackpot in U.S. history.

    “This is a great thing,” Officer Michael Wilk, a spokesman for Chicopee police, said Friday. “We want her to know we’re there if she needs us.”

    Wilk said officers are keeping an extra eye out, and have even parked in her driveway, as members of the media and others have descended on the neighborhood. Officers have spoken to neighbors to tell them that if they see anything suspicious, they should call the police, he said.


  • While reporters have been respectful, Wilk said there have been reports from neighbors that others have been hanging around, looking for Wanczyk.

    “Besides media, there have been people knocking on doors, asking people where she lives. We’re not going to tolerate her being harassed or bothered,” he said.

    Wilk said they were told by a neighbor that she is not around.




    Wanczyk quit her job on Thursday after learning she had won the prize. Lottery officials say she chose to take a lump sum payment of $480 million, or $336 million after taxes.


    usa-powerball.jpg

    Wanczyk quit her job this week after scoring the $758.7 million Powerball jackpot.
    (HANDOUT/REUTERS)
    Wanczyk has an adult daughter and son, and was accompanied Thursday to claim her winnings by other family members.

    MassLive.com reports that her ex-husband was killed last year in a hit-and-run. Court records show Mavis and William Wanczyk divorced in 2012.

    William Wanczyk, 55, of Northampton, was killed in November when he was sitting at a bus shelter in Amherst, Massachusetts, and a pickup truck plowed into it. He had served as a Northampton firefighter from 1986 to 1989 before being injured on the job.

    Peter Sheremeta, 20, of Belchertown, was later arrested and charged with manslaughter, motor vehicle homicide, drunken driving and other charges.


    He has pleaded not guilty. Authorities say a truck without its headlights on was seen speeding before it started to fishtail, drove onto the sidewalk and struck the bus shelter. The heavily damaged truck was found abandoned nearby.

    The couple’s daughter, Marlee Wanczyk, told The Republican newspaper at the time of Sheremeta’s arraignment that her father was a “wise-cracker” who enjoyed playing practical jokes.
 
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