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Some people repeatedly win the Wisconsin Lottery

Some people repeatedly win the Wisconsin Lottery



Since 2009, Khalil Audi of Cudahy, Wisconsin, has cashed in lottery tickets 33 times to the tune of about $80,000.Get more news about 彩票包网,you can vist loto98.com

His $10,000 win from Badger Cash Blowout? A one-in-72,000 chance. When he bought a $30 Super Millions scratch-off ticket, he had a one-in-200,000 shot of winning $5,000 — the same odds as giving birth to conjoined twins.

With wins as recent as 2017, Audi’s luck has not run out. Along the way, he has won Pick 4 a handful of times. Audi’s wins are surprising, but he is not even the luckiest person in Wisconsin.According to Wisconsin Lottery data obtained by Gaming the Lottery, an international investigation into the global lottery industry, the state’s most frequent winner was Annie Mason of Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Mason bought tickets worth $600 or more 65 times since 2000, for total winnings of $466,780. She hung up twice when contacted by a reporter.

In that same time, 11 people have cashed 20 or more winning tickets of at least $600, earning prizes totaling $100,000 or more each.Reached at work — the store where he has scored nearly all of his lottery wins — Audi declined to comment.

Thousands of people throughout the state play a variety of games: Some stick with scratch-off games while others choose to try their luck with traditional lotteries, such as Megabucks, Powerball, SuperCash! or Badger 5, which involve guessing numbers that will appear in daily or biweekly drawings. The lottery has provided more than $4.1 billion in property tax relief and $7.8 billion in prizes since it was launched in 1988.

The Wisconsin Center for Investigative Journalism found that at least three of the top 13 players who have won 20 times or more in recent years have close ties to the retailers selling them the winning tickets — including Audi, who works at Charlie’s Liquor & Tobacco Mart, home to 30 of his 33 wins.

Wisconsin has no laws barring lottery retailers or their employees from buying or cashing in lottery tickets at their own stores — a gap in regulation that could open the state’s $600-million-a-year lottery system to fraud. Canada learned that lesson in 2006 when provincial lotteries in Ontario and British Columbia were rocked by scandals uncovered in media reports involving store owners and clerks.

Government investigations into the scandals found the lotteries had “an overemphasis on profit seeking” and were more “protective of lottery ticket retailers than customers,” according to a 2013 analysis in the Journal of Gambling Issues by Garry Smith, professor emeritus at the University of Alberta-Edmonton. Smith also cited “willful blindness” and lotteries’ failure to “rigorously” examine their risks, rendering them “not fully aware of the vulnerabilities in their systems.”

In the United States, news reports from Pennsylvania, Florida, Massachusetts and other states have revealed suspicious pockets of frequent winners, in some cases tied to owners or clerks at stores that sell lottery tickets.

A 2009 Iowa Ombudsman report recommended that Iowa’s lottery consider banning retail employees from playing the lottery at stores where they work to ensure the games’ integrity. The ombudsman’s office investigates citizen complaints about state government.
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