SEQUEL TO CANADIAN LOTTO SCANDALS
21 December 2007
Some of the real winners get their cash....at last
The scandal over an extraordinarily high level of wins
by retail ticket sellers in the Ontario provincial
goverment lottery earlier this year (see previous
InfoPowa reports) had a happier sequel this week when
four school board employees, allegedly cheated out of
their winning lottery ticket by a retailer who claimed
the prize money as his own, received a cheque for $5.7
million - plus interest - from the Ontario Lottery and
Gaming Corporation.
The cheque came as Ontario provincial police announced
they had charged Hafiz Malik, a 60-year-old former
convenience store owner with theft and fraud following
an investigation into "insider wins" at the OLG,
according to CanWest news reports.
Police allege Malik, who has been released on $60 000
bail, validated the group's Lotto 6/49 ticket at his
now-closed convenience store in midtown Toronto but
didn't tell the customers they had won. He has been
charged with two counts of fraud of more than $5 000 and
one count of theft of more than $5 000.
A lawyer for winners Lorraine Teicht, Paul Carlisi,
Silvana Pincivero and Aurora Pincivero said his clients
played the same numbers regularly and realised they
might have been duped after checking the OLG website for
the winning numbers nine months ago.
The OLG said when it received a complaint from the group
in July it launched an internal investigation and
determined the co-workers were the rightful owners. The
winning ticket was purchased in Orillia, Ont. in June
2004 and validated by Malik who allegedly claimed the
prize as his own in January of 2005.
The OLG said it did routinely investigate Malik at the
time he claimed the prize but CEO Kelly McDougald said
she could not comment because the case is before the
courts. Speaking in general terms, McDougald said any
"insider" who claimed a prize was subject to a series of
questions, which she wouldn't reveal, when they came to
claim their money.
OPP said Malik's arrest was part of a larger
investigation into "insider wins" prompted by a scathing
report by Ontario's ombudsman earlier this year,
prompted by university research which showed a
disproportionate number of wins went to ticket
retailers.
In his report Ombudsman Andre Marin blasted the OLG for
being more fixated on profits than the integrity of
games. Ontario store owners and their families claimed
about $100 million in lottery wins between 1999 and
2006, including tens of millions of fraudulent claims
ignored by the public lottery corporation, Marin said in
his report. A management shake-up followed at the OLG.
Responding to news of the arrest, Ontario's ombudsman
said he was pleased to see the OLG and OPP take the
"insider wins" problem seriously.
"No doubt the OLG has undergone important changes in the
last few months, but culture change is not achieved
overnight," Marin said in a statement. "The developments
today are a cautionary reminder to the OLG to remain
vigilant and not let its guard down in protecting the
public interest."
OPP said they have seized and frozen more than $5
million of Malik's assets, including three cars and a
home in Mississauga.
Ontario Premier Dalton McGuinty said he hoped the arrest
would serve as a warning to other retailers.
"I'm delighted with the signal this is sending to
retailers of lottery tickets in the province of Ontario
which is - if you try to cheat people out of their
winnings, if you try to rip off the system, we're going
to be all over you."
Online Casino News courtesy of
InfoPowa
More news here.
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