ONTARIO LOTTERY INSIDER WINS HIGHER THAN ESTIMATED
6 February 2009
Lottery insiders won nearly twice as much as first
thought, audit shows
The long running discussion on why Ontario Lottery
"insiders" seem to win a disproportionately high number
of prizes took another turn this week with the release
of an independent report from auditors Deloitte & Touche
that showed a higher incidence of insider wins than had
previously been estimated.
The Toronto Star has been following the issue over the
past 2 years since the remarkable good fortune of ticket
sellers and other "insiders" first surfaced, triggering
audits and investigations. The newspaper reported this
week that lottery retailers, employees and their
families took home $198 million in prizes in the past 13
years, nearly twice the amount previously estimated by
the Ontario Lottery and Gaming Corporation.
The winnings represent 3.4 percent of the total prizes
claimed in that period, said OLG CEO Kelly McDougald at
a news conference to announce the findings of the audit.
The Crown corporation, which oversees Ontario's
lotteries, slots and casinos, had originally assessed
insider winnings at $106 million, or 1.7 percent, she
said.
The dramatic jump is due in part to the corporation's
broadened definition of "insiders," which now includes
family members and those living with OLG employees or
lottery retailers, McDougald said.
The audit also counted data that had been excluded in
the initial tally.
The numbers were part of a historical analysis of 13
years of data — from July 1, 1995 to June 30, 2008 —
performed by Deloitte & Touche to help the OLG
understand and crack down on insider fraud. The $750 000
study took five months, and is believed to be the
largest analysis of its kind published by a lottery
corporation anywhere in the world.
Two years ago Ontario's Ombudsman Andre Marin
investigated and then released a scathing report
denouncing the OLG's lax security measures and calling
for increased protection for lottery players. His
reported resulted in a management shake-up and improved
anti-fraud measures.
McDougald claimed that the Deloitte & Touche audit shows
the corporation has been successful in reducing fraud in
the two years since the ombudsman's report. Among the
precautions is a $3 million system to keep the data
updated in real time, allowing it to flag unusual
patterns and shut down the related lottery terminals.
McDougald said the entire database, which contains some
200 billion pieces of data, will be turned over to
Ontario Provincial Police, though she would not say
whether additional charges would be laid.
"It's not our job to say whether it's fraud, but it is
our job to identify cases... and signal them to the
police, " she said.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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