CANADIAN LOTTERY THIEVES NABBED
13 March 2009
Controversy continues to dog Ontario and
British Columbia provincial lotteries
The British Columbia Lottery Corporation has nabbed at
least eight lottery ticket retailers ripping off
customers over the last two years, albeit for relatively
small amounts, reports The Vancouver Sun this week. In
one case, an employee pre-scratched more than 100
scratch-and-win tickets before putting them up for sale,
but was caught and fired.
Quoting internal BCLC
documents obtained under the Freedom of Information Act,
the Sun revealed that concerns over lottery fraud in the
Canadian province were first raised in late 2006,
leading the lottery company to introduce new measures
that included having its security staff review every
retailer win over Cdn$1 000 in value.
All eight
confirmed fraud cases since 2007 involved prizes lower
than Cdn$1 000, suggesting dishonest retailers may be
stealing smaller prizes because they know they aren’t as
closely scrutinised.
In the scratch-and-win case,
a customer complained to the lottery corporation that a
number of “Gold Rush” tickets at a ticket retailer
convenience store appeared to have tiny scratches in the
instant-win box.
BCLC sent an investigator to the
store the next morning, who found 85 scratchcards with
minute scratch marks on them. When the store manager
arrived, he said he had also discovered a number of
tampered tickets and handed another 28 over to the
investigator. The culprit tuirned out to be a night
shift employee, who 'fessed up to the fraud and was
fired. BCLC additionally suspended the store’s right to
sell lottery tickets for one week.
Other cases
involved the theft of winning keno tickets worth a total
of Cdn$ 819, and shortchanging ticket holders. In one
case, a retailer paid out a customer Cdn$ 51 when the
prize was actually Cdn$ 91. In another, the customer
received just Cdn$ 12 when the amount should have been
Cdn$ 25.
And in one of the stranger fraud cases,
the retailer didn’t steal a customer’s winning ticket,
but instead used the customer’s credit card to buy one
of his own!
BCLC spokeswoman Susan Dolinski told
the Vancouver Sun that while BCLC doesn’t review
retailer wins under $1 000, it has systems in place to
detect smaller-scale fraud, such as a “mystery shopper”
program and software that detects unusual
ticket-validation patterns.
“We acknowledge that
we can’t completely eliminate risk, like any retail
business,” said Dolinski. “But we’re continuing to put
layers of security in place to mitigate risk in the
system.”
Across the country in Ontario province,
the Ontario Lottery and Gaming Corporation acknowledged
an embarrassing screw-up which saw it buying 22
European-manufactured and imported luxury cars as
prizes, instead of supporting local manufacturing in
tough times.
The Toronto Globe and Mail reported
on widespread public and government criticism of the
OLGC's "License to Win" prize selection, and the
organisation's chief executive Kelly McDougald received
a rocket from Deputy Premier George Smitherman, who
decried the choice as a “huge lapse in judgment."
“OLG regrets making the decision to feature cars in
a customer promotion that were not built in Ontario,”
the Crown agency said Tuesday in a tersely worded
statement. “Supporting Ontario business is an important
part of OLG's mandate and this promotion should not have
included foreign-made vehicles.”
Rui Brum, an OLG
spokesman, said the annual promotion has in the past
featured cars made by the Detroit Three as well as
Volkswagen. The decision to go with Mercedes-Benz for
this year's contest was made 10 months ago, he said,
well before the global economic crisis led to a steep
drop in domestic auto sales.
Senior management of
the lottery corporation will review all aspects of the
promotion, Brum said in an interview. “We're taking a
look at everything.”
Nevertheless, what can you
do with 22 luxury sedans? The OLGC is going ahead with
the grand prize draw set for April 14, even though the
corporation removed the information from its website
Tuesday afternoon. It will give away 22 Mercedes-Benz
B200 cars, worth Cdn$ 34 400 each, as part of the
contest.
Deputy Premier Smitherman said he met
Tuesday with lottery executives to tell them that he
won't tolerate having a government agency's procurement
practices favour foreign-made goods over those produced
in Ontario.
“It was a crappy decision and I let
them know it in full force,” Smitherman told reporters.
“It's wrong on all levels and it was a big mistake.”
The decision is particularly troubling, he said,
because the corporation has brought in a new slate of
executives, including Ms. McDougald, to turn around its
corporate culture after a scandal over the unusually
high number of retailers who won lottery prizes. And the
fact that the corporation got a good deal on the
Mercedes-Benz vehicles matters little.
“Anyone
looking to buy 22 cars today is going to get a pretty
good deal on them, aren't they?” he said.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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