BITTER DISAPPOINTMENT FOR LAND SLOT PLAYER
20 March 2009
Imagine winning $42 million....but then being
told the machine was broken!
Paul Kusznirewicz (55) of Ontario, Canada is a bitterly
disappointed and frankly angry gambler following a
devastating disqualification of what he thought was a
life-changing slots win. And he's not taking it lying
down after he was offered a consolation prize of four
dinner coupons by the Georgian Downs Casino in Innisfil,
Ontario.
The Toronto Star reports that
Kusznirewicz was playing the Buccaneer slot machine when
the lights and bells starting ringing and the machine
screen advised, "Jackpot! You have won $42.9 million!"
Shocked as the implications of such a huge win dawned on
him, the lucky gambler could only stare bemused at his
wife.
"The lights and the sounds," he recalls.
"It was saying on the machine 'Call attendant. You have
won a jackpot of over $42 million. I couldn't believe
it."
Amidst the bells and whistles, a casino
employee arrived, at first offering congratulations on
the win. More casino employees rushed over - two
supervisors, security and several mechanics. They took
pictures. A crowd began to gather.
Five minutes
later Kusznirewicz's hopes and dreams were dashed when
he was told: "We can't pay you that money because that
machine is broken." Instead, the casino offered him four
dinner buffet coupons, adding insult to injury.
The bitterly disappointed gambler took the matter up
with the Ontario Lottery and Gaming Corporation, but
that organisation supported the casino, explaining to
Kusznirewicz that the slot machine's maximum payout was
only $9 025.
"It malfunctioned. It clearly
malfunctioned," said OLG spokesperson Allison Sparkes.
"Each machine has a posted sign that says malfunction
voids all pays and plays."
Now Kusznirewicz has
launched litigation against the OLG with his lawyer,
Bryan McPhadden, taking issue with the OLG's position.
"The maximum payout of the machine is not clearly stated
on the machine as is the case with many other (slots in
the casino), which bear stickers stating the maximum
win. Accordingly, it is not clear that that amount
cannot be won on this machine," he said.
Furthermore, McPhadden says that despite weeks of
discussions with OLG's legal team, the corporation has
never provided evidence that the machine Kusznirewicz
was playing had malfunctioned.
Sparkes says a
report compiled after the incident indicated that the
machine never actually went into jackpot mode and that
an error message flashed on screen.
"There was an
error message," she said, adding that the OLG deals with
public money and must protect the public's interests.
"The machine did not go into jackpot mode and the patron
was informed there was a malfunction in the machine."
To this, McPhadden says both Kusznirewicz and his
wife know what they saw. Neither noticed any error
message.
"All the normal lights, bells and the
like associated with a win were shown on the machine and
this is what attracted the OLG floor attendant to go to
the machine," he said, adding that the gaming
corporation took photos of the machine at the time. "OLG
should release those photographs now if it is taking
this position. Had OLG provided us with these long ago,
as it has had ample opportunity to do, we may not have
commenced the action or continued with it."
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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