The Province

Maple Ridge man loses his claim to $50-million jackpot

Maple Ridge man plans to appeal ruling after losing his fight due to lack of evidence

- KEITH FRASER kfraser@postmedia.com twitter.com/keithrfras­er

The B.C. Supreme Court has dismissed the claims of a Maple Ridge man to a $50-million lottery jackpot.

George Wilson-Tagoe, 64, argued that through theft and fraud the B.C. Lottery Corp. had deprived him of the prize money from the winning Lotto Max ticket on March 14, 2014.

The retired accountant and father of two alleged that he had selected the numbers for himself for the winning ticket, but that he had lost his ticket. He said he remembered the numbers because he played the same numbers every week.

After a 21-month delay, BCLC in December awarded the $50 million to a publicity shy Langley family.

In rejecting Wilson-Tagoe’s claim to the lottery bonanza, B.C. Supreme Court Justice Kenneth Affleck noted that the winning ticket was selected from what is known as a quick pick, with potential winning numbers being picked by a computer, rather than through the self-selected numbers of the plaintiff.

“I have no evidence on this applicatio­n which would allow me to reject as insufficie­nt the careful scrutiny the defendant corporatio­n used to determine the winning ticket,” the judge said in his reasons for judgment. “The undisputed fact that Mr. Wilson-Tagoe purchased a ticket after self-selecting the numbers he wanted, whereas the winning ticket was a quick pick, in my view is dispositiv­e of this applicatio­n.”

Wilson-Tagoe also claimed that the winning ticket presented by the Langley family was a fake, but the judge dismissed that argument. The judge cited an earlier and similar court ruling in which an Ontario judge had found a plaintiff to be an honest and responsibl­e person with a sincere, but mistaken belief that the winning ticket was the ticket they had lost or misplaced.

“Those words are appropriat­e for the matter before me,” said Affleck.

The ruling was posted on the court’s website Monday, but was given out orally Sept. 27.

Reached for comment Tuesday, Wilson-Tagoe said that he would be appealing Affleck’s ruling, claiming that the court hadn’t looked at his evidence. Wilson-Tagoe, a self-represente­d litigant, said the judge wouldn’t let him address the court at one point.

“The lawyer for BCLC kept hogging the lectern,” he said. “When I tried to point out an error that they were talking about, the judge shut me down. It was the weirdest thing.”

Wilson-Tagoe said that his main grounds of appeal will focus on his claim that when he phoned BCLC initially, an investigat­or told him that the winning ticket was not a quick pick. “Now they are saying it’s a quick pick, so basically they are changing their story to fit a narrative.”

Wilson-Tagoe has filed an appeal of Affleck’s ruling at the B.C. Court of Appeal. No date has been set for the appeal.

In an email, a spokesman for BCLC said the corporatio­n conducts a thorough review of all prize claims and confirms the rightful winners before completing the verificati­on process and paying out any prize money.

 ?? NICK PROCAYLO/PNG ?? Maple Ridge’s George Wilson-Tagoe has had his case over a winning $50-million Lotto Max ticket thrown out of court.
NICK PROCAYLO/PNG Maple Ridge’s George Wilson-Tagoe has had his case over a winning $50-million Lotto Max ticket thrown out of court.

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