The Southland Times

Lottery lesson for winner - don’t trust anyone

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Last Christmas, a man in Vacaville, California, learned a grim, but useful, holiday lesson: Sometimes, don’t spread glad tidings. Keep the good news to yourself.

It was December 20, and the city of about 100,000, located midway between Sacramento and San Francisco, was festooned with white lights and toy reindeer. Hoping to get his hands on a bit of extra cash for the holidays, the Vacaville man went to a Lucky grocery store and paid US$30 (NZ$44) for a scratch-off lottery ticket that odds said would leave him at a loss.

But the ticket turned out to be a winner, and promised to flood his bank account with US$10,000, or so he thought. The lucky lottery contestant couldn’t contain his excitement. He returned home to tell his two roommates of his financial success.

He would rue the day he ignored the warning of Shakespear­e’s King Lear to, ‘‘Mend your speech a little, Lest you may mar your fortunes.’’

The next morning, he reported to the Sacramento district office of the California State Lottery to collect his winnings. But the ticket he presented was not a winner.

Suspecting that one of his roommates had purloined the winning ticket while he was sleeping, the man went to the local police department, which recounted the episode this week on Facebook. Chris Polen, a spokesman with the Vacaville Police Department, said authoritie­s weren’t naming the man at his request.

It didn’t take long for police to unwind the mystery of the good ticket gone bad. The following day, on Dec. 22, the man’s 35-yearold roommate, Adul Saosongyan­g, attempted to cash in on a winning scratch-off ticket at the same lottery office in Sacramento, police said.

But the winning ticket wasn’t worth a meager US$10,000, the roommate was told. It was worth US$10 million.

California lottery officials, yet to be informed that a ticket had been reported stolen, neverthele­ss began a routine investigat­ion, conducted for all winnings of US$600 and up. Collecting a prize of such a sum involves submitting a detailed claim form, either in person at a district office or else in the mail, according to the state lottery.

The lottery investigat­or who went to the Lucky in Vacaville to view video surveillan­ce footage of the original December 20 purchase learned that the ticket may have been stolen, according to the police department’s account. Theft of lottery tickets is relatively common. Numerous scratch-off winners have later been unmasked for stealing the tickets, either from friends or from the grocery stores where they were employed.

The lottery is a magnet for elaborate scams. But cases like this show that the high-stakes contest can also motivate more petty forms of personal betrayal.

The lottery investigat­or teamed up with a Vacaville detective to get to the bottom of things. Who had purchased the initial scratch-off game? Who was responsibl­e for the ticket presented the following day? And who was destined for the US$10 million?

What they uncovered was an elaborate attempt by Saosongyan­g to seize his roommate’s reward. He had purchased a similar scratch card, and then swapped it out for the winning ticket while his unsuspecti­ng roommate was sleeping.

On Tuesday, the investigat­or summoned Saosongyan­g to the Sacramento office to collect his winnings.

Instead of rejoicing in the windfall, however, he was arrested by Vacaville police, who had obtained a warrant for him on the charge of grand theft.

He was booked at the Sacramento County Jail and will be transferre­d to the Solano County Jail later this week, authoritie­s said.

 ??  ?? Authoritie­s say 35-year-old Adul Saosongyan­g made off with his roommate’s winning Lottery scratcher, worth $US10 million.
Authoritie­s say 35-year-old Adul Saosongyan­g made off with his roommate’s winning Lottery scratcher, worth $US10 million.

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