The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Shop assistant had no idea of massive win

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A teenage shop assistant has spoken of the moment he ripped up a Mearns couple’s £58 million winning Euromillio­ns ticket.

Fred Higgins took his ticket to his local Scotmid where Sean Grant ripped it up and threw it in the bin after thinking it was not a winner.

The machine then told the 18-yearold former Mearns Academy pupil to contact Camelot because the winning sum was more than the store could pay out – so he quickly retrieved it from the bin.

Sean said both he and Mr Higgins stood “clueless” because at the time they still had no idea how much he had won.

He said he only heard on Wednesday night that the couple had won £58m and said he was delighted at their success.

“I have seen Fred a couple of times in the store,” said Sean.

“He gave me two tickets – the first one I put through the machine and it wasn’t a winner so I binned that.

“The second one came through as the winning noise but I automatica­lly just ripped it thinking it would be £10 or £20.

“I came back to the lottery machine which said it was in excess of what we could pay so I had to return the ticket to Mr Higgins and the player receipt.

“I apologised to Mr Higgins and gave him the ticket and the player receipt and said to him that he would have to phone Camelot because I thought he’d won a decent amount.”

Sean said the phone call telling him Mr Higgins had won the life-changing sum was “just amazing” – admitting he did not think he had ever paid out £50 or £100, never mind £58m.

Sean has just left school and said his family cannot believe that he sold a £58m winning ticket.

He said he does not play the lottery himself but did say the first thing he would do if he did win £58m would be to buy a new car.

Sean said he was still struggling to come to terms with his “15 minutes of fame”.

 ??  ?? Shop assistant Sean Grant in the Scotmid Co-operative store in Laurenceki­rk, where he ripped up the winning ticket.
Shop assistant Sean Grant in the Scotmid Co-operative store in Laurenceki­rk, where he ripped up the winning ticket.

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