Otago Daily Times

Lotto ticket’s value at question in sentencing

- ROB KIDD

HOW much is a $20 Lotto ticket worth if it only wins $1?

That was the unlikely legal conundrum faced by Judge

John Macdonald in the Dunedin District Court yesterday.

David Owen Sinclair (38) was the man in the dock, a long history of dishonesty conviction­s in his wake.

The most recent was a count of receiving.

On the evening of June 27, a car was broken into in English Ave in Dunedin.

Along with other items stolen was a $20 Lotto ticket.

Days later, one of Sinclair’s associates took it to a supermarke­t to check whether there was a windfall in store.

The machine made the triumphant jingle — a $1 Strike bonus ticket.

On July 4, police inquiries led them to Sinclair’s home, where they executed a search warrant.

There they found the stolen ticket along with the bonus prize.

And it got worse for Sinclair. While officers were in the house they noticed a suspicious aroma.

They found 0.5g of cannabis, cannabis seeds and utensils for smoking the class C drug.

Sinclair appeared on the drugs charges in August and was fined $200, along with court costs of $130.

Judge Macdonald yesterday had a more difficult decision to make for receiving the Lotto ticket.

‘‘What is the value?’’ Judge Macdonald asked police and the defence counsel.

‘‘It could have been worth millions.’’

On Sinclair’s behalf, David McCaskill argued his client should only have to repay $1 since that was all it yielded.

But police prosecutor Stewart Sluis said that the victim had been robbed of ‘‘the excitement’’ of

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