Lottery cheating has always been tempting. There was a movie, Lucky Numbers, based on a real cheat in a Pennsylvania lottery. The TV yesterday was full of advice about what to do if you win a lottery: get a lawyer, get an accountant, move out of town temporarily, and keep your mouth shut!
Such documentaries/films serve as misinformation, as in, they obfuscate the grand scope of fraud by narrowly encapsulating a single instance of fraud. As if that's all that's all there is.
Lottery cheating has always been tempting. There was a movie, Lucky Numbers, based on a real cheat in a Pennsylvania lottery. The TV yesterday was full of advice about what to do if you win a lottery: get a lawyer, get an accountant, move out of town temporarily, and keep your mouth shut!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n8zHfScOWO8
McDonald's lottery scam became a mini-series.
Yes. This article says the drawing was delayed, not the results.
Such documentaries/films serve as misinformation, as in, they obfuscate the grand scope of fraud by narrowly encapsulating a single instance of fraud. As if that's all that's all there is.
That wasn't really what Lucky Numbers was about. Maybe the Mc Donald's one.