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MAC
01-06-2004, 02:30 PM
beware: this may be my most insensitive post yet

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Woman claims $162 million Mega Millions ticket lost
(http://www.mansfieldnewsjournal.com/news/updates/3184.html)

CLEVELAND (AP) — A Cleveland woman has told police she picked the winning numbers for the $162 million Mega Millions lottery jackpot but lost the ticket before the drawing, according to a police report.
Elecia Battle told police she dropped her purse as she left the Quick Shop Food Mart in suburban South Euclid last week after buying the ticket. She said she realized after the drawing last Tuesday that the ticket was missing.
The Ohio Lottery said last week that the winning ticket was sold at the store, about 15 miles east of Cleveland.
“I feel like crap right now,” said Battle, who cried while speaking to The Associated Press at her home Monday night.
Police say Battle also was in tears when she came to the station Friday to file the report and did not hesitate when asked to write down the winning numbers.
“We don’t believe that she’s fabricating it, but there’s no real way of knowing other than going on her word,” Lt. Kevin Nieter told Cleveland’s WEWS-TV on Monday.
Nieter said information Battle knew about when the ticket was bought and how the numbers were picked make her story credible. She told police that the numbers — 12, 18, 21, 32 and 46 and Mega Ball 49 — represented family birthdays and ages.
The winning ticket was sold to someone who chose the numbers, not someone who let the machine pick.
Messages seeking comment left Monday with the police department were not immediately returned.
Battle, 40, is a pharmacy trainer for Rite-Aid. She would not talk about the specifics of when she bought the ticket, how she lost it or even if she was a regular lottery player. She said her attorney, Sheldon Starke, would have a news conference Tuesday to announce a reward.
“I’m praying that someone finds the ticket, brings it forward and gets rewarded and from there we all live happily ever after. I’m just praying it has a positive ending,” she said.
Her husband, Jimmy Battle, has two jobs, including a paper route. The couple has seven children — some from previous marriages — ranging in age from 13 to 30.
“To have something in your hand and have it slip out is a tough thing to swallow,” said Jimmy Battle, 48.
Nieter said Elecia Battle may be out of luck if someone else picked up the lone winning ticket.
“Whoever has the ticket has the right to stake the claim to the winning jackpot. You can file all the police reports you want but it’s not going to help,” he said.
After news of Battle’s police report spread Monday night, about 30 people wielding flashlights walked through snow and braved frigid temperatures to try to find the ticket in the store parking lot and nearby bushes.
“I decided to come back to see if I could find the winning ticket,” said LaVerne Coleman, 57. The South Euclid woman said she would keep the millions if she found the ticket.
The police report says officers tried to see if Battle showed up on the store’s surveillance cameras but the store owner said the cameras were broken.
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sooooooo close to something for nothing

she gave a real dollar for a piece of paper to be part of a "game" with only 2 rules,

1) pick the numbers that get printed on this piece of paper
2) bring this piece of paper with its numbers back to win

and she fucked that up.

and now they tell us her pitiful story

now I imagine this sad beaten creature walking around shaking with sorrow at being so close to having all her problems solved and she has lost it.

why would God do that to her?

here's aconcept, if she'd been working for somethign and ALMOST had it but missed it at least she'd know that she TRYED

no, she was quiet happy to let "dumb luck" give her the right numbers....but she never thought about the FACT that dumb luck can take them away, too.

“I’m praying that someone finds the ticket, brings it forward and gets rewarded and from there we all live happily ever after. I’m just praying it has a positive ending,”

and that metaphor.....in MACelvania you'd be shot and your head put on a pike for using that metaphor outside of fictional writing.

go back to the pharmacy elucia, your 7 kids don't need to learn that 'we were almost rich but the we got FUCKED'

don't waste your time thinking that if you'd given up half of it in taxes and debt and then lived to be 90 you'd have had to spent $4,000/day to spend it all.

something for nothing

Barbie
01-06-2004, 02:48 PM
tisk tisk tisk...this is dreadful
*/ends head shaking.

It's not getting what you want, it's wanting what you got.

Money is the root of evil. Greed will only worsen personal suffering.

Let go Elecia Battle. IT'S JUST A GAME.

SimpleSimon
01-06-2004, 04:10 PM
Money is NOT the root of evil. Money is only a tool, a counter in the game we all play. The bible says (loosely translated) that the LOVE of money is the root of all evil, but as in so much else, it is wrong in that.

Money is nothing more than a tool.

Barbie
01-06-2004, 04:31 PM
The love of MONEY IS the root of all evil - and it's apparent to me that his Elicia loved the money that was never heres to begin with.

Money is a tool, I'll agree - but it doesn't make it less evil.

Barbie
01-06-2004, 04:44 PM
To quote the bible, if that is what we are going to use here as reference to life:

Jesus gave a direct warning against greed. He commanded us to guard against longing for something that we do not have: "Keep your eyes open and guard against every sort of covetousness, because even when a person has an abundance his life does not result from the things he possesses." (Luke 12:15) According to this passage and Jesus' subsequent illustration, greed is based on the foolish belief that what matters in life is how much one has.

"So, having sustenance and covering, we shall be content with these things." (1 Timothy 6:8)

"You must not desire your fellowman's house . . . nor anything that belongs to your fellowman."—Exodus 20:17.

"A mere lover of silver will not be satisfied with silver, neither any lover of wealth with income."—Ecclesiastes 5:10.

Barbie
01-06-2004, 05:48 PM
Ohio Lottery answers $162-million question
Last Updated Tue, 06 Jan 2004 12:14:21

CLEVELAND - A telecommunications worker is the winner of a $162-million lottery jackpot, and not a person who claimed to have lost the ticket, Ohio Lottery officials said Tuesday.

Rebecca Jemison, who claimed her prize at a news conference, will take home an after-tax lump sum of $67 million US.

Jemison said she's played the numbers occasionally over two years and was angry to hear that someone else claimed to have bought and lost the winning ticket.

Elecia Battle, 40, went to police last week saying she lost the ticket outside the Cleveland store where she says she bought it.

The Ohio Lottery has said that whoever turns in the winning ticket of the Mega Millions multistate jackpot is legally entitled to the winnings because the ticket is considered to be a bearer note. Lottery spokesperson Mardele Cohen said that makes the ticket "like cash."

Battle's lawyer said the ticket belongs to Battle, and argued that it was lost property.

Battle filed a police report Friday, saying she realized the ticket was missing when the numbers were announced last Tuesday.

Battle told police the numbers represented family birthdays and ages.

Police said Battle's information about the ticket, when the ticket was bought and how the numbers were picked made her story credible.


Question Answered (http://www.cbc.ca/stories/2004/01/06/jackpot040106)

Mudflap
01-06-2004, 07:29 PM
Step 2: Battle sues Jemison. Jemison settles with Battle out of court and pays Battle some odd sum to go away. Battle comes away with something for nothing (practically) and Jemison deals with more lawsuits because she now has $67 million dollars, liquid.

SimpleSimon
01-06-2004, 08:38 PM
I'd lay odds Mudflap's scenario plays out.

Barbie
01-06-2004, 08:59 PM
agreed

Billyman
01-09-2004, 04:30 AM
http://www.newsday.com/news/nationworld/nation/ny-ohiomega0109,0,4910922.story?coll=ny-nationalnews-headlines

January 8, 2004, 4:27 PM EST

CLEVELAND -- A woman who told police she bought and lost a lottery ticket worth $162 million all but admitted Thursday she made it up, saying tearfully: "I wanted to win so bad for my kids and my family. I apologize."

Elecia Battle, 40, said she is dropping her lawsuit over the Mega Millions jackpot that was awarded Tuesday to 34-year-old Rebecca Jemison.

Battle apologized to her husband, Jemison and her lawyer.

"I'm not a bad person. I'm really not," she said. "Everyone has a past."

Days after the Dec. 30 drawing, Battle filed a police report saying she lost the winning ticket, possibly when she dropped her purse outside a convenience store.

Police in suburban South Euclid, where the winning ticket was sold, said Battle will probably be charged with filing a false police report -- a misdemeanor punishable by 30 days to six months in prison and a $1,000 fine.

"I think what she's saying is what everybody else is inferring -- that she's lying," Lt. Kevin Nietert said.

Battle said she wanted to use the money to help her family and recently laid-off Cleveland police officers.

"I wanted to win," she said with a shaky voice. "The numbers were so overwhelming. I did buy a ticket and I lost it. I wanted to win so bad for my kids and my family. I apologize."

When she was asked directly if she lied, Battle's lawyer, Sheldon Starke, refused to let her answer.

The Ohio Lottery said it knew the truth all along. Jemison provided another ticket bought at the same time and place and had a ticket that showed she had played the same numbers in the prior drawing, the lottery said.

Battle has a criminal record that includes assault on a drug store clerk and misuse of another person's credit card.

MAC
01-09-2004, 05:41 AM
so, the fake lotto winner AND the 50' snake

what do they have in common?

THE NEWS REPORTED THEM WITH ABSOLUTELY NO PROOF THAT THEY WHERE IN ANYWAY CORRECT.

this isn't a matter of a genuine interest story or a "here's some info we don't know the outcome yet"

this was simply filling news space

your life is now measured by how big your entertainment pool is and its not going down just because they have nothing informative or creative to offer.

Barbie
01-14-2004, 06:05 PM
Woman who said she lost lottery ticket charged with filing false police report (http://cnews.canoe.ca/CNEWS/WeirdNews/2004/01/09/309036-ap.html)



Woman who said she lost lottery ticket charged with filing false police report



SOUTH EUCLID, Ohio (AP) - A woman who claimed to have lost a lottery ticket worth $162 million was charged Friday with filing a false police report.

The charges came a day after 40-year-old Elecia Battle all but admitted making up the story. The misdemeanour charge carries 30 days to six months in jail and a $1,000 fine. Police Lieut. Kevin Nietert said police pursued the charge because protecting the lottery's integrity is important. "I think the general public that's been reviewing this wants to know that the police department is going to do something about this," he said.

Days after the Dec. 30 Mega Millions drawing, Battle filed a police report saying she had bought the winning ticket but had lost it, possibly when she dropped her purse outside the convenience store.

Then, when Rebecca Jemison, 34, came forward with the winning numbers and was declared the winner of the jackpot, Battle sued.

On Thursday, however, Battle dropped her lawsuit and apologized to her husband, Jemison and her lawyer.

"I wanted to win so bad for my kids and my family. I apologize," she said. She added: "I'm not a bad person. I'm really not."

___________________________________________

As Billy reported, the police were probably going to charge her.
They did charge her.

And that is what is known as getting what you deserve!

Billyman
01-15-2004, 12:49 AM
Originally posted by Barbie
And that is what is known as getting what you deserve!

*nods*

Pianomahnn
01-15-2004, 04:46 AM
Win++;

Venus
01-15-2004, 04:59 AM
Originally posted by Billyman



Battle said she wanted to use the money to help her family and recently laid-off Cleveland police officers.


Now if that's not a play to try to get out of the fals report charges, I don't know what is.