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Texas Woman’s $83 Million Lottery Prize On Hold

Wagerallsports

Wagerallsports

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‘I’m being treated as the bad guy’: Texas woman’s $83M lottery prize now 'on hold' because she used ticket app​

Danielle Antosz


A group of international gamblers legally purchased nearly every number combination in a Texas state lottery drawing — a scheme designed to guarantee a win. It worked — and it may be why another woman is now being denied her own $83.5 million prize.

“I’m being treated as the bad guy,” the anonymous winner said.

The group’s $95 million win, which the New York Post described as “something out of a heist movie,” was spearheaded by London-based trader Bernard Marantelli and bankrolled by Zeljko Ranogajec, an Australian professional gambler known as “the Joker.”
Together, they exploited a simple math trick: when the jackpot is large enough, you can make a profit by buying almost every possible ticket. According to the Wall Street Journal, the group teamed up with Lottery.com and used warehouses packed with printing terminals to produce 99.3% of those combinations in just three days.

The team won a lump-sum prize of $57.8 million, but lottery officials are closing loopholes so that they may keep other winners from collecting.

International scheme could cost another winner their jackpot​

Buying every ticket wasn’t illegal under Texas Lottery Commission (TLC) rules at the time. As the Post reports, “nothing in the Texas state lottery code says a person can’t buy every number combination.”

Winners are also allowed to remain anonymous, so the group initially claimed their prize through a local company called Rook TX. But the victory didn’t stay quiet for long.

When a Texas woman won an $83.5 million jackpot this past February, after buying her ticket through the Jackpocket app, she was told she couldn’t collect her winnings. State officials are now cracking down on anything that falls outside of tightly controlled, in-person lottery purchases — especially when foreign actors are involved or the ticket-buying process becomes hard to regulate.

“Sometimes there are reasons to investigate things, but I don’t think mine is one of them.” the anonymous winner told Nexstar, speaking on condition of anonymity.

Dawn Nettles, a longtime lottery watchdog, disagrees.

“It doesn’t matter that the courier apps weren’t officially banned in Texas when she bought her ticket, because she purchased it over the internet and paid an added fee — and those things are against the law,” she told the Post.

Even so, Nettles admits that others have gotten away with similar purchases in the past. She is now part of a class action lawsuit targeting the original $95 million payout to Rook TX and says that it should never have been allowed.

Texas Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick has called the team's win “the biggest theft from the people of Texas in the history of Texas,” reports the Post. Others have raised concerns that international groups are siphoning off winnings that should benefit Texas residents.

“If you win $50 million in the lottery, you are probably going to buy a new car, new home, buy things for friends — all that is going to assist [the state’s] economy. But not if the money is leaving the state,” said Nettles.

The TLC formally banned lottery courier services in February 2025. In a press release, the commission said it would revoke the licenses of any retailer working with such services. The new policy became effective immediately and is expected to be written into official rules this spring.
 

djefferis

djefferis

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Jan 8, 2024
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As I understand it - the win is invalidated as the ticket purchaser did not buy the ticket individually/ but via proxy using the Jackpocket app.

The app purchases tickets in aggregate and then “resells” them to an individual or group - taking a fee for their service.

In essence there are a number of possible issues here - including money laundering.

No different than a land based sports book having a client walk in - place a wager - only to find out that client was a runner for someone else. Many cases where books have invalidated wins under this premise in the past. That’s exactly what Jackpocket does - it is no longer connected to Texas Lotto. Question is going to be since it WAS connected at the time I believe - are the winners “grandfathered” in / or can the Texas lotto deny them.

Ultimately - I’d expect DraftKings (parent of Jackpocket) to pay the winnings - and then settle with Texas.
 

BMR Genie

BMR Genie

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Jun 16, 2016
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40,686
As I understand it - the win is invalidated as the ticket purchaser did not buy the ticket individually/ but via proxy using the Jackpocket app.

The app purchases tickets in aggregate and then “resells” them to an individual or group - taking a fee for their service.

In essence there are a number of possible issues here - including money laundering.

No different than a land based sports book having a client walk in - place a wager - only to find out that client was a runner for someone else. Many cases where books have invalidated wins under this premise in the past. That’s exactly what Jackpocket does - it is no longer connected to Texas Lotto. Question is going to be since it WAS connected at the time I believe - are the winners “grandfathered” in / or can the Texas lotto deny them.

Ultimately - I’d expect DraftKings (parent of Jackpocket) to pay the winnings - and then settle with Texas.
This is sad. I hope she gets her winnings.
 

djefferis

djefferis

Joined
Jan 8, 2024
Messages
3,995
Curious though - how can the TLC NOT be allowed to control whoever sells its products - including telling retailers they are not allowed to sell to courier services.

A courier simply opens too many unexplored areas and allows players to potentially bypass rules. For example - if a game is restricted to Texas residents or US Citizens purchasing a ticket inside of the state of Texas - the courier services could be giving a way for others to purchase winning tickets.

Texas lotto as well likely has some agreements with other multi state lottos (Powerball/MegaMillions) who have their own interest and will likely soon be offering their own apps for purchase - so giving access to a courier is going to create issues there.
 
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