
Lottery Vermont Lotto Vermont Powerball
Vermont
Would you like to be a
millionaire? Five Opportunities!
|
Can you see yourself
in the picture, strolling down Lotto Sand Beach, hand in
hand with the girl or guy of your dreams...
(possibly even your
spouse)?
| |
Sounds
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I took that picture myself, and I can tell you personally that while
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the fact is that getting
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You
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But wishin' and hopin' won't
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The fact
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-First-
We need
some working capital. Click
below and claim your money.
A new window will open.
When you are done, come back here. |
Click
SUBMIT below and claim the $10 million. Then come back.
Don't hesitate to enter this, the only and oldest
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Yes, they will want to sell you some magazines but you
aren't obligated to buy. As a matter of fact, their very
own
rules state:
"NO PURCHASE OR FEE NECESSARY TO
ENTER.
A PURCHASE WON'T IMPROVE AN INDIVIDUAL'S CHANCE OF WINNING."
Hint: People come here all the time
and fail to enter the Publisher's Clearinghouse Sweepstakes. They
look, but do not enter.
It's free...no
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We can only guess that some people like to
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Looked at a different way, these are the people you
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Why rent your Gulfstream G5 when you can
own?

|
-Second
Opportunity-
Ok, so
what is it that makes the professional? Simple...
The
professional has
TOOLS AND A PLAN...
The amateur has only a
ham sandwich and
hopes. Which one are you??
Something to think about... When you hire the
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That's why YOU MUST get the proper tools for the job.
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Give yourself an edge. Beat the competition! That's the
name of the game and the way life succeeds. |
Ken
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←
CLICK THE BOOK TO SEE KEN'S SYSTEM
OR CLICK HERE... Ken Silver's
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|
-Third
Opportunity-
If everyone is counting on luck... and a man comes along
with a plan,
then he's already ahead of the game. Since it's all
about the "odds" then the
best plan is to put more "odds"
on your side!
It's all about increasing your "odds!" |
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success!
It works or your money back!
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|
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and tell chance to take a hike!
|
|
|
-Fourth
Opportunity-
Spend a little and earn a LOT! Make an investment now
that can pay off big dividends in your Lottery and Lotto
and Powerball adventures.
The next offer is FREE! |
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|
-Final
Opportunity-
How
much do you waste every year on losing lottery tickets?
At only $10 a week, its $500+ every year. Play $20 a
week - and you give away over $1,000 of your hard earned
money every year. That's what Terry Fisher says. He says
most folks can't afford to "play dumb".
You gotta "play smart!"
You gotta "grab your edge" |
Terry Fisher's
"Winning Lotto"
The #1 Lottery Book On the
Planet
Are you
sitting there saying, "ME TOO ME TOO!!"?
Grab a
copy of Fisher's "Winning Lotto" Book. See
how the guys who win...win. BTW, he has yet another
million buck check for you to look over. The guy
knows something we don't...and he's telling...
Go back up
and CLICK ON THE CHECK to see how he did it.
↑
|
"Start Treating Winning The Lottery like a Job...
Because then Maybe You Can Quit Your Job!"
It's Your Money. Use it wisely. Put the odds on your
side. |
Special Note: We ask that
you play the various Lottery games responsibly. The Lottery is
not for the poor
or destitute. It is not to be used as the "last resort." The
Lottery should be approached as an investment
by people who have the extra money to do so. If your choice is
to buy food or clothes for the kids, or play
the Lottery, we ask that you take care of your necessary
business first...and then use money you have
set aside to invest in our tools so that you'll have a better
chance at winning the big one. Thanks!
More Lottery Lotto Powerball Information and Research:
Study to show thyself approved.
More Lottery Lotto Powerball Information and Research:
Data by Wiki
A lottery is a form of
gambling which involves the drawing of lots for a prize.
Some governments outlaw it, while others endorse it to the
extent of organizing a national or state lottery. It is
common to find some degree of regulation of lottery by
governments.
At the beginning of the
20th century, most forms of gambling, including lotteries
and sweepstakes, were illegal in many countries, including
the U.S.A. and most of Europe. This remained so until after
World War II. In the 1960s casinos and lotteries began to
appear throughout the world as a means to raise revenue in
addition to taxes.
National Lottery building
located on Paseo de la Reforma in Mexico City.
Lotteries come in many
formats. The prize can be a fixed amount of cash or goods.
In this format there is risk to the organizer if
insufficient tickets are sold. More commonly the prize fund
will be a fixed percentage of the receipts. A popular form
of this is the "50-50" draw where the organizers promise
that the prize will be 50% of the revenue. Many recent
lotteries allow purchasers to select the numbers on the
lottery ticket resulting in the possibility of multiple
winners.
The purchase of lottery
tickets by large numbers of people is arguably economically
irrational. However, in addition to the chance of winning,
the ticket may enable some purchasers to experience a thrill
and to indulge in a fantasy of becoming wealthy. If the
entertainment value (or other non-monetary value) obtained
by playing is high enough for a given individual, then the
purchase of a lottery ticket could represent a gain in
overall utility. In such a case, the monetary loss would be
outweighed by the non-monetary gain, thus making the
purchase a rational decision for that individual.
Early history
The first recorded signs
of a lottery are Keno slips from the Chinese Han Dynasty
between 205 and 187 B.C. These lotteries are believed to
have helped to finance major government projects like the
Great Wall of China. From the Chinese "The Book of Songs"
(second millennium B.C.) comes a reference to a game of
chance as "the drawing of wood", which in context appears to
describe the drawing of lots. From the Celtic era, the
Cornish words "teulet pren" translates into "to throw wood"
and means "to draw lots". The Iliad of Homer refers to lots
being placed into Agamemnon's helmet to determine who would
fight Hector.
The first known European
lotteries were held during the Roman Empire, mainly as an
amusement at dinner parties. Each guest would receive a
ticket, and prizes would often consist of fancy items such
as dinnerware. Every ticket holder would be assured of
winning something. This type of lottery, however, was no
more than the distribution of gifts by wealthy noblemen
during the Saturnalian revelries. The earliest records of a
lottery offering tickets for sale is the lottery organized
by Roman Emperor Augustus Caesar. The funds were for repairs
in the City of Rome, and the winners were given prizes in
the form of articles of unequal value.
The earliest public
lottery on record is that which was held in the Dutch town
of Sluis in 1434.
The first recorded
lotteries to offer tickets for sale with prizes in the form
of money were held in the Low Countries during the period
1443–1449. Various towns held public lotteries to raise
money for town fortifications, and to help the poor. The
town records of Ghent, Utrecht, and Bruges indicate that
lotteries may be even older. A record dated May 9, 1445 at
L'Ecluse refers to raising funds to build walls and town
fortifications, with a lottery of 4,304 tickets and total
prize money of 1737 florins.[1] In the 17th century it was
quite usual in the Netherlands to organize lotteries to
collect money for the poor. Tickets cost about four
guilders, and the prizes were paintings (50 to 100 per
lottery); some by painters today considered famous such as
Jan van Goyen.
The Dutch were the first
to have solely cash prizes and to base these prizes on the
odds of winning — roughly a quarter of tickets winning a
prize. The lottery proved very popular and was hailed as a
painless form of taxation. In the Netherlands the lottery
was used to raise money in support of the poor, to build
dikes and town defenses, and to free sailors from slavery in
Arab countries. The English word lottery stems from the
Dutch word loterij, which is derived from the Dutch noun lot
meaning fate. The Dutch state-owned staatsloterij is the
oldest running lottery.
England, 1566-1826
Although the English
probably first experimented with raffles and similar games
of chance, the first recorded official lottery was chartered
by Queen Elizabeth I, in the year 1566, and was drawn in
1569. This lottery was designed to raise money for the
"reparation of the havens and strength of the Realme, and
towardes such other publique good workes." Each ticket
holder won a prize, and the total value of the prizes
equalled the money raised. Prizes were in the form of silver
plate and other valuable commodities. The lottery was
promoted by scrolls posted throughout the country showing
sketches of the prizes. [2]
English Lottery 1566
Scroll.
Thus, the lottery money
received was an interest free loan to the government during
the three years that the tickets ('without any Blankes')
were sold. In later years, the government sold the lottery
ticket rights to brokers, who in turn hired agents and
runners to sell them. These brokers eventually became the
modern day stockbrokers for various commercial ventures.
Most people could not afford the entire cost of a lottery
ticket, so the brokers would sell shares in a ticket; this
resulted in tickets being issued with a notation such as
"Sixteenth" or "Third Class."
English State Lottery
Ticket 1814 issued by broker Swift & Co.
Many private lotteries
were held, including raising money for The Virginia Company
of London to support its settlement in America at Jamestown.
The English State Lottery ran from 1694 until 1826. Thus,
the English lotteries ran for over 250 years, until the
government, under constant pressure from the opposition in
parliament, declared a final lottery in 1826. This lottery
was held up to ridicule by contemporary commentators as "the
last struggle of the speculators on public credulity for
popularity to their last dying lottery."
Early America, 1612-1900
Ticket from an 1814
lottery to raise money for Queen's College, New Jersey.
An English lottery,
authorized by King James I in 1612, granted the Virginia
Company of London the right to raise money to help establish
settlers in the first permanent English colony at Jamestown,
Virginia.
Lotteries in colonial
America played a significant part in the financing of both
private and public ventures. It has been recorded that more
than 200 lotteries were sanctioned between 1744 and 1776,
and played a major role in financing roads, libraries,
churches, colleges, canals, bridges, etc.[3] In the 1740s,
the foundation of Princeton and Columbia Universities was
financed by lotteries, as was the University of Pennsylvania
by the Academy Lottery in 1755.
During the French and
Indian Wars, several colonies used lotteries to help finance
fortifications and their local militia. In May 1758, the
State of Massachusetts raised money with a lottery for the
"Expedition against Canada."
Massachusetts Lottery
Ticket 1758 French & Indian Wars
Benjamin Franklin
organized a lottery to raise money to purchase cannon for
the defense of Philadelphia. Several of these lotteries
offered prizes in the form of "Pieces of Eight." George
Washington's Mountain Road Lottery in 1768 was unsuccessful.
However, these rare lottery tickets bearing George
Washington's signature have become collectors' items which
sold for about $15,000 in 2007. Later, in 1769, Washington
was a manager for Col. Bernard Moore's "Slave Lottery",
which advertised land and slaves as prizes in the Virginia
Gazette.
1776 Lottery ticket
issued by Continental Congress to finance Revolutionary War.
At the outset of the
Revolutionary War, the Continental Congress used lotteries
to raise money to support the Colonial Army. Alexander
Hamilton wrote that lotteries should be kept simple, and
that "Everybody ... will be willing to hazard a trifling sum
for the chance of considerable gain ... and would prefer a
small chance of winning a great deal to a great chance of
winning little." Taxes had never been accepted as a way to
raise public funding for projects, and this led to the
popular belief that lotteries were a form of hidden tax.
At the end of the
Revolutionary War the various states had to resort to
lotteries to raise funds for numerous public projects. For
many years these lotteries were highly successful and
contributed to the nation's rapid growth. The lotteries were
used for such diverse projects as the Pennsylvania
Schuylkill - Susquehanna Canal (lottery in May 1795), and
Harvard College (lottery in March 1806). Many American
churches raised building funds through state authorized
private lotteries.
Harvard Lottery Ticket
1811
However, lotteries
eventually became a cause of financial mismanagement and
scandal. Most notorious was the Louisiana State Lottery
(1868-1892) which was aptly called the "Golden Octopus"
because its tentacles reached into every home in America.
Louisiana Lottery 1/20th
of a $20 ticket: The Last of the Lotteries
Bolita, a type of lottery
popular in Cuba, was brought to Tampa, Florida in the 1880s
and flourished in Ybor City's many Latin saloons.
Toward the end of the
19th century a large majority of state constitutions banned
lotteries. Finally, on July 29, 1890, U.S. President
Benjamin Harrison sent a message to Congress demanding
"severe and effective legislation" against lotteries.
Congress acted swiftly, and banned the U.S. mails from
carrying lottery tickets. The Supreme Court upheld the law
in 1892, and that brought a complete halt to all lotteries
in the U.S.A. by 1900.
When lotteries raised
their head again in 1964, it would take many years of
constitutional amendements by the various states before the
lotteries were allowed to flourish again.
On March 12, 1964, New
Hampshire became the first state to sell lottery tickets in
the modern era.
New Hampshire Lottery
Ticket 1964
For modern USA lotteries
visit: Lotteries in the United States
Countries with a national
lottery
This maneki neko beckons
customers to purchase takarakuji tickets in Tokyo, Japan.
Africa
* South Africa: South
African National Lottery
* Kenya: Toto 6/49, Kenya
Charity Sweepstakes
North and South America
* Argentina: Quiniela,
Loto and various others
* Barbados: Barbados
lottery and various others
* Brazil: Mega-Sena and
various others
* Canada: Lotto 6/49 and
Lotto Super 7 (Replaced by the Lotto Max)
* Chile: Polla Chilena de
Beneficencia S.A.
* Costa Rica: Lotería
Nacional, Chances Lotería Popular, Lotería Tiempos, and
Lotería Instantanea (better known as "Raspaditas" since the
tickets are scratch cards).
* El Salvador: Lotería
Nacional de Beneficencia, Lotín (scratch cards).
* Dominican Republic:
Lotería Electrónica Internacional Dominicana S.A.
* Ecuador: Lotería
Nacional
* Mexico: Lotería
Nacional para la Asistencia Pública and Pronósticos para la
Asistencia Pública
Asia
* Mainland China: China
Welfare Lottery, China Sports Lottery
* Hong Kong: Mark Six
* Macau: Macau SLOT
* Taiwan: Taiwan Lottery
* Israel: Lotto
* Japan: Takarakuji
* Lebanon: La Libanaise
des Jeux
* Malaysia: Sports Toto
Malaysia, Magnum Corporation, Pan Malaysian Pools)
* Philippines: Philippine
Lotto Draw
* Singapore: Singapore
Pools
* South Korea: Lotto
* Sri Lanka: National
Lottery, Development Lottery
* Thailand:
สลากกินแบ่งรัฐบาล (salak gin
bang ratthabarn or "Government Lottery"), also called
lottery or หวย (huay).
* Vietnam:
Xổ số kiến thiết
Australasia
* New
Zealand: NZ Lotteries
Europe
A modern
Finnish Lotto coupon, with personal info (customer no. and
account for winnings) blanked out. These coupons are printed
out on a terminal connected to the lottery provider (a
monopoly, Veikkaus) whenever a player participates in the
lottery.}
*
Pan-European: EuroMillions
* Nordic
countries: Viking Lotto
* Austria:
Lotto 6 aus 45, EuroMillions and Zahlenlotto
* Belgium:
Loterie Nationale or Nationale Loterij and EuroMillions
*
Bulgaria: Durzhavna lotariya, TOTO 2 (6/49, 6/42, 5/35)
* Croatia:
Hrvatska lutrija
* Czech
republic: Sazka
* Denmark:
Lotto, Klasselotteriet
* Finland:
Lotto, scratch tickets, racing & football pools (Veikkaus)
* France:
La Française
des Jeux and EuroMillions
* Germany: Lotto 6 aus
49, Spiel 77 and Super 6
* Greece: Lotto 6/49,
Joker 5/45 + 1/20 and various others
* Hungary: Lottó
* Iceland: Lottó
* Ireland: The National
Lottery (Irish: An Chrannchur Náisiúnta) and EuroMillions
* Italy: Lotto and
SuperEnalotto
* Latvia: Latloto 5/35,
SuperBingo, Keno
* Liechtenstein:
International Lottery in Liechtenstein Foundation
* Luxembourg:
EuroMillions
* Malta: Super 5 and
Lotto
* Macedonia: Lotarija na
Makedonija
* Montenegro: Lutrija
Crne Gore
* Netherlands:
Staatsloterij (The State Lottery)
* Netherlands: Nationale
Postcode Loterij
* Norway: Lotto
* Poland: Lotto
* Portugal: Lotaria
Clássica, EuroMillions and Lotaria Popular
* Romania: Loteria Română
* Russia:
Gosloto (Russian:
Гослото, The State Lottery)
* Serb
Republic: Lutrija Republike Srpske
* Serbia:
Državna
Lutrija Srbije (The State Lottery of Serbia)
*
Slovakia: Loto
*
Slovenia: Loterija Slovenije
* Spain:
Loterías y Apuestas del Estado, EuroMillions and ONCE
o
Catalonia: Loteria de Catalunya (6/49 amongst others)
* Sweden:
Lotto (Svenska Spel)
*
Switzerland: Swiss Lotto and EuroMillions
* Turkey:
Various games by Milli Piyango İdaresi (National Lottery
Administration) including Loto 6/49 and jackpots
* Ukraine:
Super Lotto
* United
Kingdom: The National Lottery, the main game being Lotto.
Also Monday - The Charities Lottery and EuroMillions
Country
lottery details
In several
countries, lotteries are legalized by the governments
themselves[clarification needed]. Several on-line lotteries
and traditional lotteries with online payments exist. In the
on-line lotteries, the user has to select their number and
must either watch an ad for a few seconds before the
selection is confirmed, or click on a web banner/link to
register the pick in the system. The numbers may be drawn by
the site that runs the online lottery or might be linked to
a major physical lottery draw to ensure reliability. Prize
money ranges from $100,000 to $100 million.[4]
Australia
Main
article: Lotteries in Australia
In
Australia, lotteries operators are licensed at a state or
territory level, and include both state government-owned and
private sector companies.
Canada
In Canada
prior to 1967 buying a ticket on the Irish Sweepstakes was
illegal. In that year the federal Liberal government
introduced a special law (an Omnibus Bill) intended to bring
up-to-date a number of obsolete laws. The Minister of
Justice at that time, Pierre-Elliot Trudeau, sponsored the
bill. On September 12, 1967, Mr. Trudeau announced that his
government would insert an amendment concerning lotteries.
Even while
the Omnibus Bill was still being written, Montreal mayor
Jean Drapeau, trying to recover some of the money spent on
the World’s Fair and the new subway system, announced a
"voluntary tax". For a $2.00 "donation" a player would be
eligible to participate in a draw with a grand prize of $100
000. According to Drapeau, this "tax" was not a lottery for
two reasons. The prizes were given out in the form of silver
bars, not money, and the "competitors" chosen in a drawing
would have to reply correctly to four questions about
Montreal during a second draw. That competition would
determine the value of the prize that the winner would win.
The replies to the questions were printed on the back of the
ticket and therefore the questions would not cause any undue
problems. The inaugural draw was held on May 27, 1968.
There were
debates in Ottawa and Quebec City about the legality of this
'voluntary tax'. The Minister of Justice alleged it was a
lottery. Montreal’s mayor replied that it did not contravene
the federal law. While everyone awaited the verdict, the
monthly draws went off without a hitch. Players from all
over Canada, the United States, Europe, and Asia
participated.
On
September 14, 1968 the Quebec Appeal Court declared Mayor
Drapeau’s "voluntary tax" illegal. However, the municipal
authorities did not give up the struggle; the Council
announced in November that the City would appeal this
decision to the Supreme Court.
As the
debate over legalities continued, sales dropped
significantly, because many people did not want to
participate in anything illegal. Despite offers of new
prizes the revenue continued to drop monthly, and by the
nineteenth and final draw, was only a little over $800 000.
On
December 23, 1969 an amendment was made to the Canada's
Criminal Code, allowing a provincial government to legally
operate lottery systems.
The first
provincial lottery in Canada was Quebec's Inter-Loto in
1970. Other provinces and regions introduced their own
lotteries through the 1970s, and the federal government ran
Loto Canada (originally the Olympic Lottery) for several
years starting in the late 1970s to help recoup the expenses
of the 1976 Summer Olympics. Lottery wins are generally not
subject to Canadian tax, but may be taxable in other
jurisdictions, depending on the residency of the winner.[5]
Today,
Canada has two nation-wide lotteries: Lotto 6/49 and Lotto
Max (the latter replaced Lotto Super7 in September of 2009).
These games are administered by the Interprovincial Lottery
Corporation, which is a consortium of the five regional
lottery commissions, all of which are owned by their
respective provincial and territorial governments:
* Atlantic
Lottery Corporation (New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, Prince
Edward Island, Newfoundland and Labrador)
*
Loto-Québec (Quebec)
* Ontario
Lottery and Gaming Corporation (Ontario)
* Western
Canada Lottery Corporation (Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta,
Yukon Territory, Northwest Territories, Nunavut)
* British
Columbia Lottery Corporation (British Columbia)
France
The first
known lottery in France was created by King Francis I in or
around 1505. After that first attempt, lotteries were
forbidden for two centuries. They reappeared at the end of
the 17th century, as a "public lottery" for the Paris
municipality (called Loterie de L'Hotel de Ville) and as
"private" ones for religious orders, mostly for nuns in
convents.
Lotteries
quickly became one of the most important resources for
religious congregations in the 18th century, and helped to
build or rebuild about 15 churches in Paris, including St.
Sulpice and Le Panthéon. At the beginning of the century,
the King avoided having to fund religious orders by giving
them the right to run lotteries, but the amounts generated
became so large that the second part of the century turned
into a struggle between the monarchy and the Church for
control of the lotteries. In 1774, the
monarchy--specifically Madame de Pompadour--founded the
Loterie de L'École Militaire to buy what is called today the
Champ de Mars in Paris, and build a military academy that
Napoleon Bonaparte would later attend; they also banned all
other lotteries, with 3 or 4 minor exceptions. This lottery
became known a few years later as the Loterie Royale de
France. Just before the French Revolution in 1789, the
revenues from La Lotterie Royale de France were equivalent
to between 5 and 7% of total French revenues.
Throughout
the 18th century, philosophers like Voltaire as well as some
bishops complained that lotteries exploit the poor. This
subject has generated much oral and written debate over the
morality of the lottery. All lotteries (including state
lotteries) were frowned upon by idealists of the French
Revolution, who viewed them as a method used by the rich for
cheating the poor out of their wages.
The
Lottery reappeared again in 1936, called lotto, when
socialists needed to increase state revenue. Since that
time, La Française des Jeux (government owned) has had a
monopoly on most of the games in France, including the
lotteries. There have also been reports of lotteries
regarding the mass guillotine executions in France. It has
been said that a number was attached to the head of each
person to be executed and then after all the executions, the
executioner would pull out one head and the people with the
number that matched the one on the head were awarded prizes
(usually small ones); each number was 3-to-5 digits long.
India
In India,
the lotteries are conducted by State Government under the
rules and regulations of Central government. Privately run
lotteries are rare and restricted. The state government
lotteries are run by different state governments, like
Punjab,Goa,Sikkim, Kerala etc. Kerala & Punjab state
lotteries run by Government of Kerala & Punjab, India can be
purchased from their registered agents outlets all over the
districts or by payment via credit card online.
Liechtenstein
Main
article: International Lottery in Liechtenstein Foundation
The
International Lottery in Liechtenstein Foundation (ILLF) is
a government authorised and state controlled charitable
foundation that operates Internet lotteries. The ILLF
pioneered Internet gaming, having launched the web’s first
online lottery, PLUS Lotto, in 1995 and processed the first
online gaming transaction ever. The International Lottery in
Liechtenstein Foundation (ILLF) also introduced the first
instant scratchcard games on the Internet during this time.
The ILLF supports the International Federation of Red Cross
and Red Crescent Societies and other charitable causes in
Liechtenstein, many of which support projects in poorer
nations internationally.
The ILLF
operates many websites, referred to as the ILLF brands.
Combined, these brands offer a wide array of games to choose
from.
Lottery
winnings are not taxed in Liechtenstein.
New
Zealand
Main
article: New Zealand Lotteries Commission
Lotteries
in New Zealand are controlled by the Government. A state
owned trading organisation, the New Zealand Lotteries
Commission, operates low prize scratch ticket games and
Powerball type lotteries with weekly prize jackpots. Lottery
profits are distributed by the New Zealand Lottery Grants
Board directly to charities and community organisations.
Sport and Recreation New Zealand, Creative New Zealand and
the New Zealand Film Commission are statutory bodies that
operate autonomously in distributing their allocations from
the Lottery Grants Board.
The
lotteries are drawn on Saturday and Wednesday. Lotto is sold
via a network of computer terminals in shopping centers
across the nation. The Lotto game was first played in 1987
and replaced New Zealand's original national lotteries, the
Art Union and Golden Kiwi. Lotto is a pick 6 from 40 numbers
game. The odds of winning the first division prize of around
NZ$300,000 to NZ$2 million are 1 in 3,838,380.
The
Powerball game is the standard pick 6 from 40 Lotto numbers
with an additional pick 1 from 10 Powerball number. This
game has odds of 1 in 38,383,800 and a first prize of
between NZ$1 million and NZ$30 million [6]. In 2007
Powerball changed to a pick 1 of 10 game (formerly pick 1 of
8) and the minimum Powerball prize increased from $1 million
to $2 million. Big Wednesday is a game played by picking 6
numbers from 45 plus heads or tails from a coin toss. A
jackpot cash prize of NZ$1 million to NZ$15 million is
supplemented with product prizes such as Porsche and Aston
Martin cars, boats, holiday homes and luxury travel. The
odds of winning first prize are 1 in 16,290,120.
Website
operators independent of the state Lotteries Commission
began publishing online Lotto Results as early as 1999. An
interactive Lotto website authorised to sell tickets online
was established in 2007.
Lottery
winnings are not taxed in New Zealand.
United
States
Main
article: Lotteries in the United States
In the
United States, the existence of lotteries is subject to the
laws of each state; there is no national lottery.
Header
from 1840 US patent on a new type of private lottery
Private
lotteries were legal in the United States in the early
1800s.[7] In fact, a number of US patents were granted on
new types of lotteries. In today's vernacular, these would
be considered business method patents.
Before the
advent of state-sponsored lotteries, many illegal lotteries
thrived; for example, see Numbers game and Peter H.
Matthews. The first modern state lottery in the U.S. was
established in the state of New Hampshire in 1964; as of
2008, lotteries are established in 42 states, the District
of Columbia, Puerto Rico, and the Virgin Islands; Arkansas
voters, on November 4, 2008, approved a ballot question to
legalize a state lottery.
The first
modern interstate lottery in the U.S. was formed in 1985 and
linked Maine, New Hampshire and Vermont. In 1988, the
Multi-State Lottery Association (MUSL) was formed with
Oregon, Iowa, Kansas, Rhode Island, West Virginia, Missouri,
and the District of Columbia as its charter members; it is
best known for its "Powerball" drawing, which is designed to
build up very large jackpots. Another interstate lottery,
The Big Game (now called Mega Millions), was formed in 1996
by the states of Georgia, Illinois, Massachusetts, Maryland,
Michigan and Virginia as its charter members. These states
were joined by New Jersey (1999), New York and Ohio (May
2002), Washington state (September 2002), Texas (2003) and
California (2005) for a total of 12 members.[8]
Instant
lottery tickets, also known as scratch cards, were first
introduced in the 1970s and have since become a major source
of state lottery revenue. Some states have introduced keno
and video lottery terminals (slot machines in all but name).
Other
interstate lotteries include Cashola, Hot Lotto and Wild
Card 2, some of MUSL's other games.
With the
advent of the Internet it became possible for people to play
lottery-style games on-line, many times for free (the cost
of the ticket being supplemented by merely seeing, say, a
pop-up ad). GTech Corporation, in the United States,
administers 70% of the worldwide online and instant lottery
business, according to its website. With online gaming rules
generally prohibitive, "lottery" games face less scrutiny.
This is leading to the increase in web sites offering
lottery ticket purchasing services, charging premiums on
base lottery prices. The legality of such services falls
into question across many jurisdictions, especially
throughout the United States, as the gambling laws related
to lottery play generally have not kept pace with the spread
of technology.
An
evolution of the lottery on the internet has appeared on the
social network Facebook. The free lottery has weekly
drawings and allows people to receive daily lottery tickets
and send their friends tickets.
Presently,
large portions of many American state lotteries are used to
fund public education systems.
Probability of winning
The
chances of winning a lottery jackpot are determined by
several factors, including: the count of possible numbers,
the count of winning numbers drawn, whether or not order is
significant and whether drawn numbers are returned for the
possibility of further drawing.
In a
typical 6 from 49 lotto, 6 numbers are drawn from 49 and if
the 6 numbers on a ticket match the numbers drawn, the
ticket holder is a jackpot winner - this is true regardless
of the order in which the numbers are drawn. The odds of
being a jackpot winner are approximately 1 in 14 million
(13,983,816 to be exact). The derivation of this result (and
other winning scores) is shown in the Lottery mathematics
article. To put these odds in context, suppose one buys one
lottery ticket per week. 13,983,816 weeks is roughly 269,000
years; In the quarter-million years of play, one would
expect to win the jackpot only once, or if one person bought
a ticket every second of every day for one year, one would
win the jackpot on average about 2.25 times.
The odds
of winning any actual lottery can vary widely depending on
the lottery design of financial engineers[clarification
needed]. Mega Millions is a very popular multi-state lottery
in the United States which is known for jackpots that grow
very large from time to time. This attractive feature is
made possible simply by designing the game to be extremely
difficult to win: 1 chance in 175,711,536. That's over
twelve times higher than the example above. Mega Millions
players also pick six numbers, but two different "bags" are
used. The first five numbers come from one bag that contains
numbers from 1 to 56. The sixth number -- the "Mega Ball
number" -- comes from the second bag, which contains numbers
from 1 to 46. To win a Mega Millions jackpot, a player's
five regular numbers must match the five regular numbers
drawn and the Mega Ball number must match the Mega Ball
number drawn. In other words, it is not good enough to pick
10, 18, 25, 33, 42 / 7 when the drawing is 7, 10, 25, 33, 42
/ 18. Even though the player picked all the right numbers,
the Mega Ball number at the end of the ticket doesn't match
the one drawn, so the ticket would be credited with matching
only four numbers (10, 25, 33, 42).
The
SuperEnalotto of Italy is supposedly the most difficult, as
players try to match 6 numbers out of 90. The odds in making
the jackpot: 1 in 622,614,630.
Most
lotteries give lesser prizes for matching just some of the
winning numbers. The Mega Millions game is an extreme case,
giving a very small payout (US$2) even if a player matches
only the final Mega Ball number on the ticket. The weekly
6/49 lottery operated by the ILLF, offers a two ball cash
prize to make the odds of winning any prize only 1 in 6.63.
Matching more numbers, the payout goes up. Although none of
these additional prizes affect the chances of winning the
jackpot, they do improve the odds of winning something and
therefore add a little to the value of the ticket. In most
lotteries, if a large amount of smaller prizes are awarded,
the jackpot will be reduced, in a similar manner that the
jackpot is divided if multiple players have tickets with all
the winning numbers.
In the UK
National Lottery the smallest prize is
£10 for
matching three balls. There exists a Wheeling Challenge to
create the smallest set of tickets to cover enough
combinations to ensure that any 6 numbers drawn will match
against at least 3 numbers on at least one of the tickets.
The current record is 163 tickets.
The expected value of
lottery bets is often notably low. In the United States, an
expected value of 50% of the purchase price is common. For
instance, when the player buys a lottery ticket for, say,
$10 he obtains a financial asset with an expected value of
only $5. Hence, buying a lottery ticket reduces the buyer's
expected net worth. This is in contrast with financial
securities like stocks and bonds whose prices are
theoretically based on their expected real values, as
expected by the markets at any given point in time.
Lotteries are sometimes
described as a regressive tax, albeit a voluntary one, since
those most likely to buy tickets, and to spend a larger
proportion of their money on them, are typically less
affluent people. The astronomically high odds against
winning the larger prizes have also led to the epithets of a
"tax on stupidity" and a "math tax". Although the use of the
word "tax" is not strictly correct, these descriptions are
intended to suggest that lotteries are government-sanctioned
operations which will attract only those people who fail to
understand that buying a lottery ticket is a poor economic
decision. Indeed, after taking into account the present
value of a given lottery prize as a single lump sum cash
payment, the impact of any taxes that might apply, and the
likelihood of having to share the prize with other winners,
it is not uncommon to find that a ticket for a major lottery
is worth less than one third of its purchase price. In other
words, if a lottery ticket costs US$1 to purchase, its true
economic worth may be only US$0.30 or so at the time of
purchase. Of course, this is just a hypothetical example,
and the actual value will depend on the details of each
lottery. Some lotteries may offer tickets that are worth
less than 20% of their price, while others may be worth over
50%. To raise money, lottery operators must offer tickets
worth much less than what one pays for them, so the lottery
is a bad choice for customers trying to come out ahead.
In a famous occurrence, a
Polish-Irish businessman named Stefan Klincewicz bought up
almost all of the 1,947,792 combinations available on the
Irish lottery. He and his associates paid less than one
million Irish pounds while the jackpot stood at £1.7
million. There were three winning tickets, but with the
"Match 4" and "Match 5" prizes, Klincewicz made a small
profit overall.
Notable prizes
Prize Lottery Country
Winner Date Notes
$390m Mega Millions
United States Won by one ticket holder from New Jersey and
one from Georgia 6 March 2007 World's largest jackpot
$365m Powerball United
States One ticket bought jointly by eight co-workers at a
Nebraska meat processing plant 18 February 2006 World's
largest single ticket winner
$363m The Big Game United
States Two winning tickets: Larry and Nancy Ross (Michigan),
Joe and Sue Kainz (Illinois) 9 May 2000 The Big Game is now
named Mega Millions
€180m EuroMillions France
×2,
Portugal ×1 Three ticket
holders 3 February 2006 Europe's largest jackpot
€147,8m SuperEnalotto
Italy One ticket holder from Bagnone (Toscana) 22 August
2009 Europe's largest single winner
€126m EuroMillions Spain
Anonymous 25 year-old woman 8 May 2009 Largest single winner
in EuroMillions.
£42m National Lottery
United Kingdom Three ticket holders 6 January 1996 Largest
UK prize
€37.6m National Lottery
Germany Won by a nurse from North Rhine-Westphalia 7 October
2006 Largest German prize and single winner
€25m State Lottery
Netherlands Ticket sold in The Hague 10 July 2008 Tax free
lump sum
€115m Euro Millions
Ireland Dolores Mcnamara August 2005 Biggest single winner
and jackpot (Ireland)
Tax free lump sum
€42m Jordan Banks August
2008
Tax free lump sum
₱347.8m Philippine Lotto
Draw Philippines Two winners in Luzon 22 February 2009
Asia's largest prize
On 20 September 2005 a
primary school boy in Italy won the equivalent of £27.6
million in the Italian national lottery. Although children
are not allowed to gamble under Italian law, children are
allowed to play the lottery. [2]
Payment of prizes
Winnings (in the U.S.)
are not necessarily paid out in a lump sum, contrary to the
expectation of many lottery participants. In certain
countries, mainly the U.S., the winner gets to choose
between an annuity payment and a one-time payment. The
one-time payment is much smaller than, indeed often only
half of, the advertised lottery jackpot, even before
applying any withholdings to which the prize may be subject.
The annuity option provides regular payments over a period
that ranges from 10 to 40 years. Some U.S. lottery games,
especially those offering a "lifetime" prize, do not offer a
lump-sum option.
In some online lotteries,
the annual payments can be as little as $25,000 over 40
years, with a balloon payment in the final year. This type
of installment payment is often made through investment in
government-backed securities. Online lotteries pay the
winners through their insurance backup. However, many
winners choose to take the lump-sum payment, since they
believe they can get a better rate of return on their
investment elsewhere.
In some countries,
lottery winnings are not subject to personal income tax, so
there are no tax consequences to consider in choosing a
payment option. In Canada, Australia, Germany, Ireland,
Italy and the United Kingdom all prizes are immediately paid
out as one lump sum, tax-free to the winner. In
Liechtenstein, all winnings are tax-free and the winner may
opt to receive a lump sum or an annuity with regard to the
Jackpot prizes.
In the United States,
federal courts have consistently held that lump sum payments
received from third parties in exchange for the rights to
lottery annuities are not capital assets for tax purpose.
Rather, the lump sum is subject to ordinary income tax
treatment.
Problems
Side-effects
There can be some
problems associated with winning a lottery jackpot. Those of
a poor socioeconomic background may not have proper money
management skills. In addition, there are security and
safety risks associated with publicly announcing the lottery
winner/s such as holding family members for ransom.
Scams and frauds
This section has multiple
issues. Please help improve the article or discuss these
issues on the talk page.
* It may contain original
research or unverifiable claims. Tagged since September
2007.
* Its factual accuracy is
disputed. Tagged since March 2008.
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worldwide view of the subject. Tagged since January 2008.
Lottery, like any form of
gambling, is susceptible to fraud, despite the high degree
of scrutiny claimed by the organizers. One method involved
is to tamper with the machine used for the number selection.
By rigging a machine, it is theoretically easy to win a
lottery. This act is often done in connivance with an
employee of the lottery firm. Methods used vary; loaded
balls where select balls are made to pop-up making it either
lighter or heavier than the rest. All balls should be
independently verified for materials, size, pressure,
susceptibility to magnetism, and other qualities.
In some US States, such
as Kansas and Minnesota, losing lottery tickets can be
mailed in for a raffle of special prizes. The trouble with
that is that employees of stores that sell lottery tickets
sometimes collect the lottery tickets that are thrown away
and send them in. As a lottery official put it "The
retailers have an unlimited supply of free tickets. You do
not need to be an FBI agent to realize that is a
tremendously unfair advantage." [9]
Some advance fee fraud
scams on the Internet are based on lotteries. The fraud
starts with spam congratulating the recipient on their
recent lottery win. The email explains that in order to
release funds the email recipient must part with a certain
amount (as tax/fees) as per the rules or risk forfeiture.
Another form of lottery
scam involves the selling of "systems" which purport to
improve a player's chances of selecting the winning numbers
in a Lotto game. These scams are generally based on the
buyer's (and perhaps the seller's) misunderstanding of
probability and random numbers. Sale of these systems or
software is legal, however, since they mention that the
product cannot guarantee a win, let alone a jackpot.
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