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Daily Mirror
Daily Mirror
World
Sam Elliott-Gibbs

Man scoops massive lottery jackpot after using crafty strategy he saw on TV

A man scooped a huge prize after copying a strategy he saw on TV show The Lottery Changed My Life.

The South Carolina player won an incredible $100,000 (£81,000) by following what he saw another winner do on the popular US programme.

The show follows the lives of ordinary people who win life-changing amounts of money while playing the lottery.

He says he spent $25 per week playing the lottery for three months. The man says won $500 during that time and continued playing, just like the star of the American series.

He claimed that by the seventh week he had got lucky and won $100,000 - but at first he though it was just half that total.

He followed what he saw on TV - and didn't regret tuning in! (X90143)

After buying a Powerball ticket last month, he first thought he had only won $50,000 by matching two numbers.

Then after his wife studied the ticket, she realised he had matched four of five white balls and the red Powerball.

"I didn’t even know how to play Powerball," the man told lottery officials in South Carolina.

After hitting the jackpot, he bought a new car and says he will continue playing.

The Lottery Changed My Life tells the tales of how winners got their hands of the big prizes (Getty Images/iStockphoto)

Weeks ago a pizza delivery driver said he is suing a group of his friends who won a £600,000 lottery prize insisting he should get a cut of the money.

Sixteen members of a group won the Maxmillion prize on a Lotto Max ticket from the Ontario Lottery and Gaming Corporation (OLG) last summer.

But Philip Tsotsos, from Windsor, Ontario, Canada, says he should be the 17th winner and is taking the matter to civil court.

He insists he had remained in the lottery pool with his colleagues.

Mr Tsotsos is suing for $70,000 (£40,000) and other costs, including interest, according to CBA News.

He said: "Their dreams came true. Why should they steal mine?"

Defence lawyer David Robins, who represents the group of 16, said: "Mr. Tsotsos did not pay to play, so we deny that he is entitled to any of the relief that he is seeking, and we'll be vigorously defending the claim. In this instance, he did not play and he was not included."

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