Tag Archives: bought

I Won the Lottery! Or, Maybe Not (Page 1 of 2)

I must be the luckiest person alive. In the past three days I found out I won 1.5 Million Euros in the UK lottery, One Million Euros in the Winx International Lottery, 1.5 Million Euros in the 2007 E-Mail Lottery, and 500,000 Pounds in an e-mail lottery held by the Coca Cola Company. Wow! What did I do to receive all these riches?

The sad truth is there are actually people who fall for these schemes. For the promise of a quick buck (or million Euros as the case may be) people will turn over their bank account numbers, wire money in the hopes of getting more back, or give other information that could lead to identity theft.

These lottery and sweepstakes schemes have gone on long before the internet, with one of the oldest being the phony sweepstakes which required an entrance fee to claim your prize, which amounted to more than the “prize” was worth. Another variation of that scheme was requiring the potential “winner” to call a certain number to find out if he or she was a winner. The phone call cost the potential “winner” a certain amount per minute with an unusually-long wait time on hold. The real winner was the scamming company which made money off the phone calls.

Today’s thieves have a wide choice of scam-delivery mechanisms, including in person, the mail, phone and internet. However, the same holds true no matter how the scam is delivered: if it sounds too good to be true, it is.

How Can You Recognize the Lottery or Sweepstakes Scam?

There are certainly legitimate lotteries and sweepstakes offers. Who hasn’t bought a state or multi-state lottery ticket from their local lottery retailer? Or, who hasn’t seen one of those sweepstakes offered by a recognized company advertising in the coupon section of the Sunday newspaper? You fill out the entry form or reasonable facsimile (usually a 3”x5” card) with your name and address and send it off.

Therein is your biggest clue as to whether you’re the victim of a scam. In a legitimate lottery or sweepstakes you have bought the ticket or entered your name and address. In a scam lottery or sweepstakes you are notified you’ve won when you haven’t even entered or bought a ticket.

In addition, it’s illegal to use the mail or telephone to play lotteries across borders, whether national or state lines. Any lottery offer involving the purchase of lottery tickets for other state or country lotteries could end up with you being charged with illegal activities.

One ploy used by foreign scammers involving lotteries or sweepstakes is offering you an “advance” on your winnings. The scam artist will send you a check for part of your “winnings.” All you have to do is wire them payment for “taxes” or other official purposes. By the time you find out their check has bounced the money you wired is in their hands. And, because it was wired it’s harder to trace.

Lottery scammers don’t always use e-mail or the phone. Sometimes they do their dirty work in person. A typical scam would go something like this: You are approached in person by someone who claims he or she just won the lottery but isn’t eligible to claim it. They offer to split the money with you if you claim the prize. Sounds good, right? Except that before you claim the prize from the lottery retailer you are required to withdraw some money from your account and give it to the ticket holder as a good-faith gesture. By the time you find out you’re holding a non-winning lottery ticket, the thief is long-gone with your good-faith money.

Bingo Bags Are Making A Strong Fashion Statement.

Bingo balls are placed inside bingo bags, away from everyone’s vision. These bags are thereafter shaken to ensure that the balls would be jumbled up. Thereafter, a ball is squeezes out of the tiny opening of the bag. This opening only allows the exit of one ball at a time, to guarantee that no one would be able to inadvertently see the other digits.

Bingo bags are essential supplies for any bingo game. An organizer can try other makeshift substitutes, like covered bottles, or even fabricated boxes, but nothing can beat the sheer efficiency of bingo bags as a medium to assure the randomness of the game.

And with the way these bags are being produced in this day and age, they’re sure to be the supplies of choice by many bingo organizers.

Indeed, unlike in previous decades, bingo bags now come in different shapes, sizes and colors. A cursory look at them would even lead one to think that they are fashionable merchandise instead of bingo equipment. Case in point: my fiancée bought one as a carry-all for her incense set which she brings with her for her yoga sessions. She never even thought that it was primarily intended for bingo balls!

Another friend of mine purchased one of these bags for her 12 year old daughter who was taking some drumming lessons. The child, it seemed, thought that the bag was perfect for her percussion sticks and powder bottle. And the colors it came with were perfect complements to most of the clothes in her wardrobe. Again, both my friend and her daughter were surprised to discover that the bag was primarily intended for bingo purposes.

But here’s the clincher among today’s tales. My brother bought one of these bags as well. He’s a runner, you see, and he joins every marathon he encounters. He wanted a cool cover for his canteen, and he found one of these bags as a perfect fit for his beloved water container. And as expected, he was shocked to discover the real purpose for the bag he bought.

These bags have indeed expanded from their original usage into fashionable items for the modern times. This is a great analogy for the game such bags are associated with. Bingo, after all, is as timeless as the need for a fashionable change.