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Police in Ontario lay charges in multimillion-dollar insider lottery win
Wednesday, December 19, 2007 posted 04:19 AM EST
Nine months after a scathing report by Ontario's ombudsman, provincial police announced Tuesday they have laid charges in
connection with an alleged multimillion-dollar "insider" lottery win.
The Ontario Lottery and Gaming Corp. and the provincial government refused to comment until after police release details
of the charges at a news conference Wednesday in Toronto.
Ombudsman Andre Marin issued a special report in March which slammed OLG for ignoring allegations of widespread fraud by
retailers who were winning too many lottery prizes.
In his report, Marin accused the corporation of "coddling" ticket sellers and playing "games" with customers who complained
they had been cheated of their jackpots.
"The OLG is fixated on profile rather than on public service," he concluded. "It is too close to retailers, who are not just
its front-line sales force, but some of its best customers."
Marin concluded confidence in Ontario's lottery system was shattered because OLG lost sight of its obligation to the public
in its desire to maintain a good relationship with retailers.
He said lottery officials who raised concerns about suspect claims by retailers in 2003 and 2004 were told by the former
CEO: "Sometimes you hold your nose."
Shortly after Marin's report was released, Ontario Public Infrastructure Minister David Caplan asked police to look into
the ombudsman's findings and directed OLG to turn over all its files on insider wins to police for review.
The scandal broke in October 2006 with the case of Bob Edmonds, 78, of Coboconk, Ont., who was cheated out of $250,000 in
winnings by a lottery retailer.
The Ontario scandal has prompted similar investigations - and changes in procedures - at lottery corporations across the
country.
Starting New Year's Day, players across Canada will have to sign their lottery tickets before cashing them in, while retailers
will have to undergo background checks and navigate a new set of rules to play the lottery.
Some in British Columbia will no longer be allowed to purchase a ticket from their place of business, while others in Ontario
will have any wins over $10,000 investigated by the Alcohol and Gaming Commission - the new regulator of Ontario's lottery
corporation starting Jan. 1.
An audit in Nova Scotia found retailers pocketed 85 winning tickets - each worth more than $25,000 - for a total of $14 million.
The Nova Scotia government is demanding a review of the Atlantic Lottery Corp. after it was unable to explain why lottery
insiders won approximately 10 times more major prizes than expected.
British Columbia is still absorbing the impact of ombudsman Kim Carter's five-month investigation into the lottery system,
which found the public was in danger of being ripped off by retailers and their employees who sold tickets.
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