A decade after Colorado engineer Amir Massihzadeh hit the lottery, two state agents visited him with stunning news: He was likely the only legitimate winner of a USD 4.8 million jackpot he'd had to split three ways.
They told the Boulder resident that the other two people who had won the 2005 drawing were linked to a conspiracy in which a lottery insider and several cohorts had rigged drawings in several states. Now Massihzadeh, 62, is suing for the rest of the winnings that he feels should have been his.
Massihzadeh filed a lawsuit today against the Colorado State Lottery, arguing he should be declared the sole winner and that the USD 800,000 cash prize he opted to receive should have been tripled. Accounting for 12 years of interest, he is seeking about USD 4 million from the lottery for what he calls a breach of contract.
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Tipton, his brother, and a friend were recently sentenced for conspiring to use this insider knowledge to buy winning tickets and collect prizes between 2005 and 2011. They fixed jackpots that paid USD 2.61 million to them and their associates in four states, and their scheme unraveled after Eddie Tipton was caught buying the winning ticket for a USD 14 million Iowa jackpot that was never paid.
Massihzadeh, who received USD 568,900 after taxes, argues that he's entitled to the other two-thirds of the prize because the other tickets were purchased through Tipton's conspiracy and should be invalid.
"Even though the Tiptons have agreed to repay the money they received from the Lottery, the Lottery has refused to honour its obligation to Mr Massihzadeh," his lawsuit says. It's the third lawsuit to claim lottery players were cheated by Tipton's scheme.
Hundreds of thousands of people who bought tickets on dates in which Tipton could predict winning numbers are pursuing a class-action lawsuit seeking refunds, arguing those drawings weren't truly random. A man who won a 2011 jackpot is also suing the Iowa Lottery, saying his prize should be larger because the USD 14 million jackpot should have rolled over.
Tipton, who is serving a 25-year prison term, built computers used by Colorado and other states to generate random numbers for drawings. Starting in 2005, he secretly installed code that directed them to use a predictable formula to select numbers on May 27, November 23, and December 29 for drawings that fell on Wednesdays and Saturdays. The November 23, 2005, Colorado drawing is the first that was fixed.
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