Of course, anyone of legal age can play the lottery. The exception would be someone who works for the lottery.
Of course, anyone of legal age can play the lottery. The exception would be someone who works for the lottery.
yes
A forged notarization, where the person claims to be a notary, should be reported to the agency that grants notary licenses and they will instruct you on how to continue. A forged signature, of a notary but not claiming to be a notary, is reported to the police.
I will play the lottery expecting to win.I will play the lottery hopeful that I win.I will play the lottery wishing that I win.
No. The whole purpose of the notary is to ensure that the person signing the document is competent and knows what they are signing. That is why a notary can not notarize a document unless the signer is in the physical presence of the notary. If a notary affixes his or her stamp to a document, knowing that the person is incoherent and does not understand the document, the notary is guilty of a felony in most states.
A notary can notarize the signature if it is signed in front of them and done in the state where the notary is licensed. Where the signing person lives does not matter.
The odds of winning at lottery games are extremely slim. Often times it's a one in a ten million chance to win at lotteries. With that said, the best way to play a lottery is to play very seldom if at all. If a person wants to gamble, take a limited amount of spare money and play blackjack at a casino. Chances of winning are much higher than a lottery.
All foreigners can play the lottery unless they are a terrorist or a criminal
A notary can notarize any document. They are simply attesting that the person who signed it was the person they said they were.
YES
No because to be a notary you need to be a resident of that particular state.
Yes, and a common scam starts with claiming a person has somehow won a lottery they never entered into.