i dontt that why i looked it up but yall want to be some .......
The Kentucky Lottery has several different games and many winners in the past. Some of these winners are anonymous. The names of some of the most recent $1 million winners are Ralph Staples, Steve Brown, and Alex Parker.
The Florida Lottery site provides users with a variety of different information including lotteries available in Florida, local winners of lotteries and frequently asked questions concerning Florida lotteries.
Past winners of the MN lottery include James Wagner (who won $306,884), Charles Bistram (who won $403, 429), Donald Smith (who won $500,000), Angela Norby (who won $200,000) and Katy Whelan (who won $100,000).
There are a number of California citizens that win the state lottery on a daily basis. The most recent winner of the biggest prize, the SuperLotto Plus, was Cynthia Stafford.
No. Prizes are only paid to the ticket holder or group trustee. You can not set up a blind trust to claim lottery winnings like you can in some states. When a player purchases a lottery ticket from BCLC it constitutes a contract between that player and BCLC. Part of that contract is BCLC's right to publicize winners' names and picture.
There are no "winning numbers" that unlock dreams. On the other hand, some people believe that it is possible to dream of specific numbers that might win a lottery. Statistically, random numbers seen in a dream have just as much chance of being lottery winners as any other random numbers.
Some candy might contain wheat, but it's not wheat in and of itself.
It depends on the rules of the lottery you played. Some lotteries require winners to participate in a press conference as part of their publicity obligations, while others allow winners to remain anonymous if they wish. Check the rules of the specific lottery you played to see if a press conference is required.
candy is different because the kinds they have might not be here in America and some candy is sugar and in other countries have sugar free candy such as gum and candy bars.
It is a variable answer. First of all you need to know the exact number of how many people have won the lottery in the history of mankind, or if you want to know an anual average. Then you find out how many of those winners have since filed for bankruptcy. The hard part is to find out the average of people going bankrupt after winning the lottery. But once you have the numbers, you can figure out the average of said original question.Another answer:There are lots of stories, but very little statistical data on this subject. Economists at the University of Kentucky, University of Pittsburgh and Vanderbilt University studied Florida's Fantasy 5 lottery from 1993 to 2002, and cross-referenced winners of jackpots up to $150,000 with state bankruptcy records. They found that 1,900 of 35,000 winners were bankrupt within five years. That's about 5% of the winners.They also found that about 1% of the people who play the lottery (both winners and losers) were bankrupt within five years. That's about double the rate of bankruptcy for the population as a whole.It's difficult to draw conclusions from that single study, but it seems to indicate:Most lottery winners do not go broke. Some do, in spectacular fashion, but they are a minority.People who play the lottery are more likely to go broke than people who do not, regardless of whether they win or lose.
That depends on what lottery you are talking about. - You might make statistics of some specific lottery, but I assume you want to guess which numbers have a higher chance of appearing next time. This simply doesn't work; the fact that some number appeared (by chance) in a lottery in the past, one or more times, won't have any effect whatsoever on the numbers drawn in the future.
it depends how old are the people....For kids i would recommend candy,food,small items,that are'nt very exspensive.