Because, in some states it is legal for the winner to have a representative of the trust cash in the ticket and avoids revealing the winners name. This will save the winner the headache of having to avoid every huckster, schemer and long lost family member from appearing at their door trying to get them to part with their money. The trust may however, be obligated to reveal the names of the trust beneficiaries (the winner) to the state for things such as back/future child support.
In the UK there is no tax on lottery winnings, if you win £750.00 you get to spend all of it.
actualy there are allot of winners of the lotto so it would take years to tell you them all so lol
In general, lottery organizers must provide anonymity to winners if they ask for it. However - it would depend on the rules of the individual game as to whether or not they provide this service.
If you felt that winning the lottery was impossible, there would be little sense in buying a lottery ticket.
It isn't possible. Quite simply, if there were a way to do it, such a method would spread very quickly and that would ruin the lottery; there would be no more lottery.
I think it would be the winner was she
Of course, anyone of legal age can play the lottery. The exception would be someone who works for the lottery.
Ask yourself the question that if the husband purchased a lottery ticket and the ticket was a winner, would the payments be partly the wife's?
On the outer portion of the scratching area there will be three letters each in a different spot. If it is a loser they will just be random ie; TXK. If its a winner it will be (depending on the amount) TWO, TEN, TWY, ect. ect.
It would depend on what you would play. The Kentucky Cash Ball lottery is one of the main ones. The chances of winning a lottery for 200,000 is approximately 1 in 1,200,000
Of course, anyone of legal age can play the lottery. The exception would be someone who works for the lottery.
The tax on a two million dollar lottery jackpot is around 30%. The winner would thus be paying around $600,000 in taxes before they saw the money at all.