Who is Paul Little? Man who thought he lost winning lottery ticket gets $3M after scam unearthed
July 2, 2023
How did Paul Little lose his ticket?
On January 17, Little went to the Lakeville Market & Liquors and purchased two Mega Millions Quick Picks, two Mass Cash tickets, and a bag of barbeque potato chips. The shop worker, identified as 23-year-old Carly Nunes, printed out Little’s tickets and then rang up the rest of his order. But he accidentally left the tickets behind and assumed that he has lost them, according to the Plymouth County District Attorney's Office. After Little left, Nunes gave the tickets to the next customer to purchase lotto vouchers, who immediately returned them back. Officials assert that Nunes stole the tickets and said that Little, who is referred to as "him," must have owned them.
Later that night, the number was announced and Nunes had won the multi-million dollar prize. Two days later, Nunes' coworker Joseph Reddem, 32, drove Nunes and her boyfriend to the regional lottery headquarters in Dorchester, according to MassLive. At the Lottery office, a clerk grew suspicious after he noticed that the ticket was torn and had burn marks on it. After winning the prize, the trio was celebrating their windfall when Nunes and Reddem got into an argument. Officials overheard Reddem demanding a larger cut of the winnings after Nunes said she would only give him $200,000.
How did police arrest Carly Nunes?
After the argument, officials decided to summon Nunes for additional questioning over the poor condition of the ticket. Nines stated that the ticket had burn marks from being placed on a pipe and that accidentally torn it while taking it out of her purse. Unsatisfied with her answers, State Lottery Officials and the state police went back to check her store’s security footage, which confirmed that Little was the rightful owner of the ticket. Finally, Nunes told the authorities that she had accidentally taken the ticket rather than having purchased it. She then fled for two weeks before being arrested by state police. In court on Tuesday, Nunes entered a not-guilty plea to each allegation arising from the event, according to DailyMail.
Nunes has been held on a $10,000 cash bond on charges of stealing from a
building and attempted larceny, as well as making a false claim and
intimidating witnesses. Reddem pleaded not guilty to one count of
attempted extortion and was allowed to go free. Massachusetts lottery
authorities later started a flyering effort in the vicinity of the
business to find Little. Prior to being contacted by authorities, he
never knew he left a million-dollar ticket in the store, having assumed
he lost the ticket. He only learned he was a billionaire after being
questioned as part of the inquiry. Little now plans to pay off his
mortgage and fix up his home, as well as donate money to charity.
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