Father and sons claimed $21 million in lottery prizes — but they didn’t win, feds say

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A Massachusetts father and his sons claimed millions in lottery prizes and cashed in thousands of tickets as part of a fraud scheme, feds say.Vladimir Solomianyi via Unsplash



It wasn’t “miraculous luck” when a father and his two sons claimed $21 million in Massachusetts lottery winnings after cashing in thousands of tickets, federal prosecutors said.

In reality, the trio never won any prizes despite ranking among the top individual lottery ticket cashers in the state, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Massachusetts.

Over the course of nine years, Ali Jaafar, 63, and his sons cashed more than 14,000 lottery tickets on behalf of actual winners as part of a fraud scheme to avoid paying taxes — and to receive tax refunds themselves, prosecutors said.


A jury found Ali Jaafar and Yousef Jaafar, 29, who are both from Watertown, guilty of conspiring to defraud the Internal Revenue Service, conspiring to commit money laundering and filing false tax returns, the office announced in a Dec. 10 news release.

The older son, Mohamed Jaafar, 31, of Watertown and Waltham, pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to defraud the U.S. on Nov. 4, according to an earlier release.

“By defrauding the Massachusetts Lottery and the Internal Revenue Service, the Jaafars cheated the system and took millions of hard-earned taxpayers’ dollars,” U.S. Attorney Rachael S. Rollins said in a statement.

McClatchy News reached out to attorneys representing the men for comment on Dec. 12 and didn’t immediately receive a response.

“Any attempts to fraudulently claim Lottery prizes to assist others in the avoidance of paying taxes, child support or other debts are viewed by the Lottery as serious offenses,” Mark William Bracken, the interim executive director of Massachusetts State Lottery, told McClatchy News in a statement on Dec. 12.

The ‘ten-percenting’ lottery scheme
Between 2011 and 2019, the Jaafars engaged in a “ten-percenting” scheme by working with others, including convenience store workers, to buy winning lottery tickets from ticket holders at a discount, prosecutors said. As a result, the ticket holders could avoid paying taxes on their lottery winnings.

For each winning lottery ticket the Jaafars bought, they would keep about 10% to 20% of the ticket’s value, according to court documents.

On numerous occasions, three men claimed the winning tickets on their own and collected the full cash prizes from the Massachusetts Lottery Commission, prosecutors said. This helped the actual lottery winners get out of reporting their winnings on tax returns.

One example included how Ali Jaafar bought a winning lottery ticket worth $20,000 from a convenience store clerk at a discount and cashed it in on April 29, 2016, according to court documents. To do so, he lied on a Lottery Commission claim form stating the winnings were solely his and that he was “not claiming [the] prize to assist another in the avoidance of financial obligations.”

By 2019, Ali Jaafar ranked the top individual lottery ticket casher in Massachusetts, officials said. Meanwhile, Mohamed Jaafar ranked third and Yousef Jaafar ranked fourth.

As part of their scheme, the Jafaars reported every lottery win they claimed “as their own on their income tax returns and claimed fake gambling losses to offset the claimed winnings, thereby avoiding federal income taxes and receiving tax refunds,” according to the release.

This resulted in all three men illegally receiving more than $1.2 million in tax refunds, prosecutors said.

Mohammed Jaafar will be sentenced on March 8, according to the release. Ali Jaafar’s sentencing is scheduled for April 11 and Yousef Jaafar will be sentenced on April 13.

Their convictions are “the latest example of the Mass Lottery’s ongoing efforts to partner with law enforcement to assist in preventing illegal activities, while also maintaining the integrity of the Lottery,” Deborah B. Goldberg, the state treasurer and receiver general, who is also the chair of the Massachusetts State Lottery Commission, told McClatchy News in a statement.
 
Scam like this could only work if they planned to leave the country and never return, and with a friend in the state police or IRS letting them know that the investigation is about to begin.

That's 9 years and at least $2.1 million profit from their end of the tickets and $1.2 million from the tax refunds. So $3.6 million for 9 years of criminal activity. $400,000 per year.

Pretty good for one guy - who plans to go back to a non extradition, favorable exchange rate, I can live like a king here "homeland," with businesses and home financed with his U.S. "earnings."




For three guys, and a potential 20 years in federal prison ... nah, not so much. Father shot down his own sons' futures...
 
Tax avoidance IS PERFECTLY LEGAL AND IS LITERALLY EXPECTED

its how the wealthy stay wealthy by putting their tax burdens

on the masses but I digress,

they fucked up by their wording and wording alone... they

shouldve never claimed ownership,

they shouldve claimed HOLDER IN DUE COURSE...

but yall aint hear dat from me tho?

but you are supposed to know the fuckin retarded

as fuck tax laws they always changing...

Not paying taxes is not tax avoidance

tax avoidance is when you want to pay

a little taxes as you possibly can...

irs has zero problem with that..

just make sure you cross your I's and dot yo T's...

but these dudes really thought this criminal govt

was going to let them pull this shit off forever...

I mean the actual hustle is pure bookkeeping genius...

but to think you can get away with escaping a fuckin

audit always fuckin winning lotterys..

was just insanely stupid...
 
Man I was reading the article thinking the math isn't adding up until this. Shit I thought I couldn't do basic math for a second :lol:



As part of their scheme, the Jafaars reported every lottery win they claimed “as their own on their income tax returns and claimed fake gambling losses to offset the claimed winnings, thereby avoiding federal income taxes and receiving tax refunds,” according to the release.
 
Man I was reading the article thinking the math isn't adding up until this. Shit I thought I couldn't do basic math for a second :lol:



As part of their scheme, the Jafaars reported every lottery win they claimed “as their own on their income tax returns and claimed fake gambling losses to offset the claimed winnings, thereby avoiding federal income taxes and receiving tax refunds,” according to the release.
Bingo…
 
Good for them Musty Arabs them fuckers do shit like this all of the time,this is why they have lottery machines,the foodstamps machine and then you go back in their store and the machines are gone CAUSE OF FRAUD that they do all of the time.

Back in 2013 I purchased two rolls of of scratch offs and one pack,thinking I had made the deal of a lifetime so I thought after showing them shits to my family they all said the samething "You about to go to jail if you try to cash them in..." but that didn't stop us from scractching them off just to see what we would of won.......I'll never do that shit again,I wasted 20 dollars on that bullshit.
 
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