How to Stay Anonymous When You Win the Lottery

Gemini

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
How to Stay Anonymous When You Win the Lottery

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We all have fantasies of hitting the lottery, right? The new cars, the boat, the...lawsuits, predators, and bankruptcies? The winning ticket isn’t necessarily the winning ticket for a happy life, which is exactlywhy the winner of January’s Powerball jackpot of $560 million wants to keep her name out of the public record. But New Hampshire, where the she lives, doesn’t allow winners to claim their winnings anonymously, and so in January she filed a lawsuit in an attempt to protect her identity.

The states have an interest in making lotto winners’ identities public to protect the integrity of the game—see, for example,the Iowa security chief who rigged the $16.5 million lottery(he had been a computer programmer in the state lottery office and evidently did something programmy with the numbers) and then tried to claim it anonymously.

Only seven states—Delaware, Kansas, Maryland, North Dakota, Ohio, South Carolina, Texas, and likely soon Georgia—allow winners to shield their identities. A handful of other states, like California and Wisconsin, entirely forbid winners to remain anonymous, “and then there are the states with gray areas,” saysJason Kurland, an attorney in East Meadow, New York, who has represented jackpot winners in the past. Depending on where you live, you can “form a trust and hide behind that. Your lawyer can be the face of the trust.”

Now this is exactly what Jane Doe, in New Hampshire, did—but she had already signed her lottery ticket in her own name, and lottery officials have refused to let her white out her name and re-sign in the name of the trust.

Most advisors instruct the winner to sign the ticket immediately so the ownership is indisputable—does the New Hampshire case mean that the lucky holder of the winning Powerball ticketshouldn’tsign the back of the ticket? Kurland notes that leaving the ticket unsigned, and risking someone (even your lawyer) stealing it, is a big risk. His solution? “Sign it, but sign it small. Then you can add trustees, or several trustees, and the name of the trust.”

Once you’ve signed, find a trusts and estates attorney in your state to advise you. This person should also put you in touch with a financial planner—you’re going to owe taxes, and you’ll likely want to consider how best to handle charitable contributions and gifts to family and friends. “Once you set up your team, you can’t go wrong,” says Kurland.

Oh, and mum’s the word. New York City trusts and estates attorneyAlison Besundersays, “The bigger problem arises when there is an oral (usually flippant) promise to share the proceeds.” So if youreallywant to stay anonymous? Keep your mouth shut.


https://lifehacker.com/how-to-stay-...urce=lifehacker_twitter&utm_medium=socialflow
 

Camille

Kitchen Wench #TeamQuaid
Staff member
Same here. People are going to find out regardless.

Nope. If I ever win I have in mind someone I am going to hire. All the friends and relatives I plan on gifting will receive an anonymous financial literacy package with instructions and tests they have to pass to show they read and understood the material. Once they participate I'll dole out some money, but as far as they will be aware, I was just a randomly selected family member just like them, and if they go through what they were given, oh well. They see me spending big, they will think it is because I got the same amount of money they did.
 

daking181

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
Nope. If I ever win I have in mind someone I am going to hire. All the friends and relatives I plan on gifting will receive an anonymous financial literacy package with instructions and tests they have to pass to show they read and understood the material. Once they participate I'll dole out some money, but as far as they will be aware, I was just a randomly selected family member just like them, and if they go through what they were given, oh well. They see me spending big, they will think it is because I got the same amount of money they did.
I’m telling you it won’t matter. I’ve told this story before but, my aunt won 2 million from a scratch off and people who were her clients (she worked in a welfare office) got her number and were calling her. If they found her for 2 million, you think you gonna win 200 million and nobody knows:smh:
 

THE DRIZZY

Ally of The Great Ancestors
OG Investor
I would claim publicly but afterwards I am going into hiding. Changing phone #'s and moving out of my residence. Then apply for a legal name change while I am in hiding sorting things out. I would possibly lay low somewhere like Panama, Costa Rica, or Thailand while my name change runs it due process. I don't play lottery and never brought a lottery ticket in my life so I don't have to worry about this but in an alternate reality that is what I would do.
 

g0nbad real bad

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
Go find crazy cousin uncle Willie apply for guardianship and power of attorney over him then let him claim the money.

Deposit check in joint account and move money soon as it clear.
 

ViCiouS

Rising Star
BGOL Patreon Investor
the advise given in the article posted by op can be used for a lot more than a lottery claim

Go find crazy cousin uncle Willie apply for guardianship and power of attorney over him then let him claim the money.

Deposit check in joint account and move money soon as it clear.
won't work... you would run out of time to claim (1 year)
- if crazy fam didn't have an exiting guardian
- if crazy fam has an existing guardian
- if crazy fam is a ward of the state
all equal quagmire

and who ever the previous guardian was can still tie you up in litigation for years
 
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godofwine

Supreme Porn Poster - Ret
BGOL Investor
Nope. If I ever win I have in mind someone I am going to hire. All the friends and relatives I plan on gifting will receive an anonymous financial literacy package with instructions and tests they have to pass to show they read and understood the material. Once they participate I'll dole out some money, but as far as they will be aware, I was just a randomly selected family member just like them, and if they go through what they were given, oh well. They see me spending big, they will think it is because I got the same amount of money they did.
Similar.

I'm in Ohio, which is a state you can remain anonymous, so I'm cool that way. I'm gonna sit on it for a minute and go to work................but I ain't working shit. I got a government job, so I can fuck around for a minute before they can fire me. About 2 months, 2 weeks and 2 days later I'm gonna come to work in a bangin ass suit, talk into my boss' office and say, "I have to leave early. I have a job interview."

Questions will be asked, but I ain't telling.

a week or two later I will dip. No one will know shit. Everyone will think I got whatever job I interviewed for and boom. Story told, no one knows shit.

I got a friend who is a lawyer. Soon as I find out I'm telling him so he can set up the trust. My lawyer will contact households and will inquire what the household debt is - all bills, mortgage, credit cards, cellphones, taxes - everything. I am going to pay down or eliminate debt for my family.

The ones I really got love for will get more, extra shit, the ones who are just family will get a debt check that can only be spent on their debt

I'll keep my house in Medina for my "Ohio Home" so when I come back to the state I don't have to live in a hotel. Other than that, I'm out bitches. No one knows shit, and I get to live my life without really having to look over my shoulder...but I will be strapped with my conceal carry
 

roots69

Rising Star
Registered
Yall do know the lotto is a scam,,, right?? Anyway, I dont worry about telling my name or where I live.. Because I dont play the lottery!!
 

Gemini

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
$560 Million Powerball Winner Can Keep Her Name Private, Judge Rules


The winner of a $560 million Powerball jackpot — one of the largest prizes in United States history — can remain anonymous, a New Hampshire judge ruled Monday.

The woman who bought the winning ticket in January had gone to court to keep her name from being made public. Her lawyers argued that she feared being overwhelmed with requests for a share of her winnings and was concerned about her safety.

The state had argued that the names of lottery winners must be disclosed to ensure that prizes are distributed fairly and that winners are not related to lottery employees.

In the end, the court sided with the woman, saying disclosing her name would amount to an invasion of privacy.

Should her identity be revealed, “she will be subject to an alarming amount of harassment, solicitation and other unwanted communications,” Judge Charles S. Temple of the Hillsborough Superior Court Southern District wrote in a 15-page decision.


Still, the judge said, the winner’s hometown, Merrimack, N.H., would have to be disclosed. He said she could not be identified by this bit of information and saw no reason to keep it secret.

The judge dismissed the state’s argument that disclosing her name would show the public that the lottery system is above board. He said there was “no evidence” that the New Hampshire Lottery Commission was engaged in corrupt activity and noted that the winning numbers are drawn in Florida anyway.


The commission already allows winners to sign their tickets with the name of a trust instead of the individual’s name, the judge noted, in essence allowing winners to be anonymous. As a result, he said, the commission’s argument that there is a “strong public interest in disclosing the identity” of the winners “is simply not persuasive.”


Billy Shaheen, a lawyer for the New Hampshire winner, who was described in court papers only as Jane Doe, said that his client was elated to hear the news.

She had already received her after-tax winnings of $264 million while the judge mulled her claim to privacy.

“New Hampshire has a long tradition of protecting and preserving the right of privacy, and people pride themselves on it, in the ‘Live Free or Die’ scenario we have in this state,” Mr. Shaheen said.

He said that his client was now reflecting on how best to use her windfall to benefit others. She has already donated a combined $250,000 to Girls Inc. of New Hampshire, an empowerment group for girls, and three chapters of End 68 Hours of Hunger, which provides meals for schoolchildren during the weekends.

An essential decision ahead, Mr. Shaheen said, will be for the winner to determine whether to spend the money while she is alive or to create a more enduring fund, like a foundation or endowment.

https://www.nytimes.com/2018/03/12/...n=click&contentCollection=U.S.&pgtype=article
 

praetor

Rising Star
OG Investor
I used to think about this, but it really seems like a non issue.

1. Right now, how many people can you name that won the lottery (millions) in your state?

2. Would you continue to live in the same house and work at the same job?

Unless you won some record setting jackpot, no one's going to remember you six months later except some broke family members asking for money.

Tell them no.

I rather have people know that it was me who won than get robbed blind by a fucking lawyer.
 

luukim

Rising Star
Registered
I used to think about this, but it really seems like a non issue.

1. Right now, how many people can you name that won the lottery (millions) in your state?

2. Would you continue to live in the same house and work at the same job?

Unless you won some record setting jackpot, no one's going to remember you six months later except some broke family members asking for money.

Tell them no.

I rather have people know that it was me who won than get robbed blind by a fucking lawyer.

$

Craigory Burch, Jr. won nearly a half million dollars from a Georgia lottery in November of 2015. Just two months later, he was found dead in his home from gunshot wounds after a violent home invasion. Armed robbers entered the 20-year-old's home with masks and shotguns, demanding his money. According to his girlfriend, who ran for help during the robbery, Burch pleaded with them not to kill him in front of his kids. He told them they could have his bank card, but when the thieves couldn't find his wallet, they shot him and ran away. Burch had recently used some of his $434,272 Fantasy 5 winnings to buy Christmas presents for the less fortunate.

$

All Doris Murray's dreams were about to come true when she struck it rich hitting the Georgia state lottery jackpot for $5 million. But unlike some other lotto winners who squander their money, the mother of four kept a low profile and continued to live modestly. Too bad she didn't have the greatest taste in men.

After she threatened to break up with her boyfriend, he stabbed her to death just a year after she won the lottery. Family and friends insist it was all over the money.
 

praetor

Rising Star
OG Investor
$

Craigory Burch, Jr. won nearly a half million dollars from a Georgia lottery in November of 2015. Just two months later, he was found dead in his home from gunshot wounds after a violent home invasion. Armed robbers entered the 20-year-old's home with masks and shotguns, demanding his money. According to his girlfriend, who ran for help during the robbery, Burch pleaded with them not to kill him in front of his kids. He told them they could have his bank card, but when the thieves couldn't find his wallet, they shot him and ran away. Burch had recently used some of his $434,272 Fantasy 5 winnings to buy Christmas presents for the less fortunate.

$

All Doris Murray's dreams were about to come true when she struck it rich hitting the Georgia state lottery jackpot for $5 million. But unlike some other lotto winners who squander their money, the mother of four kept a low profile and continued to live modestly. Too bad she didn't have the greatest taste in men.

After she threatened to break up with her boyfriend, he stabbed her to death just a year after she won the lottery. Family and friends insist it was all over the money.

Firstly, did the first winner you posted simply pose for his picture and not say anything more about it to anyone, or did he run around telling every fucking body that he had won?

For the second example, even if she would have collected anonymously, she still would have told her boyfriend.

What is the mortality rate (percentage) of people that have won millions of dollars?
 

killagram

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
Imma stunt and be one worse asshole than I am already and pay wackenhut to watch my home....brah..and do some awesome stoopid shit...keep that heavy metal round me..
 

easy_b

Look into my eyes you are getting sleepy!!!
BGOL Investor
When the lottery gets real high like over 100 mill and above that’s why I want to hide out for minute
 

Aww Skeet Skeet!

The antithesis of nonsense.
BGOL Investor
I'mma remain anonymous as possible. What's a few 10ks to a lawyer when I won millions. Plus is need to lessen the blow to Uncle Sam who's gonna take millions. If I have to pay for that advice, so be it. I'mma still be rich as fuck afterwards. Trusts set up in my name, estate planning done, dodging gift taxes...
 

godofwine

Supreme Porn Poster - Ret
BGOL Investor
When the lottery gets real high like over 100 mill and above that’s why I want to hide out for minute
Don't leave work immediately. My plan is to work 2 months 2 weeks and 2 days, or enough time for me to figure out the plan to execute

Everything will be done from a trust, even money I give to my family. For the most part I'm just going to take care of my family's debt , I don't know how much physical money I'm going to give them.

I'd buy a bunch of 3-5 year old Toyotas to give away to family members who need cars who need cars.

The biggest thing is Black Wall Street Will be back, on my mama
 

easy_b

Look into my eyes you are getting sleepy!!!
BGOL Investor
Don't leave work immediately. My plan is to work 2 months 2 weeks and 2 days, or enough time for me to figure out the plan to execute

Everything will be done from a trust, even money I give to my family. For the most part I'm just going to take care of my family's debt , I don't know how much physical money I'm going to give them.

I'd buy a bunch of 3-5 year old Toyotas to give away to family members who need cars who need cars.

The biggest thing is Black Wall Street Will be back, on my mama
Yeah always say I was going to put in a 30 day notice and then quietly bounce
 

Adam Knows

YouTube: Adam Knows
Platinum Member
i didn't have a lottery winning but i had a large settlement/inheritance when i turned 18 for 3 mil. Fortunately i had a lawyer who gave a damn and protected it as a trustee, especially since i got married to someone 6 years older then me at 18 who became a crazy psycho since she didn't have access to the money as she thought she would. the whole time i was with her i had a living expense which matched hers (she was a teacher at the time) which allowed us to live like the avg suburban household and then that amount was adjusted what i would receive based upon the income i was bringing in from a job, with a splurge every so often. plus nobody got anything from me due to that as well even though everybody was waiting on me to get it, so a lot of people of course stopped communicating with me. by the time we did part ways she had calmed down and gotten over it and figured it would be in the best interests to do joint custody because she knew as long as there was no drama from her the kids would always get what they need. and it was like that from 1990 to about 2000 after we went our separate ways. I really didn't start spending money until 2 years after that and didn't spend much basically some cars n clothes, trips n shit. fast forward it's more like loaning from it and repaying it back from income now if needed. since 18 i havent even spent a million of it, but the kids will have what's left when all's said and done
 

godofwine

Supreme Porn Poster - Ret
BGOL Investor
Yeah always say I was going to put in a 30 day notice and then quietly bounce
I have 18 years including my military time at my government job. I'm taking early retirement, even if they say I can't have it until I'm 62. AND I'm trying to increase my disability

Got to keep that money coming in
 

"THE MAN"

Resident Cool Nerd
BGOL Investor
Wait she won that case in New Hampshire?! That's bullshit. Her dumb ass signed the ticket before setting up a trust.
 
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