Thursday, 13 December 2012

Florida Lottery Numbers

Florida Lottery Numbers Biography

Before police found Shakespeare's body, Moore claimed Shakespeare had decided to leave town and had gone to Texas, Jamaica, Puerto Rico, Orlando, Florida or was sick in a hospital. Moore even claimed that Shakespeare was sick of people asking him for money, so she helped him leave town.[3] Moore told police different versions of what happened to Shakespeare, after they found his body under a concrete slab, in the backyard of the home she put in her boyfriend's name. Moore claimed drug dealers killed him, a lawyer did him in and then blamed her 14-year-old son.[11] She also claimed she killed Shakespeare in self-defense.[10]
Soon after Shakespeare disappeared, Moore, who was living in Shakespeare's house, kept using his cell phone and sending text messages to his friends and relatives, as though she were Shakespeare. Moore would text messages, which people thought did not sound like him and were suspicious because Shakespeare was illiterate.[3][11] When people texted Shakespeare's phone back with questions that could not be answered by Moore, no response was given.[11]
During the same time that Moore was trying to make it appear that Shakespeare was alive, she tried to find a person who would take the blame for Shakespeare's death, for $50,000. She also offered to pay someone to dig up and move Shakespeare's body to another location.[12]
Somehow, property records show that Moore's company, American Medical Professionals, bought Shakespeare's house.[1] Moore told investigators she paid Shakespeare $655,000 for his home and bought $185,000 for loans which were actually worth much more, which people owed him; however, there is no evidence showing she paid Shakespeare anything.[3]
Moore offered the mother of one of Shakespeare's two sons a $200,000 home if she would lie to detectives and tell them she had seen him recently. She also paid $5,000 to a relative of Shakespeare's to give his mother a birthday card and imply it was from him.[3]
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Ct Lottery Results


Ct Lottery Results Biography

In 2010, after many American lotteries offered successful raffle-style games, the Connecticut Lottery introduced Super Draw, which has had four drawings: on January 1 and July 4, 2011; January 1 and July 4, 2012. Each drawing produced 1,311 winning six-digit numbers, with prizes of $100, $1,000, $20,000, and one top prize of $1,000,000 (all prizes paid in lump sum.)
The most recent Super Draw began sales on April 1, 2012, with sales ending on July 3; the $1,000,000 winner (claimed on July 11) was purchased in Bristol.[2]
The fifth Super Draw is to begin sales on October 1, 2012, with the final day of sales to be December 31 (unless the game "sells out"), and the drawing to be held on January 1, 2013. (Both "New Year's Day" Super Draws sold all 275,000 potential tickets.) The parameters of this Super Draw will be the same as the first four.Main article: Mega Millions
Connecticut began selling Mega Millions tickets January 31, 2010, following a 2009 agreement in which lotteries then offering either Mega Millions or Powerball were allowed to offer both games. Connecticut is among 44 lotteries selling Mega Millions tickets.[6] Mega Millions plays are $1 each, or $2 with the Megaplier option.
As of June 25, 2012, Connecticut has yet to produce a jackpot-winning Mega Millions ticket, although it has sold eight such winners in Powerball.Main article: Powerball
Connecticut has been a member of the Multi-State Lottery Association (MUSL) since 1995.[6] MUSL is the operator of Powerball, which is offered by 44 lotteries.[7] A jackpot of $254.2 million was won in the November 2, 2011 drawing by one ticket, sold in Fairfield County. Three men claimed the ticket; it was the largest prize in Connecticut Lottery history.[8]
On January 15, 2012, Powerball became a $2-per-play game; $3 with Power Play. (Mega Millions remains a $1 game; $2 with Megaplier.)
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Florida Lottery Powerball


Florida Lottery Powerball Biography

From its inception, the Virginia Lottery has sold instant (scratcher) games. Originally, all scratch tickets were $1 each; in the mid-1990s, the first Bingo scratcher was introduced; each Bingo ticket cost $2. Eventually, higher-priced scratchers with larger prizes were introduced. Currently, the most expensive scratchers are $20 each. These almost always offer a top prize of at least $1 million (annuitized; "fixed" annuity scratcher prizes always offer a cash option.) The largest prize offered in a Virginia scratcher was $5 million (annuity.) Winners of scratcher annuity prizes of at least $1 million can choose cash (just as in the top prizes in Powerball, Mega Millions, or Decades of Dollars.)
In 2007, the Lottery began complementing scratchers with Fast Play games, including "Bingo" (later replaced by "Bonus Bingo") and "Find the 9's": each with its own set of rules and play instructions. Most Fast Play games cost $2 each ("Three Card Bingo" costs $3). As with traditional Lottery games, tickets are printed by the terminal; however as in scratchers, winning status is determined when the ticket is printed (there is no drawing for a Fast Play game).Virginia Lottery drawings are conducted under elaborate security protocols, in which each drawing supervised is by two Lottery employees and a representative of an independent accounting firm. The set of balls used for each drawing are randomly selected from a number of sets; and detailed records of "test" drawings are maintained to prevent systematic biases.[34] In addition, forging lottery tickets, or tampering with a Lottery drawing is a Class 5 felony.[35] All Virginia Lottery employees[36] and applicants to become Lottery sales agents[37] are fingerprinted and subject to criminal background checks.
Theft of Virginia Lottery tickets are investigated by both the Lottery and local law enforcement agencies
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