Pensioner Robbed Of £6.5m Winning Lottery Tickets Commences Legal Proceedings Against Camelot

Pensioner Robbed Of £6.5m Winning Lottery Tickets Commences Legal Proceedings Against Camelot

By Emily Caulkett-

A veteran who has been denied  his winnings of £6.5million on the lottery ticket , after a shopkeeper informed him the ticket has already been claimed has began legal proceedings against lottery operator Camelot.

Analysts observing the dispute between the 60 year old pensioner and Camelot say the lottery operators have no plans of yielding to the man’s demands, and that legal communication which has already begun, is at best an effort by the pensioner to try and obtain winnings he believes are owed to him.

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In a case said to have occurred at a shop during the beginning of  the 2020 lockdown, it seems unlikely that cameras in the shop were examined as part of any investigation, after police ruled the case a legal matter

Mr Rhodes says he took his ticket to a shop in London, insisting that his National Lottery jackpot was stolen by an unnamed shop employee when he tried to cash in the ticket. He now appears to have began legal proceedings against Camelot , although  the process is very much at its infant stage.

Camelot have declined to comment on what steps they have taken to confirm that the eventual claimant of the ticket actually purchased the ticket themselves.

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Under camelot’s rules, a lottery winner has to produce a ticket with numbers matching the balls that turn up on the night of the draw.

The distraught  pensioner claims a woman in Camelot’s operations team confirmed it was worth £6.5million but hours later he says he was contacted by the lottery firm’s fraud team saying they will not pay out the winnings  because it had already been claimed.

Mr Rhodes, from London, told The Mirror: “It’s a life-changing amount of money. They haven’t stolen from me. They stole my kid’s futures. That money was going to be for them.

“I turned 60 a couple of weeks ago and I never asked anything from anyone.”

Mr Rhodes says he took his ticket to a shop in London in October 2019 and when the shopkeeper put it through the machine it allegedly made a noise to indicate he had won something.He said things then became very strange and claims the shopkeeper refused to give his ticket over.

Mr Rhodes said: “When I first went in and handed it over the shopkeeper put it in the machine and it made a noise, meaning it was a winning ticket of some sort.

“I didn’t know how much was on it and he then refused to give me my ticket. I asked for my ticket back and he took three steps to the right and put it under the counter.

“I leaned over and saw he had about 80 tickets under the counter. He picked one up and paid me something like £11.40.

“He tried to say it was my ticket and it wasn’t. I know it wasn’t because I folded mine twice and put it in my wallet and this one was flat.”

Mr Rhodes said: “I spoke with someone in operations [at Camelot] who went out of their way to find an electronic footprint to prove I had bought the ticket.

“I don’t buy tickets every week, I only ever bought tickets when it was a large jackpot.

“I had the bank print off the statement and she found the ticket through that – and that is when I learned it was a £6.5million ticket.

“Then I got a call from their fraud department saying they are shutting down the case because they won’t pay out twice.”

In search of his winnings, Mr Rhodes contacted the police. He has hired a solicitor and plans to take his case against National Lottery as far as he can.

“This was initially dealt with as a civil matter. In September 2021, following further contact from the complainant, officers liaised with Camelot who confirmed there was no evidence that any fraud had been committed.

“As a result, the case has been closed – should any further information come to light then this decision can be re-assessed.”

A Camelot spokesperson refused to comment at all on the case, telling this publication that they are in the process of responding to Mr. Rhode’s solicitors.

A statement from Camelot said:”While we can’t comment on the specifics of this case, we’re aware that Mr Rhodes has now instructed solicitors and we’ll be responding fully to his solicitors in due course.

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