Wednesday, April 28, 2010

PEOPLE BEING PEOPLE

An Indianapolis man is suing a convenience store chain for the $11.5 million lottery jackpot he says he would have won if a clerk had sold him a ticket.
Charles Andrews, 70, says he had picked the winning numbers for the February 2008 drawing, but workers at the Speedway store refused to sell him a ticket with a few minutes left before the sales cutoff.
  Andrews says there wasn't enough time to go to another store.
Andrews says he signed his play slip and left it with the store so he would have proof in case they were the winning numbers. He found that they matched when he returned the next day.
Speedway SuperAmerica LLC has denied in court filings any responsibility for Andrews not winning.
Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

No comments:

Post a Comment