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How Aussie maths whiz won the lotto 14 times

<p>Winning the lotto is more than likely a once-in-a-lifetime chance, but Aussie man Stefan Mandel defied the odds when he won the golden ticket 14 times using basic maths.</p> <p>The Romanian-Australian mathematician, joined by a small team of investors, discovered a remarkably easy way to hack the system in the 1980s and 1990s.</p> <p>Mandel’s first two wins were secured in his home country of Romania, where he was saving up to escape the then-Soviet Union before he won another dozen times in Australia.</p> <p>Surprisingly, Mandel’s system was not only straightforward but relied on very little of his mathematical training.</p> <p>The odds of winning the jackpot in the Australian Powerball are about one in 76,767,600, according to lotto land. If you want to double your chances with two tickets, the odds are still a mere 2 in 76,767,600.</p> <p>Mandel observed that in certain lotteries, the jackpot prize was much higher than the cost of purchasing every possible combination of numbers. Given he buys every ticket, he was almost guaranteed a return on his investment – so long as the winnings were split between several golden ticket holders.</p> <p>So, Mandel did just that.</p> <p>While it’s not completely against the rules, snatching up every ticket doesn’t quite resonate with the spirit of the game, and his winnings were astronomical.</p> <p>Mandel, now 89, convinced a group of investors to buy into the scheme over several years.</p> <p>He created algorithms that were able to generate and print the millions of different ticket groups required, which some lotteries allowed people to do at the time.</p> <p>With his pile of tickets printed and ready to go, Mandel and his team waited for a hefty jackpot, where they would purchase those tickets in shops.</p> <p>Mandel secured 12 wins on smaller lotteries Down Under before he sought out jackpots in the US with a sum far larger than anything he had won so far.</p> <p>While he won millions of dollars with his scheme, aiming for massive lotteries in the US proved to be his downfall.</p> <p>Mandel specifically had his sights set on the Virginia lottery, which was new at the time and only used numbers 1-44 in its draws. That meant there were 7,059,052 possible combinations, much less than the 25 million or higher that his team was used to.</p> <p>When the jackpot was high enough, around US$15.5 million, Mandel ordered thousands of investors to buy out the tickets in bulk.</p> <p>To Mandel’s dismay, some investors pulled out. After two days of purchases, the group secured about 6.4 million of the possible 7 million combinations needed to guarantee them the jackpot. Fortunately, the odds remained in his favour as he won the Virginia Lottery too.</p> <p>The FBI and CIA launched an investigation into Mandel, but no wrongdoing was found. Virginia Lottery had no choice but to pay up.</p> <p>Mandel won millions of dollars in the Virginia Lottery, including bringing home most of the smaller prizes.</p> <p>He later disbanded his team and retired to a beach house in Vanuatu, where he still lives.</p> <p>While Mandel’s scheme was legal at the time, it resulted in new rules for the lottery. Many countries, including the US and Australia, have since passed laws that stopped punters from buying lottery tickets in bulk or printing them at home, in turn rendering his methods impossible.</p> <p><em>Image credit: Twitter / Youtube</em></p>

Money & Banking

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$10 million Powerball jackpot winner rushed to hospital in euphoric shock

<p>A New Zealand man who won $10.3 million ($AU9 million) in the Powerball jackpot was rushed to hospital after he collapsed when seeing all the zeros in his bank account.</p> <p>Lou Te Keeti, who is in his 70s, said he didn’t really believe he had won the jackpot until the money showed up in his bank account – and then it became a bit too overwhelming.</p> <p>“I hadn’t really believed it until it hit my bank account. I was still thinking this might be a hoax, even though I had an email and had spoken to the people at the Lotto, it didn’t seem real,” he told <strong><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><a href="http://www.nzherald.co.nz/nz/news/article.cfm?c_id=1&amp;objectid=11893726">New Zealand Herald</a>. </span></strong></p> <p>“But when I opened my computer on Wednesday morning and saw my accounts, most of them were as usual with not much in, then there was this one account with all these zeros.</p> <p>It dawned and I thought ‘whoa, this is for real.’”</p> <p>He then went to do his usual grocery shopping but started to have “flutters”.</p> <p>“I was feeling not myself, quite strange, and they got me in an ambulance and I had all these tests and stayed a night in Tauranga Hospital. I saw all these docs but I didn’t tell any of them that I had just won Lotto,” Te Keeti recalled.</p> <p>His doctor later diagnosed him with a “case of euphoria”.</p> <p><img width="443" height="249" src="http://cdn.newsapi.com.au/image/v1/8f15347bb672c53b36c3f0e69be641dd" alt="Lou Te Keeti with his grandchildren. Pictures: New Zealand Herald" style="display: block; margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"/></p> <p style="text-align: center;"><em>Lou Te Keeti with his grandchildren. Image credit: New Zealand Herald</em></p> <p>Now a millionaire, Te Keeti said he’s planning to use the money to reopen Treaty negotiations for his family’s Treaty claim.</p> <p>He’s also planning a special 50th wedding anniversary next year with his wife Val and their four children and seven grandchildren.</p> <p>The rest of the money will be used to make sure his family are looked after.</p> <p>Te Keeti said it was a last minute decision to buy the lotto ticket online on July 8.</p> <p>“I saw this email on Sunday from MyLotto but all it said was ‘You have won a prize,’ but I thought it would be about $1000 and thought well that’s great, but the next day I just went to the tangi and carried on as normal. It wasn’t until I spoke to them on the phone I learned the full amount, but it did not hit home until I saw it in the account.”</p>

Retirement Income

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Best way to avoid sharing a lottery jackpot

<p>There are three people in the USA who are set to have a very good Friday!</p> <p>The winning tickets of the unprecedented record-breaking US Powerball jackpot have been announced, with three US citizens overcoming odds of roughly 1 in 292.2 million to land on the winning number (4-8-19-27-34). They will now split the world-record jackpot.</p> <p>The winners will take away around $187.2 million each (after the 39.6 per cent federal income tax deduction and the winnings are split three ways) and they can elect to receive their prize as a lump sum or as annual payments that could be spread over decades.</p> <p>Their identities are currently unknown, but they reside in California, Florida and Tennessee. These states that don’t tax lottery earnings, so they’ll be $28 million better off than if they lived elsewhere.</p> <p>Sharing lottery jackpots isn’t uncommon, and there’s a reason for this.</p> <p>Studies have found that when asked to pick random numbers humans tend to go for odd, prime and sequential numbers in an attempt to populate their ticket with “winning” numbers.</p> <p>But people forget that the numbers drawn in a lottery system are completely random.</p> <p>A 1998 paper in the Journal of Risk and Uncertainly found the most frequently played numbers in Britain were 7, 14, 21, 28, 35 and 42.</p> <p>That being said, avoiding common numbers will only decrease the likelihood of sharing your prize. The likelihood of taking it outright is still next to zero! </p> <p><strong>Related links:</strong></p> <p><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><em><strong><a href="/news/news/2016/01/never-carry-your-phone-in-your-pocket/">You should never carry your phone in your pocket</a></strong></em></span></p> <p><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><em><strong><a href="/news/news/2016/01/bear-cub-performing-tai-chi/">Cute bear cub masters the art of tai chi</a></strong></em></span></p> <p><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><em><strong><a href="/news/news/2016/01/things-you-didnt-know-your-dishwasher-could-do/">5 things you didn’t know your dishwasher could do</a></strong></em></span></p>

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