What happens if you tear up a winning lotto ticket? Will the lottery pay out?

Joe Lamport Jr, left, and Kim Claassen, right, stand with Joe's mother, Felicia Velasquez, after winning the Powerball lotto   Photo: Dylan Brown, Independent Record

As you'll read in these cases, it doesn't pay to tear up your lottery tickets too early. The lottery companies can take quite a while to pay out.

Michigan resident Kim Claassen very nearly let a $48 million winning ticket get away.

She said she checked the Powerball lottery website Wednesday night, and believing her numbers were not winners, tore the ticket into four pieces and threw it away.

Then she sent Joe Lamport a text message saying, "We're not millionaires yet."

Kim Claassen and Joe Lamport Jr. are presented with their checks at the Michigan Lottery HQ.   Photo: Michigan Lottery

Kim Claassen, 55, and 23-year-old Joe Lamport Jr. have worked together at North West Home Health Care for several years. Over that time they have intermittently purchased lottery tickets together with the understanding that they would split any winnings. 

But in this case Claassen had checked the site before Wednesday's winning numbers were updated.

A colleague told her Thursday that a winning ticket was sold at the Town Pump where she bought her chances.

Claassen fished her ticket out of the trash, pieced it back together, and discovered she had the winning numbers.

She brought the ticket to the Montana Lottery office, where its authenticity was confirmed.

A lotto store serves customers in Italy where a winner spent 11 years trying to claim a ticket.   Photo: Supplied

The Italian Job

It took 11 years, but finally a winning lotto ticket that its owner ripped in half and was refused payment, was honored.

The owner living in Arezzo, Italy, ripped the ticket in two before realizing it entitled him to 100,000 euros (US$112,000).

A clerk serves customers in an Italian lottery store.   Photo: Supplied

The case dates back to 2002, when the man originally bought his lottery ticket.

When he did not hear his number called out during a live, televised extraction, he tore the ticket in two and threw it away.

The next morning, while reading the newspaper, the man realized that his ticket qualified for one of the 100,000 euro 'consolation prizes'. 

He found the two pieces of the ticket and tried to collect his prize money, but the State refused to pay. 

But in the meantime, the Arezzo man passed away. 

After his death, the man's family carried the legal battle forward with Arezzo lawyer Edoardo Manco, who won the case. 

A Vietnamese lottery ticket which was torn in a 'banned area' by the Kien Giang Lottery Company.   Photo: Supplied

Good Morning Vietnam

And it has happened elsewhere around the world. In Vietnam - after refusing to make payment three times -the Kien Giang Lottery Company has finally paid US$4,800 to Duong Van Tung.

Duong was the holder of a winning lottery ticket that was ripped in the crucial right edge.

RELATED: Is Your Winning Lottery Ticket Valid If You Mark Or Highlight It?

Shirley Wile (right) won £20,000 on Sun+ Lotto — after fishing her torn ticket out of a shop’s trash can. Photo: The Sun   Photo: The Sun UK

Sun-Shines

Shirley, 50, called at the Co-op to check her National Lottery ticket from a Saturday’s draw, reported The UK Sun.

When told she’d won nothing, she asked the assistant to trash her ticket.

RELATED: Winner Is Seconds From Disaster When Ripped $1 Million Powerball Ticket Mistakenly Goes Into The Trash

But back home in Bridgend, South Wales, hubby Jerry, 48, said he’d read in The Sun that a local woman named Shirley had won.


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Shirley, who works in a Sainsbury’s coffee shop, said: "I ran back and luckily the ticket was still there."

WE SUGGEST: Tearing up or getting rid of your ticket in the trash your ticket immediately is not a good idea.

We recommend that you hold on to any ticket for at least 6 months, or more if you can store them safely.


 POLL  Have you ever torn up a winning lotto ticket?

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