Hair stylists spar over $9.5M Hoosier Lotto jackpot


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INDIANAPOLIS, IN ? There is a developing "prize fight" over a $9.5 million Hoosier Lotto jackpot.

An Indianapolis, Indiana, hair stylist says she won it all, but her co-workers say they pooled their money to buy the winning ticket, and they should split it. Now that jackpot is frozen until further notice.

Eight stylists from an east side hair salon were feeling lucky when they chipped in on a work pool last week. One of those stylists bought the tickets for the group and then tickets for herself. When those winning numbers were announced Saturday, one of those tickets won. But the woman who bought them said it was her ticket that won, not one of the pool tickets.

Here's where things get a little bit messy. Had that woman brought her winning ticket to the Hoosier Lottery headquarters, she would have claimed her money no questions asked. Instead, she went to the salon first and told them their pool didn't win, but she did. That's when they decided to file a court order to freeze that money.

That court order was filed in Marion County Court. According to the attorney on behalf of the stylists, Scott Montross, "We wanted to slow down the train until we can figure things out. My clients want to be satisfied and want to know exactly how things developed. That's why we filed a restraining order freezing the money."

Tracy Williams just happened to be buying tickets for her office pool Thursday night at the same Speedway that sold Saturday's winning ticket. She considers her plan foolproof.

"I make copies at work and pass them out at work," said Tracy.

So the big question for the judge: Can the woman who bought the lottery ticket prove she bought her wining ticket separately from the pool tickets? If not, $9 million may be split eight different ways.

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So the big question for the judge: Can the woman who bought the lottery ticket prove she bought her wining ticket separately from the pool tickets? If not, $9 million may be split eight different ways.

No way to completely prove it now.

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That's why lottery syndicates should use pre-approved numbers or the chosen numbers should be communicated to the syndicate before the draw. Otherwise you have situations like this where she may have bought the ticket herself or she may be attempting to illegally steal millions of dollars.

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