Mega Millions ‘winner’ a loser of winning ticket

Imagine the joy of winning millions in the lottery.

mirlande-wilson

Mirlande Wilson, center, will be able to afford even fancier hats if she finds the 'misplaced' winning Mega Millions ticket. (AP Photo)

Now imagine losing that winning ticket.

Now imagine lying about everything to any reporter who will listen.

That would seem to be the case of alleged Mega Millions winner Mirlande Wilson, 37, of Maryland, who’s claimed to have won a third of the world record $656 million lottery jackpot.

As you’ve doubtless read before, Wilson refused to share her presumptive millions with her McDonald’s co-workers, whom she had purchased tickets with in a pool.

Wilson, a Haitian immigrant and mother of seven, quit her fast-food gig by calling in to tell her former friends she was a millionaire and would not be sharing because she purchased the winning ticket separately from the office pool.

Today, NBC News reports Wilson has “misplaced” the ticket.

When asked if she was a teller of tall tales, Wilson told NBC “I did not make up no story to get no attention.”

Even her own attorney has never seen the alleged winning ticket, which makes me wonder about his mental state as much as his client’s.

So far, winners in  Kansas and Illinois have yet to step forward. Baltimore must be full of tricksters — another man there claimed to have been the Maryland winner, but it was a cruel joke that made his mother cry instead of laugh.

Maryland lottery officials are urging people who bought tickets to check their numbers again to make sure they don’t have the winner. The fear is that the real winner may have thrown out a ticket worth millions because they thought someone else had already won the big prize.

142 comments Add your comment

pino

April 6th, 2012
1:00 pm

aren’t they great

Honest Al

April 6th, 2012
1:02 pm

Thank you Angie A.

CoffeePartier

April 6th, 2012
1:02 pm

@Patti
Keeping the pooled ticket at work — for others that are on the up and up, not necessarily Ms. Wilson — lets your co-workers know that you’ll be returning to the office and not making off with the original ticket. I would highly doubt that people that do lock up the tickets work with a bunch of amateur safe crackers well versed in picking Master locks.

Meowwww

April 6th, 2012
1:07 pm

Karma’s a #itch, ain’t it Ms Wilson! Now your 7 children will have a wonderful story to tell their grandchildren.

Ben

April 6th, 2012
1:08 pm

She hasn’t lost it, she’s probably given it to someone else close to her to avoid being sued by the other workers.

gg

April 6th, 2012
1:09 pm

I’m with Angie A. She has the ticket, and someone she knows is going to turn it in as a LLC.

So much for the

April 6th, 2012
1:12 pm

American Dream!

Bill

April 6th, 2012
1:17 pm

….they live among us – and reproduce

Silly Rabbit

April 6th, 2012
1:18 pm

But even if she gives the ticket to someone else to turn in, the officials will know where the ticket originated. The other 2 tickets are not in Georgia. This scam has me saying, who gives a crap. She’s mental.

rob

April 6th, 2012
1:21 pm

She had the ticket, never checked the numbers, but is sure she won…. how can you people not believe her!!! Everyone is to quick to judge!…………arent we!!!!