Clerk tells $600 Florida lottery winner his prize is only $5. Problem? Winner was an undercover agent.

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Clerk tells lottery winner his prize is only $5. She picked the wrong man to scam, cops say
Howard Cohen, Miami Herald · January 26, 2018

Do you trust your store clerk with your lottery ticket?

Maybe you’ve won a few hundred bucks or more. Will the employee tell you — or pocket the ticket while telling you it’s a loser?

That happened this week at a Fort Myers store, according to the Florida Lottery Commission. A Winn-Dixie Liquors employee is accused of keeping a customer’s $600 winning ticket —and paying him only 5 bucks.

Crystelle Yvette Baton was charged with larceny grand theft on Monday.

Baton, 42, was caught because she scammed the wrong customer, cops say.

The man wasn’t a customer — he was an agent working undercover for the Florida Lottery Commission’s security division.

When the undercover agent approached Baton with the winning ticket, she scanned it and realized it was worth $600. But instead of telling the man, investigators said she quietly pulled $5 out of her purse and told the man that was the “winning” ticket’s payoff

Shortly after, the agent went back to the store to bust Baton. The winning ticket was found hidden in her notebook.

Seems the Lottery Commission makes these random visits to sellers to make sure the games are played properly.

“Anyone that is working in a customer service job, you think that they are doing what is in your best interest. I would be very upset if someone took that from me,” Winn-Dixie customer Nadina Puzic told WBBH NBC2.

A reader, posting on the NBC2 website on Wednesday, said the scam isn’t unusual. “This is much more common than you would think. I put my name on the back always, and always notice when the cashier checks the back before she determines whether it won something or not. A favorite trick, pretend to throw ticket away after telling someone they did not win anything, and then when they leave, pull it out of the trash and collect.”

Jacksonville-based Winn-Dixie responded with a statement:

Clerk tells lottery winner his prize is only $5. She picked the wrong man to scam, cops say.

Do you trust your store clerk with your lottery ticket?

Maybe you’ve won a few hundred bucks or more. Will the employee tell you — or pocket the ticket while telling you it’s a loser?

That happened this week at a Fort Myers store, according to the Florida Lottery Commission. A Winn-Dixie Liquors employee is accused of keeping a customer’s $600 winning ticket —and paying him only 5 bucks.

Crystelle Yvette Baton was charged with larceny grand theft on Monday.

Baton, 42, was caught because she scammed the wrong customer, cops say.

The man wasn’t a customer — he was an agent working undercover for the Florida Lottery Commission’s security division.

When the undercover agent approached Baton with the winning ticket, she scanned it and realized it was worth $600. But instead of telling the man, investigators said she quietly pulled $5 out of her purse and told the man that was the “winning” ticket’s payoff.

Shortly after, the agent went back to the store to bust Baton. The winning ticket was found hidden in her notebook.

Seems the Lottery Commission makes these random visits to sellers to make sure the games are played properly.

“Anyone that is working in a customer service job, you think that they are doing what is in your best interest. I would be very upset if someone took that from me,” Winn-Dixie customer Nadina Puzic told WBBH NBC2.

A reader, posting on the NBC2 website on Wednesday, said the scam isn’t unusual. “This is much more common than you would think. I put my name on the back always, and always notice when the cashier checks the back before she determines whether it won something or not. A favorite trick, pretend to throw ticket away after telling someone they did not win anything, and then when they leave, pull it out of the trash and collect.”

Jacksonville-based Winn-Dixie responded with a statement:

“We are taking this matter very seriously as the trust and safety of our customers is our highest priority. The associate’s employment has been terminated.”

Baton posted a $5,000 bond on Tuesday. Her trial date is set for Feb. 26.

The lesson, even if it gnaws at you a bit for not trusting your fellow human: Make use of the Florida Lottery Commission’s electronic checkers that are placed on the counters near the lottery machine. You’ll save time, too, if there’s a line.
 

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I really don't understand how this is possible, I play the lottery, when I have a winning ticket I hand it over, they put it through the machine that scans it and the winnings comes up on a screen, similar to the process when buying groceries and scanning the items. PLUS I ALWAYS sign the back of my ticket anyways AND I always know if my ticket is a winner or loser and how much it won before even going to cash it.

Doesn't every state have the same machines to prevent something like this?
 

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You have to be 1 whopping moron to have a winning lottery ticket and be told you are wrong.

I dont play scratchers but I think it would be very obvious if you have a winner or not.

And the clerk just took money out of her purse to pay the $5???? What??? That wasnt a giveaway to know something may be up?

So many holes in this story.
 

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I’ve heard of this happening before. Just makes me wonder how often that clerk got away with it.
 

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You have to be 1 whopping moron to have a winning lottery ticket and be told you are wrong.

I dont play scratchers but I think it would be very obvious if you have a winner or not.

And the clerk just took money out of her purse to pay the $5???? What??? That wasnt a giveaway to know something may be up?

So many holes in this story.
There arent any holes vlad. Read the story, the guy was a lottery agent running a sting.
He knew what was going on, he just played along, then he went back with his buddies and busted her.
 

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Dateline once ran a show on clerks ripping off customers....It happens a lot.
 

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I always check my tickets online & at the stores self checking machine......no way would I ever give my ticket to a teller unless I know I won.
 

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I had a co-worker. Took his lotto ticket in, on is birthday, scanned it... saw 100k.. took it to the counter wondering if it was a glitch. no glitch. dude won 100k. if he doesnt check his ticket? maybe they keep it like in these videos.. but he did check it- .. 100k richer. man could use that right now
 

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Happens less than in years past I believe, automatic scanners help the cause, those are the few that have been caught, Im sure people have went years without being caught, older machines never had the music to hear when they scan a winner and never had a screen to see the dollar amount ...etc.... easy risk reward scam in years past
 

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I dug alot of winners out of the trash when pa changed the way instant tix show winners years back. Use to be you didn't have to play the game cuz there was a set of numbers and if you won the numbers enclosed in parenthesis was the winning. They killed that and people kept not playing the game and just looking for parenthesis which were no more. That didn't last long and they changed it again after that.
 

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I dug alot of winners out of the trash when pa changed the way instant tix show winners years back. Use to be you didn't have to play the game cuz there was a set of numbers and if you won the numbers enclosed in parenthesis was the winning. They killed that and people kept not playing the game and just looking for parenthesis which were no more. That didn't last long and they changed it again after that.

I remember that, there's a new stand that sellers a lot of scratch offs that's across my cousins restaurant, the workers at the news stand would tell us quite a few people threw winning tickets away looking for the winner between the parentheses
 

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People suck.

I feel bad for you millennial fucktards. The world used to be a much better place, filled with a much higher quality human. People these days are total garbage. Scum.

I am an agnostic who is pretty close to being an atheist...... but moving away from traditional church teachings, moving mom out of the house and into the workforce, and replacing it with the brainwashing of kids at school into the least moral positions, has gotten us into a bad state of affairs.

Apparently the money she was makng as a supermodel didn't pan out.

1163301-11-20180126075805.jpeg
 

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