Texas to investigate lottery jackpots as questions swirl about online couriers

CNN Business
25 Feb
CNN  — 

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott has directed the Texas Rangers to investigate two controversial lottery jackpots amid growing scrutiny over the role of online ticketing firms in the state.

Abbott asked the agency to investigate this month’s $83.5 million prize, which involved a lottery courier service, and a $95 million win jackpot from 2023 won by a group of investors. Both practices, according to government officials, affect the public’s confidence in the lottery.

“Texans must be able to trust in our state’s lottery system and know that the lottery is conducted with integrity and lawfully,” Abbott said Monday in a news release, as lawmakers blasted the Texas Lottery Commission for failing to regulate couriers.

Lottery courier services allow customers to buy lottery tickets virtually. Couriers then buy the tickets for customers at physical stores they often own. Critics argue the practice makes it impossible to verify the legality of the buyers and is vulnerable to money laundering.

Lottery couriers, which have been operating in the state since 2019, became a focus in April 2023 after a single entity bought 25 million lottery tickets in less than 72 hours using a courier service, CNN affiliate WFAA reported.

Then, this month, someone won an $83.5 million jackpot using a ticket purchased through a courier service at an Austin retail store, WFAA reported.

Texas Lottery is moving to ban courier services from operating in the state “to ensure all ticket sales comply with state law and agency regulation as well as to maintain public trust,” Texas Lottery Commission Executive Director Ryan Mindell said.

“Lottery courier services operating in Texas have been a significant concern for many of our stakeholders. Previously, the agency interpreted its authority as not extending to the regulation or prohibition of these services,” Mindell said in a news release.

However, after a review of the State Lottery Act and “information from recent retailer investigations,” the commission “will revoke the license of a retailer that works with or assists a courier service,” Mindell said.

The Coalition of Texas Lottery Couriers called the lottery commission’s announcement “abrupt, disappointing and unnecessary” in a statement reported by WFAA.

“Lottery couriers have been legally and responsibly operating in Texas since 2019, while always maintaining a transparent and professional relationship with the Texas Lottery Commission,” the group said.

“Throughout this process, the TLC has claimed to have no regulatory authority over courier activities, despite couriers’ persistent requests to be regulated, just as we are in other states.”

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott at the White House on February 5.
Andrew Harnik/Getty Images

Texas Lieutenant Gov. Dan Patrick slammed the Texas Lottery’s announcement in a post to social media.

“I’ve never read so much garbage from a state agency press release in my 18 years in office,” Patrick wrote.

“Today’s action is an obvious admission that the Texas Lottery Commission had the oversight authority all along and allowed these businesses to creep into Texas and undermine the integrity of the Texas Lottery.”

In another post, Patrick asked the Texas Rangers to expand its investigation beyond the two specific incidents to “any and all matters related to the Lottery Commission first allowing lottery couriers into Texas and any and all possible crimes internally or externally arising from the Lottery Commission’s actions or failures to act.”

Last week, Patrick visited the courier-owned Austin retail store that sold the $83.5 million winning ticket and questioned one of its workers in a video posted to social media.

This is a developing story and will be updated.

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