Should lottery winners' names be kept secret?

PHOENIX (AP) - When two winning tickets for a record $588 million Powerball jackpot were claimed from the Nov. 28 drawing, the world focused on the winners.
A Missouri couple appeared at a press conference and held up the traditional giant-sized check. The Arizona winner, however, skipped the press conference where lottery officials announced last month that someone had claimed the second half of the prize.
The differing approach to releasing information on the winners reflects a broader debate that is playing out in state Legislatures and lottery offices nationwide: Should the winners' names be secret?
Lawmakers in Michigan and New Jersey think so, proposing bills to allow anonymity because winners are prone to falling victim to scams, shady businesses, greedy distant family members and violent criminals looking to shake them down.
Lotteries object, arguing that publicizing the winners' names drives sales and that having their names released ensures that people know there isn't something fishy afoot, like a game rigged so a lottery insider wins.
When players see that an actual person won, "it has a much greater impact than when they might read that the lottery paid a big prize to an anonymous player," said Andi Brancato, director of public relations for the Michigan state lottery.
Most states require the names of lottery winners be disclosed, albeit in different ways. Some states require the winner to appear at a press conference, like Missouri winners Mark and Cindy Hill did on Nov. 30.
Arizona and other states allow winners not to appear in public, but their names can be obtained through public records laws. The Arizona winner, Matthew Good, was not identified at the news conference a week after the Hills' came forward, and has not given interviews or appeared in public.
When news media learned of his name through records requests, TV crews and reporters flocked to Good's neighborhood to get reaction from the winner of a lottery that captivated the nation.
Jeff Hatch-Miller, executive director of the Arizona Lottery, said he understands winners' desire for privacy, but he argues they are essentially entering into a large contract with the government that is public. Others argue that appearing at a news conference helps defuse media interest because the winner is available to answer questions that satisfy the media's interest in telling their stories.
In Michigan, Republican state Sen. Tory Rocca pushed a lottery bill that allows winners to remain anonymous. It didn't pass, but in arguing for it, he cited cases where lottery winners were shot and killed because of their newfound wealth.
A Florida woman was convicted last month of first-degree murder after she befriended a man who won a $30 million jackpot in 2006. Prosecutors said she took control of his assets, killed him, buried him in her yard and poured a concrete slab above the grave.
An effort in New Jersey by Democratic Sen. Jim Whelan took a middle ground between public release and privacy, calling for a one-year delay in releasing winners' names. It also didn't make it out of the Legislature last year, but he said he'll keep pressing to get it passed.
Whelan said a one-year delay would give winners a chance to adjust while still keeping the public disclosure lotteries say they need. However, Whelan said he doesn't really buy the agencies' arguments for public disclosure.
"I'm not sure how many people are spurred to buy a lottery ticket because they see a picture of someone in the paper holding up a big check - and I don't think people don't buy a ticket because they think the whole thing's fixed," Whelan said.
Of 44 states participating in Powerball and 33 in Mega-Millions, only Delaware, Kansas, Maryland, North Dakota and Ohio allow blanket anonymity, said Chuck Strutt, executive director of the Multi-State Lottery Association, which oversees the games.
"Obviously, it is a law that is designed to ensure an open and transparent process, so that the public can be ensured that insiders are not winners," Strutt said. "But in today's world, most of us can understand the wish to remain anonymous."
The most famous modern lottery fraud case happened in 1980 when Pennsylvania Lottery district manager Edward Plevel and TV announcer Nick Perry were convicted of fixing the result of the Daily Number drawing.
Authorities found that some of the ping pong balls used in the game were injected with paint to make them too heavy to float up the winning slots. The result paid $3.8 million, a record at the time, and eight people involved in the fix won a total of about $1.2 million.
Former Missouri child services worker Sandra Hayes shared a $224 million Powerball jackpot with a dozen co-workers in 2006 and said she understands the push for anonymity.
Hayes said she received many requests for money or to make investments, both at work (she kept her job another month) and at home, where she'd find people waiting on her porch. Her lump sum payout after taxes was more than $6 million.
Even if people are allowed to remain anonymous, it's often inevitable that their identities will become known.
Steve Thornton, a lawyer in Bowling Green, Ky., has helped two big lottery winners shield their names through corporations despite rules in his state that require disclosure of winners. Even though they were kept out of the public eye, one winner couldn't stay hidden.
"It was not many months later that lots of people knew who won, even though it was not released, because of their gifts and their spending." Thornton said.
A Missouri couple appeared at a press conference and held up the traditional giant-sized check. The Arizona winner, however, skipped the press conference where lottery officials announced last month that someone had claimed the second half of the prize.
The differing approach to releasing information on the winners reflects a broader debate that is playing out in state Legislatures and lottery offices nationwide: Should the winners' names be secret?
Lawmakers in Michigan and New Jersey think so, proposing bills to allow anonymity because winners are prone to falling victim to scams, shady businesses, greedy distant family members and violent criminals looking to shake them down.
Lotteries object, arguing that publicizing the winners' names drives sales and that having their names released ensures that people know there isn't something fishy afoot, like a game rigged so a lottery insider wins.
When players see that an actual person won, "it has a much greater impact than when they might read that the lottery paid a big prize to an anonymous player," said Andi Brancato, director of public relations for the Michigan state lottery.
Most states require the names of lottery winners be disclosed, albeit in different ways. Some states require the winner to appear at a press conference, like Missouri winners Mark and Cindy Hill did on Nov. 30.
Arizona and other states allow winners not to appear in public, but their names can be obtained through public records laws. The Arizona winner, Matthew Good, was not identified at the news conference a week after the Hills' came forward, and has not given interviews or appeared in public.
When news media learned of his name through records requests, TV crews and reporters flocked to Good's neighborhood to get reaction from the winner of a lottery that captivated the nation.
Jeff Hatch-Miller, executive director of the Arizona Lottery, said he understands winners' desire for privacy, but he argues they are essentially entering into a large contract with the government that is public. Others argue that appearing at a news conference helps defuse media interest because the winner is available to answer questions that satisfy the media's interest in telling their stories.
In Michigan, Republican state Sen. Tory Rocca pushed a lottery bill that allows winners to remain anonymous. It didn't pass, but in arguing for it, he cited cases where lottery winners were shot and killed because of their newfound wealth.
A Florida woman was convicted last month of first-degree murder after she befriended a man who won a $30 million jackpot in 2006. Prosecutors said she took control of his assets, killed him, buried him in her yard and poured a concrete slab above the grave.
An effort in New Jersey by Democratic Sen. Jim Whelan took a middle ground between public release and privacy, calling for a one-year delay in releasing winners' names. It also didn't make it out of the Legislature last year, but he said he'll keep pressing to get it passed.
Whelan said a one-year delay would give winners a chance to adjust while still keeping the public disclosure lotteries say they need. However, Whelan said he doesn't really buy the agencies' arguments for public disclosure.
"I'm not sure how many people are spurred to buy a lottery ticket because they see a picture of someone in the paper holding up a big check - and I don't think people don't buy a ticket because they think the whole thing's fixed," Whelan said.
Of 44 states participating in Powerball and 33 in Mega-Millions, only Delaware, Kansas, Maryland, North Dakota and Ohio allow blanket anonymity, said Chuck Strutt, executive director of the Multi-State Lottery Association, which oversees the games.
"Obviously, it is a law that is designed to ensure an open and transparent process, so that the public can be ensured that insiders are not winners," Strutt said. "But in today's world, most of us can understand the wish to remain anonymous."
The most famous modern lottery fraud case happened in 1980 when Pennsylvania Lottery district manager Edward Plevel and TV announcer Nick Perry were convicted of fixing the result of the Daily Number drawing.
Authorities found that some of the ping pong balls used in the game were injected with paint to make them too heavy to float up the winning slots. The result paid $3.8 million, a record at the time, and eight people involved in the fix won a total of about $1.2 million.
Former Missouri child services worker Sandra Hayes shared a $224 million Powerball jackpot with a dozen co-workers in 2006 and said she understands the push for anonymity.
Hayes said she received many requests for money or to make investments, both at work (she kept her job another month) and at home, where she'd find people waiting on her porch. Her lump sum payout after taxes was more than $6 million.
Even if people are allowed to remain anonymous, it's often inevitable that their identities will become known.
Steve Thornton, a lawyer in Bowling Green, Ky., has helped two big lottery winners shield their names through corporations despite rules in his state that require disclosure of winners. Even though they were kept out of the public eye, one winner couldn't stay hidden.
"It was not many months later that lots of people knew who won, even though it was not released, because of their gifts and their spending." Thornton said.
Yes the winners should choose if they want to remain anonymous. However if the particular state thinks they need to come into the spotlight, then the state should be held responsible if anything happens to the winners family (& possibly close friends)
I think it's necessary for transparency purposes. Better have a thick skin and contact a financial planner/lawyer before claiming it if you win big to protect yourself from creepers coming out of the woodwork.Â
I think the winners should have the right to choose. There are too many crazy people in the world today and getting put out there like that could be hazardous to one's health. I do play the lottery in the hopes that someday, I'd be able to have the kind of life I've up to now, only been able to dream about. Personally, I wouldn't want the world to know because I wouldn't want people pestering me or worse. Also, if you notice, the people who win the smaller prizes in the lottery, like the $250,000 consolation prize (getting all numbers right except the mega ball), don't have their names on blast. Nor do any of the rest of the smaller prize winners. What's the fairness in that?Â
So if the government pays out a $1 million lottery prize to someone and they have to reveal there name, age, and residence etc....then why when the government gives $100 dollars to 10,000 people their names are not made public. For instance, disability, welfare, food stamps etc... Both parties are getting public funds (although different amounts but both add up to a million) therefore it would be inconsistent and unfair not to publish their names too. All I am saying is it should be that way for both parties or none at all.
 @Joe Build First of all, the government does NOT pay out to lottery winners. The lottery, although run by a governmental agency, operates entirely on funding provided by the sale of tickets to the various games., The long-term prizes are funded in most part by term annuities. No tax dollars are used in lottery games.
In a word...YES...allow the winners to make that choice, don't force them into the spotlight, the way Christine Gregoire did to Jim and Carolyn McCuller!
A winner should have the option of going public or remaining anonymous. I wouldn't want everyone under the sun after me and my money if I won the lottery.
Some lotteries allow for the winner to choose between revealing their identity or not. I think that ought to be the way to go.
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God knows, if *I* ever won the lottery the first thing I'd do is hire a lawyer and change my phone number. The second thing is hire a guy to help me manage that money. Giving someone who doesn't know how to manage it single payout of multiple millions of dollars is like handing the keys of a sports car to a 12 year old.
Well why don't we just publish the names and address of the people who work for the lottery that published the wrong winning numbers for their recent "Raffle" drawing. Seriously cannot believe they did that. People who thought they had won have lost and some who looked at results and thought they lost might of won and thrown their tickets away.  Do lottery workers have to be drug tested? Makes ya wonder how many of those quick check scanners at the stores actually work right.
I've never been interested in knowing who won the lottery as that is of no benefit to me. Â It's enough to know that the winner was not me. Â Winner names may be public information, but should have to be requested rather than being published. Â
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If you're going to call the names of gun owners public information, so too should the lottery winners names. This is particularly true since these are run by the government. Print a disclaimer on every ticket. These people can now afford to do whatever they need. They were looking for a lifestyle change or they never would have bought a ticket......wish I had their problem. Â
 @bagsofdirt What if you win and someone kidnaps one of your loved ones demanding a ransom? By making it public, aren't you setting your entire family up for that kind of crime?
 @bagsofdirt If you won the lottery and had some bad people after your money, I'd bet you'd think MUCH differently.
I like the idea of setting up a corporation or maybe a trust (I'm not an attorney so I don't know if a trust would do it). But by all means contact an attorney before doing anything.
I would hand the ticket to my attorney and have him claim it. Pay him 10% and the rest would go into a double blind trust.
This is a public lottery and so everything should be made public. If it was a private lottery, like at a casino, then it could be kept secret. I'm against any state or federal agency hiding any information when the public has a right to know.
 @Blindman In Washington the courts have ruled the winner must be divulged if requested properly under Washington's public records law.
@Blindman
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Who says the public has a "right to know" who won a lottery prize? It should only matter to the woinner & the lottery, and the IRS for tax purposes.
 @LocalLady  @Blindman Because its a public lottery. Its for public purposes and the people have a right to know.
 @Blindman  @LocalLady "Its for public purposes"
What "public purposes"? No tax money is involved in the lottery pool.
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 @deadcandance Well, as to "cousins", I am into genealogy and know who all my cousins are...
 Who cares ? The odds of you having to really worry about this problem is next to nil............
 @hwystar71 Only six million to one (roughly) for Lotto in Washington state. The higher the payout in the game the greater the odds.
the name should be kept secret
I think it should be this.....
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If lottery winners have to be named publically then anyone getting a salary or any money from State government should have their names and the money received public....
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So that means ANYONE getting disability, welfare, food stamps etc should have their names published weekly... They are getting money and we need to know they really exist and aren't a scam.Â
 @Joe Build "then anyone getting a salary or any money from State government should have their names and the money received public..."
Actually, that information is already available on the web.
And no, I'm not going to tell you where...
@Joe Build
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Why should people on disability & retiirees on social security be "disclosed"? Why should those who are unemployed, getting food benefits, health care benefits, or anything else be disclosed? For what purpose? There is no logic behind what you are proposing.
 @LocalLady Â
My point is if government pays out a $1 million lottery prize to someone and they have to reveal there name, age, and residence why when the government gives $100 dollars to 10,000 people their names are not made public. Both parties are getting public funds (although different amounts but both add up to a million) therefore it would be inconsistent and unfair not to publish their names too. All I am saying is it should be that way for both parties or none at all.
 @Joe Build  @LocalLady Different sources of money. Lotteries are NOT taxpayer supported but operate solely from the sale of tickets.
I could be wrong but I think you can leverage the Freedom of Information Act to obtain the information about those that are getting public assistance from the government.
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The same as what was done to gain the information about  those with gun permits earlier this year
 @Justaguy You are correct. For example this link, provided by the Tacoma News Tribune for Pierce County employees.
http://www.thenewstribune.com/piercecountysalaries/
Winning the lottery sounds like a huge pain in the rear. I am happy driving my old beat-up car and living in my ramshackle house, it would upset my apple cart to have people calling or pounding on my door asking for money.
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Washington state should adopt a strict privacy rule on lottery winnings, I would be slightly more likely to buy a ticket, I could anonymously help people with the winnings without being bothered or having to change my life too much. Â
So, we can know the names and precise payments to all public employees, but we shouldn't get to know the name of a citizen who receiving huge paychecks from the government? It's ironic we'd have the right to know the name of the guy cleaning out the storm drain in front of our house, but not the one now driving a Ferrari past it.
 @TruthinAdvertsÂ
Why do you consider a lottery winning as a "huge paycheck from the government"? They did nothing to "earn" it as in working for it - it is a game of chance, they paid their money & they happened to beat the odds. That is not a "paycheck".
 @LocalLady  @TruthinAdverts so you are concluding from this that they deserve an anonymity that the guy cleaning out the storm drain doesn't? Or should they both have that anonymity?
 @TruthinAdverts  @LocalLady Both should be anonymous. Governmental salaries can be listed by job title rather than by employee names.
I have the perfect solution. The lottery winners can hire me to publicly claim their prize in MY name, for only a small percentage of the winnings (plus the taxes I'd have to pay for the grand total).  By signed contract, I'll donate their winnings back to them.... and will keep their names forever secret!  Yes, I'd do that for someone(s)... it's the kind of person I am.  :)
@Anselm  Yeah, right! And I'll bet you've got some ocean-front property in Arizona, and you'll throw in the Brooklyn Bridge for free.
easy to remain annonymous. just open a blind trust.
 @dorimonsonfan You can't. The lottery security teams require individual SSN's to payout and check for back child support and money owed the State. Plus a couple lost a court case against the lottery in Yakima when they tried to claim with a trust and the judge said the Trustees and Beneficiary names are to be released under the public disclosure and lottery RCW acts. You can claim it but the media can get the documents from the lottery showing only name, age and residence.
I 100% think that if the winners should have the right to choose to be public or remain anonymous. By going public, they are opening themselves to the moochers, scam artists, theives, etc. who's sole purpose is to get their hands on the money won by someone else. If I won, I would definitely remain anonymous!
I have no problem with that. Everytime I hear about the winners, I'm always thinking do these guys really want to be identified for everyone to see? Yeah I've always had that fear of being targeted. As much as I'd love the money, I'm not sure I'd want the attention or the concerns.
"Former Missouri child services worker Sandra Hayes shared a $224 million Powerball jackpot with a dozen co-workers in 2006 and said she understands the push for anonymity.Hayes said she received many requests for money or to make investments, both at work (she kept her job another month) and at home, where she'd find people waiting on her porch. Her lump sum payout after taxes was more than $6 million."
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I believe that would be more accurate around $60 million after taxes and the lump sum penalty.
 @Getov Mylon How do you figure? If they split the money 13 ways it'd be about $17 million before taxes and penalties.
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And it'd be super creepy to have random people coming to your door expecting a handout.
 @Just_Mike Whoops! My bad. I glossed over where she had co-winners. Never mind. Disregard.
No the winners should not be identifed. I remeber a while back when a young lady won a substantial amount of money. She was a single mom who had just turned her life around for the better but because her name was made public both her and her mother were getting threats left to right from people in her past. there are too many dangerous people out there that sit with their hand out and expectt eveyrthing for nothing.
You can create a trust to accept lottery proceeds on your behalf. The tax code is a bit different, but I have heard of it being used by very savvy winners. Then again, with the public disclosure laws, people who really want to know will find out.
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Personally, I would skip town. I have a plan with my winnings (crosses fingers). I would give 100K to each of my co-workers, 5M to my mother and brother each (assuming it was the big one) and good luck finding me cuz I would be gone with what few irreplaceable things I own in less than 20 minutes.
"Lotteries object, arguing that publicizing the winners' names drives sales"
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Once again greed outweighs public safety.
The winners should be verified as not being relatives of state officials or something but the names should be kept private in this day and age.
I know that if I won a large sum of money, I would want to remain anonymous.