StarTribune.com

Wisconsin woman doesn’t fall for $500K “Powerball” win

Posted on July 29th, 2008 – 11:31 AM
By James Shiffer

My colleague, online reporter Tim Harlow, wrote this dispatch about a deal that sounds just a little too good to be true:

Terri Hagen of Frederic, Wis. was a tad suspicious when earlier this month when she received a letter from an organization calling itself Powerball America 2008 stating that she’d won $498,750 in a lottery. Turns out she was right to be wary.

The letter came with an official-looking check for $3,980 and a few instructions. To get her money, all Hagen had to do was call a phone number, which happens to be registered in Canada. Upon verifying her claim with an agent, Hagen was to cash the $3,980 check, then send that amount to the clearing house “to pay an insurance fee and small processing fee” required by the Sweepstakes by-law, the letter said.

Red flags abound with this letter. First, the address listed on the Powerball America 2008 letterhead, 111 Bethel Road NE., Olympia, Wash., doesn’t exist, according to a spokeswoman with the Olympia Public Works Department. Second, in a voice mail left on my office telephone by an agent who identified himself as William Chambers, he left the incorrect toll-free phone number. The letter instructs callers to dial 1-888-275-4076, but Chambers’s message says to call “1-888-275-4067,” which belongs to an organization called Write to Redress.

When finally reached by phone, Chambers said Powerball America operates in 15 states and has been around since 1983. Yet there is no mention of any previous winners to be found, and the only reference to the organization online is the heart-wrenching story of an upstate New York woman who sent $3,980 to Powerball America 2008 and is now facing eviction because she can’t pay her rent.

“We keep the names of winners private. We don’t publish them on newspapers or web sites,” Chambers said. He assured me that this deal was real.

The $3,980 check Hagen received with her letter came from the “Rick Moore Group” with an account at the Wells Fargo in Bellevue, Wash. She said that she called that bank and a supervisor there confirmed it was a “scam.”

Brian Bergson, a spokesman with the Minnesota Attorney General’s office, said he could not discuss whether any Minnesotans had been taken in by Powerball America, but he did say when it comes to scams like this “we see them all the time and it only takes one bite.”

Apparently several versions of the letter similar to the one Hagen received have been sent to households across the United States under various versions of “Powerball.” On the web site 800notes.com, a web site that people can report unwanted and unsolicited calls, a South Carolina woman posted that she received a letter telling her to call 1-778-227-5520 because she won the Oregon Powerball 2008.

“Huh?,” she wrote. “I’ve never played.”

Bergson said anybody who receives such a letter should call the Minnesota State Attorney General at 651-296-3353.

16 Responses to “Wisconsin woman doesn’t fall for $500K “Powerball” win”

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  1. D Says:

    My mom “won” the Canadian Lottery the same way. I had to repeatedly tell her that it was a scam, but she almost still fell for it. Sick how these people pray on the elderly.

  2. Winner Winner Chicken Dinner Says:

    Eversince I have posted my resume on Monster.com, I have received emails that I have won the Nigerian lottery 4 times! It is a similar scam.

  3. Nick F. Says:

    I got an email that I’d won an online lottery, I thought it was a scam but followed it up just to see and ended up winning almost $150,000! Don’t be so sure that it’s always a scam - I’m so glad I called them!

  4. bies25 Says:

    Well if Nick F. says in an anonymous blog posting that these things are for real, then they must be!! I’m going to start replying to the emails in my junk email folder right away!!! There must be all kinds of people giving away money for no reason on the internet, because “Nick F.” said so!

  5. Big Jim Says:

    This is so NOT NEWS. Lottery scams have been around for ages, and if there was a news item about every time someone “didn’t fall for it” that’s all we would ever get to read.

  6. daisy Says:

    There is no free money. Bottom line is if it’s too good to be true, it is. As for “Nick F”, I wonder if you are a scam yourself.

  7. Jimmy Scammer Says:

    I operate an online lottery scam. A few months back I convinced some Nick F. guy that he won nearly $150,000. Sucker. In reality I got him to send me nearly $150,000. Thanks Nick!

    /sarcasm

  8. kinsley Says:

    You would think these “We send you a bogus check. You wire us money.” scams would lose steam sooner or later.

  9. alaskajim Says:

    I also made 30 million dollars for handling some money for a Nigerian businessman who was in exile in England. 30 million bucks, just like that! Now I’m sitting pretty with $29,998,800 because I decided to repaint my double-wide and add a deck.

  10. eyeque Says:

    I can never understand why the never go after these people. They should be able to follow the money. I can see if they are in Nigeria but Canada? All the have to do is throw a few in jail and a lot of this would stop. Until they do the crooks get a free ride.

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