2004 Chinese lottery scandal
In 2004, a scandal occurred when one of four lottery tickets didn't go to a prearranged winner, resulting in the arrest of five people and several government officials being removed.[1][2][3]
The Shaanxi Provincial Sports Lottery Centre refused to give the unexpected winner, Liu Liang, the prize of a new BMW, claiming that he held a fake lottery ticket.[1][2] The court found that Yang Yongming, a contractor to the lottery company, had cheated on the four top prizes. The lottery center authorities declared that Liu's ticket was valid and apologized.[1] The car was sold for 300,000 yuan, and Liu Liang retreated to a remote village on Qinling Mountain.[1]
References[]
- ^ a b c d "Lottery winner sold BMW, goes bush". Shenzhen Daily. 30 June 2004.
- ^ a b Ai Guo Han (August 2008). "Building a Harmonious Society and Achieving Individual Harmony". . 13 (2): 147. doi:10.1007/s11366-008-9021-y.
- ^ Youjun Li (December 26, 2007). "Zhongguo duojucuo daji dupin fanzui" (China takes many measures to fight drug related crimes". . p. 5.
External links[]
- Liu Liang inside his car, June 4, 2004
Categories:
- 2004 in China
- Gambling in China
- Lottery fraud
- China stubs