Credits: CBC News
Music Credits: Natural
Barbara Reddick, a woman from Nova Scotia, regularly played the Chase the Ace lottery and often asked her nephew, Tyrone MacInnis, to buy tickets for her. In 2018, one of those tickets won a massive C$1.2 million jackpot, but because Reddick had written both their names on the ticket “for luck,” the lottery corporation issued two equal cheques—one to each of them. Reddick immediately claimed she never intended to split the jackpot, saying she only meant to share small winnings, not the grand prize, and famously told her nephew, “see you in court.”
The dispute went to court, and MacInnis’s share of the money was temporarily frozen. After months of legal tension and public attention, the case ended in an out-of-court settlement. Reddick received the larger portion of the winnings, while MacInnis kept a smaller share (reported to be a few hundred thousand dollars). The lawsuit was dropped, but the relationship was badly damaged, and the story became a cautionary tale about never putting two names on a lottery ticket unless you truly plan to share the prize.
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Fair Use Disclaimer
This video is protected under the Fair Use doctrine (17 U.S.C. § 107). It is a transformative work that includes original commentary, narration, and visual edits for educational or critical purposes. The content used is limited in length, does not compete with the original, and is used in a non-commercial or mixed context. No copyrighted music is used. If the rights holder believes this use is improper, they are encouraged to contact me directly via the email contact@riseandinspireyt.com to resolve the matter amicably.
#lottery #aunt #lawsuit #family #money
Music Credits: Natural
Barbara Reddick, a woman from Nova Scotia, regularly played the Chase the Ace lottery and often asked her nephew, Tyrone MacInnis, to buy tickets for her. In 2018, one of those tickets won a massive C$1.2 million jackpot, but because Reddick had written both their names on the ticket “for luck,” the lottery corporation issued two equal cheques—one to each of them. Reddick immediately claimed she never intended to split the jackpot, saying she only meant to share small winnings, not the grand prize, and famously told her nephew, “see you in court.”
The dispute went to court, and MacInnis’s share of the money was temporarily frozen. After months of legal tension and public attention, the case ended in an out-of-court settlement. Reddick received the larger portion of the winnings, while MacInnis kept a smaller share (reported to be a few hundred thousand dollars). The lawsuit was dropped, but the relationship was badly damaged, and the story became a cautionary tale about never putting two names on a lottery ticket unless you truly plan to share the prize.
.
.
.
Effects & Presets: https://riseandinspire.gumroad.com/l/viralcreatormasterbundle
Discord: https://discord.gg/ua3zNmvf9Z
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/risee_and_inspire/
Tiktok: https://www.tiktok.com/@riseeandiinspire
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=61573709636886
Fair Use Disclaimer
This video is protected under the Fair Use doctrine (17 U.S.C. § 107). It is a transformative work that includes original commentary, narration, and visual edits for educational or critical purposes. The content used is limited in length, does not compete with the original, and is used in a non-commercial or mixed context. No copyrighted music is used. If the rights holder believes this use is improper, they are encouraged to contact me directly via the email contact@riseandinspireyt.com to resolve the matter amicably.
#lottery #aunt #lawsuit #family #money
- Category
- Lottery Online Games






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