“It could be they lost the ticket and don’t know.
“We have not had anyone check this ticket on their app, or at the self check,” Bitonti said.īitonti said there are a number of possibilities about what could have happened to this ticket, but it’s impossible to know until a winner comes forward. The ticket was purchased at a retailer in Scarborough, though the OLG is not naming the store in order to protect their validation process.īitonti said while people have come forward to the OLG, there still has been no activity on the ticket since it was purchased last June. But if they can answer some questions that lead us to believe they may be the owner of the ticket then they go into the queue for further review.” “If not, they are not part of the process. “When people call in claiming they have lost their ticket, an OLG employee will ask a few questions to determine if the person is on the right track,” OLG spokesperson Tony Bitonti said Friday. This would be the largest lottery prize in Canadian history to go unclaimed if the winner from the Jdraw isn’t found by the deadline. The Ontario Lottery and Gaming Corporation (OLG) told CTV News Toronto they are now in the process of vetting more than 760 calls from the public ahead of the June 28 expiry date.
Hundreds of people have come forward to claim they could be the winner of the expiring $70 million Lotto Max prize.