Made with Love

You win half a billion dollars. All you have to do is make your name public.

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Unless the issue is something legal and she is worried about prosecution of some other serious crimes.
 
But because of lottery rules, everyone has to know her name: her friends, her family, ex-lovers, her mailman and all her enemies.

So yeah, the unidentified woman is not about this life, so she has asked a judge to not only let her keep her massive winnings, but to let her remain anonymous.
 
Her lawyer is not such a great grape.



“She is a longtime resident of New Hampshire and is an engaged community member,” the woman’s attorney, Steven Gordon, wrote in the court documents. “She wishes to continue this work and the freedom to walk into a grocery store or attend public events without being known or targeted as the winner of a half-billion dollars.”
On one side of the case are lottery officials who say the integrity of the games depends on the public identification of its winners as a protection against fraud and malfeasance. A local woman holding up a giant check while cameras flash and reporters scrawl also happens to be a powerful marketing tool.
On the other side is a woman suddenly faced with a life-changing stroke of luck who, court documents say, wishes to live “far from the glare and misfortune that has often fallen upon other lottery winners.”
 
She said she maid a big mistake by signing the back of the lottery ticket. But she does want the money.

Another dumb one.
 
She has the galls to sue the state in order to remain anonymous :no:
 
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