A good reminder as a UK ticketholder has today claimed £177 million jackpot (Picture: Getty/Reuters)
Assassination, abduction or substance abuse – all part of a jinx following a number of winners of the lottery.
Players may envisage that buying a lucky ticket will make all their dreams come true, but more often than not it turns out to be a deal with the devil.
Believe it or not, the reality of scooping a jackpot is different to what many of us imagine.
History has countless examples of winners whose lives took a turn for the worse after scooping a large sum of money.
Some studies suggest lottery winners in the US are more likely to declare bankruptcy within three to five years compared to the average citizen.
Around one-third in the US find themselves in financial trouble – and it does not end there.
The pressure may force someone to spiral into depression, and lead to alcohol and drug abuse and problems with family and friends.
One such example in the UK is Michael Carroll, a bin man who won £9.7 million on the National Lottery in 2002 – but declared bankruptcy nine years later.
He splashed his fortune on a Norfolk mansion, drug fuelled orgies and investing in Rangers football club.
He bragged that he had pay to sleep with more than 4,000 women, and once shared that he started each day with ‘three lines of Charlie and half a bottle of vodka, as the Daily Star reported.
The former millionaire spent his entire winnings, and was eventually left homeless, bankrupt, and divorced after his wife left him.
There are also instances of people facing threats such as kidnapping after winning the lottery.
In 1960, Sydney salesperson Bazil Thorne and his wife Freda scooped what is now the equivalent of £1.5 million.
The couple became overnight celebrities, but the fame and fortune brought tragedy.
It was on July 7 when their son Graeme was kidnapped while on his way to school.
A hefty ransom demand was issued with threats to throw the eight-year-old to the sharks in Sydney.
His body was eventually discovered on waste ground in a suburb.
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Source:: Metro