Conman who got £2.5m from British lottery convicted of fraud

Fake winning ticket though mangled and missing barcode was honoured by Camelot

A conman in the UK has been convicted of cashing in a fake British lottery ticket to claim a £2.5 million (€2.8 million) jackpot.

Edward Putman, 54, conspired with a Camelot insider to cheat the system and present a counterfeit slip to claim the outstanding top prize in 2009.

He was jailed on Friday for nine years by Judge Philip Grey.

The builder plotted with friend Giles Knibbs — who then worked in the securities department at the Lottery operator — with the pair submitting a deliberately damaged forgery just before the 180-day claim limit expired.

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But the fraud unravelled after Mr Knibbs confessed to friends that he had “conned” the lottery before taking his own life after an angry row about how the winnings were divided.

Jurors at St Albans Crown Court found Putman guilty of fraud by false representation on Friday after a two-week trial.

Putman, wearing a Barbour-style jacket and blue jeans, did not appear to make any reaction to the verdict.

The genuine winning ticket, which was bought in Worcester, has never been discovered.

Putman, a convicted rapist and benefits cheat, was paid the jackpot by Camelot despite the bottom part of the mangled slip missing the barcode, the trial heard.

Jurors were told the plan began to fall apart after the friendship between former business partners Mr Knibbs and Putman deteriorated.

Mr Knibbs’ behaviour became increasingly erratic and he began revealing details of the fraud to friends after failing to receive what he said was his agreed €1 million (€1.2 million) share of the prize.

He confronted Putman in a heated argument in June 2015, breaking Putman’s wing mirrors and stealing his phone.

The lottery worker was subsequently arrested for burglary, blackmail and criminal damage after Putman complained to police. He later killed himself after fearing he would go down for “10 to 15 years for blackmail”, the trial heard.

Evidence suggested Mr Knibbs was initially paid £280,000 (€313,500) by Putman for his part in the ruse, followed by much smaller increments totalling £50,000 (€56,000).

Unclaimed wins

The scam began after Mr Knibbs saw documents being printed containing details of big wins which had not yet been claimed while working late one night.

Prosecutor James Keeley told the trial there was “some trial and error” in producing a successful forged ticket, with several different specimens made, each with one of the 100 different possible unique codes on the bottom.

Mr Knibbs had claimed Putman went to 29 different shops as the clock ticked down to claim the cash, providing a different ticket at each, before the right number was found.

Mr Keeley said Putman eventually submitted the correct code at a shop in High Wycombe, on August 28th, 2009.

Despite his multi-million pound windfall, three years later in 2012 Putman was sentenced to nine months for benefit fraud after going on to claim £13,000 (€14,550) in housing and income support.

His previous convictions also include the rape of a teenager in the early 1990s, for which he was sentenced to seven years.

In 2016, the Gambling Commission fined Camelot £3 million (€3.36 million) for breaching its operating licence regarding controlling databases, investigating prize claims, and paying out prizes.

The UK’s Crown Prosecution Service said it “will take steps to recover his fraudulently acquired winnings”. – PA