






A secret winner’s loss will be some lucky Iowans’ gain.
The Iowa Lottery announced plans Friday to give away $2 million in cash prizes, including a $1 million prize at the Iowa State Fair, with the state’s share of a leftover jackpot that went unpaid after a New York lawyer refused to explain how he ended up with the winning ticket.
“We’re going to see if we can have better luck the second time around,” Iowa Lottery CEO Terry Rich said in a statement, calling the unexpected windfall a “summer bonus” for the state’s Lottery players.
The Iowa Division of Criminal Investigation and the Iowa Attorney General’s Office continue to look into whether any crimes were committed in the attempt by New York attorney Crawford Shaw to claim the prize on behalf of a trust. Shaw’s lawyers shocked lottery officials when they showed up with the winning ticket two hours before the prize would have expired on Dec. 29, the anniversary of the Hot Lotto prize drawing.
The ticket was indeed the winner, but Lottery officials said Shaw refused in the following weeks to explain who purchased it at a Des Moines gas station and who would receive the payout. Through his lawyers, Shaw said he was representing an attorney for a person who purchased the ticket and wished to remain anonymous. During a meeting with Lottery officials, he said the trust’s proceeds would go to a corporation based in Belize, a country known as a tax haven.
Shaw ultimately withdrew his claim last month after Lottery officials said they would not pay the money unless he answered their questions.
In a brief telephone interview Friday, Shaw declined to elaborate on his withdrawal and claimed he had explained everything to the lottery. “The matter has been resolved as far as I’m concerned. I wish everybody good luck,” said Shaw.
Details for the summer promotion are still being worked out, but lottery officials said the promotion will start in July for players who buy Hot Lotto and Powerball tickets and enter through the Lottery’s website. It will culminate with a drawing for the $1 million prize in August at the state fair in Des Moines — a competition that also will probably be open to fairgoers in the crowd and retailers who sell lottery tickets. Smaller cash prizes also will be given away.
Lottery officials said the $2 million giveaway would be funded with the state’s $1.4 million share of the leftover Hot Lotto jackpot plus its $600,000 share of an unclaimed $77 million Powerball jackpot sold in Georgia that expired in December. States who participate in those games were given back the proceeds of the tickets sold within their borders when the jackpots weren’t claimed.
Lottery spokeswoman Mary Neubauer said Iowa law requires unclaimed prizes to go back to players for prizes instead of other potential uses, such as funding state government. But she said the $2 million promotion was by far the largest in its history since it was so unusual to have two large jackpots go unclaimed at once.