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- Aunt in $1. 2M Chase the Ace lawsuit collects final payment . . . - CBC. ca
A Guysborough, N S , woman at the centre of a nasty battle with her nephew over a lottery win last summer has collected the last of her winnings But the family rift is still there
- I won the lottery but lost half after I was sued by my own aunt
A TEEN won over $420,000 on a lotto ticket that he shared with his aunt, but she ended up suing him and taking the lion’s share after claiming she was the sole winner Tyrone MacInnis, then-19, and his aunt Barbara Reddick, from Nova Scotia, Canada won the jackpot from the Margaree Chase the Ace lottery in July 2018
- Aunt and nephew pose with $1. 2m lottery check seconds before she says . . .
A Nova Scotia woman sued her nephew after she claimed he lied about an agreement to split a massive $1 2 million lottery jackpot, causing a scene in front of officials (Image: CBC News)
- Aunt in Canada sues nephew over $1. 2m lottery win: ‘See you in court . . .
The aunt, who lives in the small town of Margaree Forks in Nova Scotia, claims she sent her teenage nephew $100 via an internet transfer so that he could buy a lottery ticket for her
- Nova Scotia lotto aunt and nephew reach deal in jackpot feud - BBC
A Canadian woman and the nephew she took to court over a lottery win have come to an agreement over how they will split the jackpot
- $1. 2 Million Lottery Win Frozen After Nova Scotia Woman Sues Nephew . . .
A judge in Nova Scotia has frozen half of a $1 2 million lottery jackpot until a family feud between the woman who bought the winning ticket and her nephew is resolved
- Woman vows to sue nephew over $1. 2 million lottery prize
NOVA SCOTIA, Canada — A lottery jackpot check presentation turned into a family feud when the woman who put her nephew’s name on the winning ticket refused to split the prize and vowed to sue for the remaining portion
- Dead to me: Aunts feud with nephew over $1. 2M Chase the Ace . . . - CBC. ca
As an aunt continues to feud with her nephew over a $1 2-million jackpot, a Dalhousie University law school professor suggests the family members seek an alternative to taking the matter to court
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