Oregon Video Lottery Cheats

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Video Lottery Terminals (Class II machines) VLTs are most often found in Indian gaming casinos or ' racinos ' (location with both a horse racetrack, as well as a casino). Each machine or terminal in a casino is linked together, forcing players to compete against one another for the prize, and with a set number of wins and losses, the group. 2 HISTORY OF THE LOTTERY 1984: Ballot Measure 4 Oregon Lottery voted in to aid economic development 1995: Ballot Measure 21 15% of Oregon Lottery proceeds go to Education Endowment Fund 1997: Ballot Measure 52 Lottery bonds to finance school projects 1998: Ballot Measure 66 15% of Lottery funds go to state parks, watersheds, fish and wildlife 2002: Ballot Measure 19 Conversion of Education.

  1. While the Oregon Lottery does sell tickets for Powerball and Mega Millions, it has a number of interesting draw games that are only available to in-state players. Megabucks is the flagship lottery game in the Beaver State. To play, all you have to do is buy a ticket for $1 and choose six numbers from 1.
  2. Oregon Video Lottery offers a full range of Las Vegas-style video games. Colorful, fun and fast paced, there are games to satisfy virtually any player (must be over 21 to play).

Some people just don't buy into the caution that you should quit while you're ahead.

Black jack online game. That may have been the case Monday, when Eugene detectives arrested two people on charges of peddling methamphetamine near a school. In the course of the arrest, officers seized more than $6,000 that the suspects said came not from selling meth but from exploiting a flaw in an Oregon Lottery video slot game.

What's more, evidence indicated that a number of other people in the methamphetamine underworld were sharing instructions on how to trick the game into dishing up large payouts. The game, called Da­Vinci Diamonds, was pulled by state lottery officials late Monday after they caught on to the apparent flaw.

The incident began Monday night when Eugene police detectives spotted what they believed to be a drug deal in the parking lot of an Albertsons grocery store at 65 Division Ave., said Sgt. Kevin McCormick of the department's vice and narcotics unit. They arrested Justin Ray Harig, 30, of Eugene on charges of delivering methamphetamine within 1,000 feet of a school and possession of methamphetamine.

McCormick said officers seized almost an ounce of the drug from Harig during the arrest, along with nearly $3,000 in cash. They also cited the alleged buyer, Christopher Lynn Dumont, 30, of Canyon­ville for possession of methamphetamine.

Police then got a search warrant for Harig's home, which is near Spring Creek Elementary School. While there, an alleged associate of Harig's drove up.

Risa Holden-Collins, allowed police to search her car, and officers said they found a small amount of methamphetamine, drug paraphernalia, a handgun and $3,600 in cash.

McCormick said the pair claimed that the money had come from playing the DaVinci Diamonds game. He said messages found on a cell phone seized in the search included text messages among people believed to be in the meth trade, offering to show how to trick the game.

'It was remarkable to me they were all meth dealers and meth users,' he said.

McCormick said Holden-Collins described in detail the elaborate trick that allowed people to put $20 into the lottery terminal but make the machine think it received $40.

'It sounded complex enough that it wasn't just a matter of sitting down in front of the machine,' he said.

A lottery spokesman said the trick involved touching the touch-­sensitive screen in just the right way. An investigation into what caused the flaw is continuing.

The flaw affected all state lottery terminals offering the DaVinci Diamonds game, and a number of local retailers reported that machines that usually turn a profit instead had losses, or payouts, of between $1,000 and $3,000.

Go bananas game. Some outlets may have lost a month or more of lottery profits from the glitch, which was spread by word of mouth for nearly a week.

Vegas games with the best odds. It's not known how far knowledge of the flaw had spread, but it appeared to be known to a substantial number of local lottery retailers in the Eugene-Springfield area.

Harig was jailed and later released on the drug charges. Holden-Collins was charged with manufacture, delivery and possession of methamphetamine within 1,000 feet of a school, and being a felon in possession of a firearm.

She was released with a citation to appear in court.

Video
Oregon Lottery
Websitewww.oregonlottery.org

The Oregon Lottery is run by the government of the U.S. state of Oregon. It is a member of the Multi-State Lottery Association (MUSL).

History[edit]

The Oregon Lottery was authorized by Oregon Ballot Measure 5 which was passed by voters in the 1984 general election. The measure amended the Oregon Constitution to allow a state lottery to be created. The Lottery began in April 1985;[1][2][3] eventually offering two types of games: scratch-it tickets, and a drawing game, Megabucks. The Lottery has introduced many games, while removing those that were not successful. In fiscal year 2006, the Lottery's sales reached $1 billion for the first time.

Games offered[edit]

The following games (including those retired) have been offered by the Lottery:[4]

  • In 1985, Megabucks, an in-house jackpot game, was introduced. In 1990, Megabucks became the first US lottery game to give players a choice of lump sum or annuity, should they win the top prize. It has become Oregon Lottery's flagship game, and is referred to in promotional advertising as 'Oregon's Game'.
  • In 1985, Scratch-it games were introduced.
  • In 1987, 'Breakopen' games were introduced; they were discontinued in 2009.
  • In 1988, as a charter member of MUSL, Oregon helped launch Lotto*America, which became Powerball in 1992. Four Powerball jackpots have been won in Oregon; a $38.4 million winner from Eugene in 1992; a $33.8 million winner from Beaverton in 1999; a family from Jacksonville won a then-record $340 million jackpot in 2005; and in March 2007 a man from Milwaukie, won a $182.7 million jackpot. Powerball's cash option began in 1997.
  • In 1989, the lottery added Sports Action, a parlay game that enabled betting on National Football League (NFL) games. In 1989, National Basketball Association (NBA) games were added (excluding games involving the Oregon-based Portland Trail Blazers); wagering on basketball was discontinued in 1990. In 2005, a bill was signed that ended football wagering at the conclusion of the 2006–2007 NFL season.
  • In 1991, a keno game began.
  • In 1992, the Lottery began video lottery games that included versions of draw poker. Video lottery games are a type of slot machine known as a Video Lottery Terminal.
  • In 2001, Win for Life, which awards its top prize as a lifetime weekly annuity, was introduced; unlike the other U.S. 'lifetime payout' draw games (Cash4Life and Lucky for Life; the latter available in Idaho beginning January 27, 2015) there is no cash option for Oregon WFL top-prize winners.
  • In 2005, 'line' games were added to video lottery terminals.
  • In 2006, the tic-tac-toe-style game, Lucky Lines, was launched by the Lottery.
  • In 2009, the first raffle drawing was conducted.
  • In 2010, Oregon added Mega Millions.
  • In 2011, Oregon's video lottery added Platinum Spin Series games with prizes over $600.

Oregon Lottery Video Poker

Profits[edit]

The allocation of lottery profits is determined by Oregon voters, who approve the broad categories that may receive Oregon Lottery funds.[5] Constitutional amendments have allowed using lottery funds for economic development (Oregon Ballot Measure 4 in 1984), public education (Oregon Ballot Measure 21 in May 1995) and natural resource programs (Oregon Ballot Measure 66 in 1998).[5] In 2016, Oregon voter approved Measure 96 that amended the state constitution to set aside 1.5 percent of Oregon's lottery funds for veterans programs. Measure 96 passed with 84 percent of voters in favoring the amendment.[6][7] The Oregon State Legislature and Governor appropriate the remainder of lottery funds within those categories during each legislative session.[5]

As of 2012, over $5 billion of lottery proceeds have gone to public education, $2 billion to economic development, $900 million to natural resources (including Oregon State Parks and watersheds), and over $50 million for problem gambling treatment programs.[5]

Oregon Video Lottery Cheats Winning

Problem gambling[edit]

Oregon dedicates about 1% of lottery proceeds for problem gambling prevention and treatment programs.[8]

Controversy[edit]

Like other U.S. lotteries (and gambling in general), the Oregon Lottery has drawn its share of controversy. Topics of debate include: the morality of legalized, government-sponsored gambling; the disproportionate economic impact that gambling (of all kinds) has on the poor; and, the suitability of lottery dollars as an alternative (to taxes) revenue source.[9] Several issues have been unique to Oregon, however.

Other controversies include the 1992 introduction of video poker machines, which may be installed in a wide number of locations, such as bars and other adults-only establishments. In 2005, the lottery added electronic slot machines.[10]

Sports Action[edit]

In 1989, the lottery added Sports Action, a parlay game allowing wagers on National Football League (NFL) games. The reaction from the sports world was negative. The NFL was highly displeased by this move, though legally powerless to stop the Oregon Lottery as the game took care to avoid infringing upon any NFL trademark (no NFL team names were used; NFL teams were identified by city). They even stated that Oregon would never have an NFL team as long as the betting continued.[11] The revenues were used to provide funding to intercollegiate athletics in the state.[11]

In 1990, National Basketball Association (NBA) games were added (excluding games involving the Portland Trail Blazers.) This prompted a lawsuit from the NBA; however, betting on basketball did not prove financially viable, and the lottery discontinued NBA betting the following year (settling the lawsuit with the NBA thereafter). Still, wagering on football proved highly successful for Oregon, bringing in over $2 million yearly in proceeds. The National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA), long opposed to sports betting, took the position that no post-season basketball games (which are played at neutral sites) would be held in Oregon so long as Sports Action was available;[11] the NBA criticized Oregon even after its wagering on NBA games was discontinued.

Many proponents of the lottery rebuffed such criticism, noting that the Oregon Lottery, with a maximum wager of $20, was 'small potatoes' compared to the Las Vegas sports book and the various illegal sports books throughout the country. Further, it had been pointed out that the overwhelming popularity of the NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Championship is driven by office pools and other forms of gambling.

In 1997, a bill was introduced to eliminate the lottery game,[11] but was not enacted into law. In 2005, House Bill 3466 was passed by the Oregon State Legislature and signed into law by Governor Ted Kulongoski; this bill outlawed Sports Action game as of the conclusion of the 2006–2007 NFL season.[12] As a result, the Rose Garden arena was awarded regional games in the 2009 NCAA men's basketball tournament.[13]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^'Oregon Lottery starts today'. Eugene Register-Guard. (Oregon). April 25, 1985. p. 1A.
  2. ^Stahlberg, Mike (April 27, 1985). 'Lottery on a roll, selling 3 million tickets'. Eugene Register-Guard. (Oregon). p. 1B.
  3. ^Stahlberg, Mike (May 3, 1985). '6,810,000 lottery tickets purchased during week 1'. Eugene Register-Guard. (Oregon). p. 11B.
  4. ^Oregon Lottery official site
  5. ^ abcdHow Lottery Funds Are Allocated
  6. ^'Oregon Portion of Lottery Proceeds for Support of Veterans, Measure 96 (2016)', Ballotpedia, Middleton, Wisconsin, accessed 14 January 2018.
  7. ^'Huge betrayal: Kate Brown angers veterans with cuts despite Measure 96', Oregonian, Portland, Oregon, 9 December 2016.
  8. ^Lottery FAQs: Problem Gambling
  9. ^Gambling and problem gambling in Oregon
  10. ^Video slots installed by Oregon Lottery
  11. ^ abcd'Senator wants Sports Action abolished'. The Register-Guard. Eugene, Ore. wire reports. April 16, 1997. pp. 3C. Retrieved May 10, 2010.
  12. ^Association of Oregon Faculties 2005 Oregon Legislative ReportArchived May 12, 2006, at the Wayback Machine
  13. ^March Madness coming to Portland in 2009
  • 'Oregon State Lottery – Administrative Overview'. Oregon Blue Book (Online). Salem, Oregon: Oregon Secretary of State. 2000. Retrieved July 19, 2012.

External links[edit]

Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Oregon_Lottery&oldid=1001452542'




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