15-18C
Mostly cloudy

Find a...

Date Job Car Home







  • NEWS
  • Martin wades into abortion debate

    As the Dáil committee hearings continue on the abortion bill, Archbishop of Dublin Diarmuid Martin has waded into the debate saying it is important that Christian believers "be, and seen to be, on the side of life, especially when life is most vulnerable".

  • Payment cuts see families pay rent shortfall

    Limits on rent supplement payments set by the Government are forcing thousands of families to make undeclared top-up payments to landlords to secure places to live.

  • WORLD
  • Anger as North Korea launches another missile

    North Korea fired a short-range missile from its east coast, a day after launching three more of these missiles, a South Korean news agency said.

  • How Star Trek predicted the future

    WHEN Star Trek creator Gene Roddenberry first dreamed up the concept of a television show based in the unexplored universe of Outer Space in 1964, the world was a very different place.

  • BUSINESS
  • Warnings over future of eurozone

    The eurozone is heading towards a break up unless there are moves towards much closer political and fiscal union, according to chief economist with State Street Global Advisers, Chris Probyn.

  • Bruton defends corporate tax rate

    Ireland will be able to maintain its current corporation tax code in the face of international pressure to prevent multinational corporations avoid paying their fare share of tax, Minister for Jobs, Enterprise and Innovation, Richard Bruton said yesterday.

  • SPORT
  • Mayo’s statement of intent

    Galway 0-11 Mayo 4-16 Five minutes to go in Salthill yesterday and James Horan was still cajoling his men to sew it into Galway.

  • Wilkinson inspires Toulon to glory

    ASM Clermont Auvergne 15 Toulon 16 Not for the first time this season, a matchday performance and the result have made a mockery of the statistics.

  • LIFESTYLE
  • What Lenny Abrahamson did next

    LENNY Abrahamson has directed three feature films: Adam & Paul, Garage and What Richard Did.

  • Why do women love to dress up?

    Trying on clothes, said Ewart, produced "sensations which bring deep peace and perfect contentment" to the female mind.






Shop keeper tried to claim lottery winner’s £1m jackpot for himself

A shop worker has admitted attempting to falsely claim a £1m (€1.2m) lottery prize.

Farrakh Nizzar told great-grandmother Maureen Holt, 77, she had won nothing when he scanned her EuroMillions ticket at a shop in Oldham, Greater Manchester.

He told her he would throw the ticket in the bin for her but later phoned a lottery hotline to say it was he who had bought the jackpot ticket.

Nizzar’s con unravelled when it was discovered that the ticket had been purchased at a Tesco Extra store in the town, rather than at the Best One Convenience Store in Watersheddings St.

Camelot, the operator of the National Lottery, was able to trace Mrs Holt because she had used her Tesco Clubcard when she bought the ticket, and the store had her contact details. CCTV footage also confirmed she had bought the ticket.

Mrs Holt and husband Fred, 80, were on holiday when the EuroMillions UK Millionaire Raffle draw which matched their numbers was conducted in June.

Nizzar, 20, pleaded guilty to fraud by false representation at Oldham Magistrates’ Court. The defendant, of Woodlands Rd, Crumpsall, Manchester, has been remanded in custody ahead of his sentencing hearing at Manchester Minshull St Crown Court on Aug 20.

When Nizzar, nicknamed Lucky, realised his plot had been discovered he told friends he was moving back to his native Pakistan, but he was caught before he left the country when his car activated a police number plate recognition system.

Police were made aware last month of allegations surrounding the attempt to claim a prize from Camelot, a spokesman for Greater Manchester Police said.

Det Insp Danny Inglis said: “We have worked very closely with Camelot throughout this investigation and will continue to do so during the remainder of the judicial process.”

The mother-of-seven, whose husband Fred still works for a security firm, said: “I just can’t believe he did this, but at least he got caught.

“This money will mean my husband can finally give upwork and we can enjoy our retirement.”

Mr Holt said: “I’ve been going to that shop for years — Lucky always saved the paper for me.

“He was a great character. I was really terribly shocked when I found out what happened. It was unbelievable. We feel let down.” Home

More from the Irish Examiner