FBI Missed Texas Judges Role In Rigged Lottery Jackpot Scheme [View all]
Investigators were suspicious in 2006 when they heard that a rural Texas judge was trying to exchange $450,000 in consecutively marked bills.
But Tommy Tipton, a Fayette County magistrate, told the FBI that his actions were innocent, if odd: He won the Colorado lottery but couldnt tell his wife because gambling was against their Christian faith. The FBI accepted the story and dropped its inquiry of Tipton, who soon bought a new truck and more property around the town of Flatonia, 110 miles west of Houston.
A decade later, the inquiry stands out as a missed chance to stop a jackpot rigging scandal that would corrupt the $70 billion lottery industry for years while enriching a tiny group of insiders. The FBI didnt uncover one fact that its informant knew but didnt see as significant: that Tiptons brother, Eddie Tipton, was a lottery industry employee. In fact, hed built the machine that picked the winning combination for the Colorado Lotto game.
Eddie Tipton, 54, admitted in a plea agreement with multiple states this month that he long profited off his position at the association, which helps run dozens of lotteries. Investigators say he designed and installed code that allowed him to predict winning numbers drawn every May 27, Nov. 23, and Dec. 29 of non-leap years. He conspired with his younger brother, friend Robert Rhodes and others to buy and claim winning tickets in five states between 2005 and 2011.
The brothers have agreed to tell investigators the full extent of their involvement in jackpot-fixing under the deal, which requires they pay back $3 million. Prosecutors will seek 25 years in an Iowa prison for Eddie and 75 days in a Texas jail for Tommy, who worked as a sheriffs deputy before being elected Justice of the Peace in 2002, presiding over traffic enforcement, misdemeanors and some civil disputes.
The scandal has roiled state lotteries, which have vowed to tighten their security and face lawsuits from players claiming they were cheated.
The $4.5 million Colorado jackpot in late 2005 is the first prize suspected of being fixed.
At: http://dfw.cbslocal.com/2017/06/19/fb-texas-judge-rigged-lottery-jackpot/