NYS Gaming Commission
September 09, 2016
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Two Winning Cash4Life Tickets Worth $1,000 A Week For Life Sold in New YorkTickets sold in Commack and Brooklyn |
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The New York Lottery today announced two winning second prize tickets for the September 8, 2016 Cash4Life drawing were sold in New York. The second prize ticket is worth $1,000 a week for life, which is valued at $1,000,000. One winning ticket was sold at the 7-Eleven at 6230 Jericho Turnpike in Commack. Another second prize ticket, also worth $1,000,000, was sold at H & K Mart at 2001 Cropsy Avenue in Brooklyn.
The winning numbers for the September 8 Cash4Life drawing were 03-07-22-37-60 and Cash Ball 02. Cash4Life is the only New York Lottery draw game that offers two “for life” prizes. The top prize is $1,000 a day for life, and the second prize is $1,000 a week for life. A Cash4Life ticket cost $2 and gives players the chance to dream about how they would ‘upgrade’ their life by winning a prize that continues to pay out for a lifetime. Cash4Life drawings are held on Mondays and Thursdays. The Lottery encourages everyone who bought a New York Lottery draw game ticket, to check their tickets again, as they could be holding a winner. Tickets expire one year after the game’s drawing. The winners may claim the tickets at any one of the Lottery’s Customer Service Centers statewide, including the Long Island office at 45 South Service Road, Plainview, NY 11803 or at the New York City office at New York Lottery Office at 15 Beaver Street, New York, New York 10004. To learn more about how to redeem a prize, click here. About the New York Lottery The New York Lottery continues to be North America’s largest and most profitable Lottery, contributing $3.30 billion in fiscal year 2015-2016 to help support education in New York State. The Lottery’s contribution represents 14 percent of total state education aid to local school districts.
New York Lottery revenue is distributed to local school districts by the same statutory formula used to distribute other state aid to education. It takes into account both a school district’s size and its income level; larger, lower-income school districts receive proportionately larger shares of Lottery school funding. |
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