It took only 7 seconds in this lottery game for winner to lose his $27 Million Jackpot

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Joel Ifergan got this important deadline wrong and missed out on millions in his Canadian lottery game   Photo: CTV News

It took only 7 seconds for Montreal lottery player Joel Ifergan to lose the $27 million jackpot on his ticket.

He had the correct numbers in the old Loto-Quebec Super 7* jackpot, and his ticket was also correct in every detail.

Except one... He bought it too late. In fact, 7 seconds too late.

When Joel Ifergan (photo, right) approached the store owner back in 2008, he asked how much longer he had for the cut-off time for the week's game.

The owner told him that there was about one minute to go. Based on that, Joel bought three tickets.

His winning combination was on the last ticket that popped out... 7 seconds after the 9pm deadline.

And unfortunately, he lost.

He took the matter to court, but the lottery organization has refused to settle the case and he lost.

Ifergan, an accountant by trade, has always maintained that he should have won the May 23 draw because his ticket request was entered into the system at 8:59.47.

Ifergan shows copies of his tickets with the winning numbers highlighted   Photo: CTV News

Each ticket then took ten seconds to process, meaning the second ticket was printed seven seconds after the deadline.

"The ticket requests are entered simultaneously, but not processed simultaneously," Ifergan explained. "Loto-Québec doesn’t tell you that in their publicity."

The covenience store in Quebec where Joel Ifergan bought his tickets   Photo: CTV News

Every court, including the country’s top one, has rejected that argument.

Every other lottery board in Canada has a 'draw-break' where they shut down the system briefly at 9pm to prevent such issues, he added.

There is no further recourse for Ifergan, who had seen his claim rejected by the Quebec Superior Court in November 2012 and the Quebec Court of Appeal in 2014.

Convenience store owner Mehernosh Iranpur   Photo: CTV News

Mr Ifergan has lost his court bid to appeal over a decision denying him half of the $27 million dollar prize. The Supreme Court of Canada refused today (Thursday 29 January 2015) to accept Joel Ifergan’s appeal.

Mr Ifergan blamed the delay on Loto-Quebec’s central computer system and sued the province’s lottery regulator for half of the jackpot because there was another winning ticket.

Ifergan said the court case has cost him more than $100,000.

Joel Ifergan talks about his experience to CTV News   Photo: CTV News

A very expensive few seconds it seems. Still, the experience hasn't stopped him from buying lottery tickets — as he said, you never know when you'll get lucky.

Our advice from this story?

TIP: Buy your tickets well before the deadline.

Most lottery organizations have the cut-off or deadline time for buying tickets on their "How To Play" or FAQ website pages.

Watch as the story unfolds for Joel Ifergan   Video: YouTube

But few lottery sites will say what happens to your tickets after that time. The Maryland Lottery FAQ does state this for its Mega Millions game, but it is somewhat vague:

"Sales for Mega Millions tickets cut off approximately 15 minutes prior to the Mega Millions drawing. Sales for the next drawing start immediately following the cut-off."

The concern is the "approximately" in the statement. It offers too much flexibility for the organization to refuse your winning ticket on that draw.

So the moral is to get your tickets processed well BEFORE time.

*The Super 7 Lotto was replaced in 2009 by Canada's Lotto Max.


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