Man 'Conspired With Lottery Employee To Fake His Way To £2.5m Jackpot'

The genuine winning ticket, which was bought in Worcester, has never been found.
Edward Putman is accused of fraud
Edward Putman is accused of fraud
PA

An alleged conman conspired with a Camelot employee to fake his way to a multimillion-pound National Lottery win more than a decade ago, a court has heard.

Edward Putman, 54, is accused of fraud by false representation after allegedly claiming an outstanding jackpot of £2.5 million with a fake ticket in 2009.

He is accused of conspiring with friend Giles Knibbs – who worked in the securities department at Camelot between 2004 and 2010 – to submit a damaged fake ticket to take the top prize in September 2009, just before the 180-day limit to claim prizes was due to expire.

The trial at St Albans Crown Court was told Knibbs did not feel he had received his fair share of the jackpot, which was paid out to Putman, and they had a bitter argument.

Knibbs killed himself later that year, the court was told, having been arrested for burglary, blackmail and criminal damage.

The genuine winning ticket, which was bought in Worcester, has never been found.

Prosecutor James Keeley told the jury: “The prosecution ask you to keep your eye on the ball, in that the clear picture that comes out from what Mr Knibbs told his friends is that a fraud took place, and both he and the defendant were involved in it.”

Keeley said the ticket submitted by the defendant was badly damaged, but on 8 September 2009, Camelot decided he was the genuine winner and paid out.

The prosecutor said: “They had been conned.”

Putman, of Station Road, Kings Langley, Hertfordshire, denies fraud by false representation.

The trial is listed to last for two weeks.

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