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He had a golden ticket -- and gave it away
A Brookline man bought his family lottery tickets for Christmas. His in-laws hit the $1 million jackpot. And he has no regrets.
Thursday, January 03, 2008
Brookline pharmacist Fred DePasquale.

Fred DePasquale, a Brookline pharmacist, put the old axiom about it being better to give than to receive, to the ultimate Christmas test.

He bought a selection of tickets in the $1 million lottery and handed them out to family.

Yesterday, the 38-year-old pharmacist who essentially gave away $1 million to in-laws for Christmas, was having no second-thoughts. He was delighted to give the winning ticket. The in-laws, whom he won't name for the time being, were delighted to get the winning ticket.

"I can't say that I play that often," said Mr. DePasquale. "I'm just not a lottery player. Not a gambler. But for a raffle like this you buy them and give them away."

For his troubles, Mr. DePasquale at least gets a $5,000 bonus for selling a $1 million winner, said Lottery Commission spokeswoman Elizabeth Brassell.

Mr. DePasquale's Brookline pharmacy, The Medicine Shoppe, was one of three area outlets that accounted for three of the five $1 million tickets sold in the $20-a-ticket lottery. It's the fourth drawing of its kind, with a limited number of tickets -- 625,000 -- sold.

"They're actually the best odds the lottery offers," said Mr. DePasquale. The chances of winning the $1 million are 1-in-125,000 according to the Pennsylvania Lottery Commission. Those are the same odds for winning one of the five $100,000 prizes in the same drawing, so you could say that Mr. DePasquale bought just the right ticket.

Those odds paid off for customers at two other area stores: the Greeting Gallery, in Hampton, and InfoPlace, in Robinson.

The other two winners were sold in Scranton and Hanover.

While he's not giving up the names just now, Mr. DePasquale was willing to say this much about the winners:

They are in-laws on his wife's side.

He's godfather to their daughter.

They have another baby on the way.

In short order they expect not to have a mortgage on their South Hills home.

"They're thrilled. They're jumping out of their skin," said Mr. DePasquale.

And no, for the cynics out there, he's not wishing he'd kept the ticket for himself.

"All it was to me was a $20 ticket in my hand," he said. "That's like giving a shirt for Christmas and asking them if you could wear it New Year's Eve."

Dennis B. Roddy can be reached at slevin@post-gazette.com or 412-263-1965.
First published on January 3, 2008 at 12:00 am
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