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She thought her lottery ticket was a loser and tossed it. The store owner saw she won $1 million and tracked her down.

Family finds, returns winning lottery ticket
Million-dollar lottery ticket returned to winner who mistakenly discarded it 02:01

A Massachusetts woman who accidentally tossed out a $1 million lottery ticket eventually collected her winnings thanks to the kindness and honesty of the owners of the convenience store where she bought it. Lea Rose Fiega bought the $30 Diamond Millions scratch-off ticket in March at the Lucky Stop convenience store in Southwick near where she works.

"I was in a hurry, on lunch break, and just scratched it real quick, and looked at it, and it didn't look like a winner, so I handed it over to them to throw away," she said Monday.

The ticket lay behind the counter for 10 days.

"One evening, I was going through the tickets from the trash and found out that she didn't scratch the number," Abhi Shah, the son of the store's owners, told WWLP-TV. "I scratched the number and it was $1 million underneath the ticket."

Fiega is a regular customer, so the family knew immediately who had discarded it.

Shah told CBS station WBZ-TV he initially wanted to buy a Tesla with the winnings, but the family decided to talk it over first, and they included Shah's grandparents in India in the conversation.

"My grandmother said, 'Let's not keep the ticket. It's not right. Just give it back to them. If it's in your luck, you will get it anyhow,'" Shah told the station.

Lea Rose Fiega displays a winning lottery ticket March 30, 2021, at Massachusetts Lottery Commission headquarters in Boston.
Lea Rose Fiega displays her winning lottery ticket March 30, 2021. Massachusetts Lottery Commission Photo via AP

Shah went to see Fiega at work.

"He came to my office and said, 'My mom and dad would like to see you,'" she said. "I said, 'I'm working,' and he said, 'No you have to come over.' So I went over there and that's when they told me. I was in total disbelief. I cried, I hugged them."

Fiega said overcoming a near-fatal bout with COVID-19 in January was like "winning the lottery," so she feels doubly fortunate.

"I mean, who does that? They're great people. I am beyond blessed," she said.

The store gets a $10,000 bonus from the state lottery commission for selling the winning ticket. Fiega said she gave the family an additional reward. She's saving the rest for retirement.

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