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She Won $71.5 Million, Then a Rule Change Froze Her Lottery Payout
An 83-year-old Texas retiree using the pseudonym Jane Doe hit a $71.5 million Lotto Texas jackpot on Feb. 17, 2025, after buying her ticket through the Jackpocket app. Seven days later, the Texas Lottery Commission banned third-party courier services, and her payout has been frozen amid an investigation by the Texas Rangers. Doe sued the commission on May 19, 2025, and the winnings remain unpaid.
An 83-year-old Texas retiree hit the Lotto Texas jackpot on 2/17/2025, only to watch her windfall get stuck in bureaucratic quicksand. She bought in through Jackpocket, the ticket courier app now owned by DraftKings, and her numbers matched. A week later, the Texas Lottery Commission moved to ban third-party courier services, then treated the shift as if it had always been the rule. Now her $71.5 million sits in limbo as the Texas Rangers investigate and a lawsuit grinds on.
An unexpected windfall, bought like any other mobile order
Every so often, tech’s quiet convenience collides with the hard edges of regulation. That’s what happened in Texas after a retiree used a lottery app the same way millions of Americans use delivery and ride-hailing tools. A jackpot hit, the state validated the ticket, and then the rules shifted. Now a payout that should have been routine has turned into a test of trust.
According to the lawsuit timeline, an 83-year-old Texas retiree identified as Jane Doe won the $71.5 million Lotto Texas jackpot after buying tickets through Jackpocket. The winning numbers hit on February 17, 2025, and what looked like a life-changing claim moved forward: the ticket was later presented to the state and validated without any initial red flags.
A rule change lands, and the jackpot freezes
Seven days after the draw, the Texas Lottery Commission announced a ban on third-party courier-style lottery services, including the kind of app workflow Jackpocket uses. On paper, the policy was framed as immediate going forward. In practice, per the disclosure around the dispute, it effectively froze Jane Doe’s claim and pushed the case into an enforcement posture.
The situation got even thornier because the physical ticket wasn’t digital at all. It was purchased at a licensed retailer in Austin, Winners Corner, by a Jackpocket runner on her behalf. That store is owned by DraftKings, which acquired Jackpocket, and regulators pointed to that relationship as a potential integrity concern. Jane’s argument is simpler: if it was allowed when she bought it, the state can’t move the goalposts after her numbers already won.
From customer service problem to courtroom fight
By May 19, 2025, Jane Doe filed suit against the Texas Lottery Commission, arguing that retroactively applying a new rule undermines the reliability of a state-run game. The commission, meanwhile, has said the claim is under review and has been investigated by the Texas Rangers, a detail that signals the state is treating the matter as more than a paperwork dispute.
Inside the agency, the controversy also triggered leadership turbulence. The commission’s executive director resigned in April and an interim director stepped in, according to reporting around the episode. Lottery consultant Matt Osgood warned that refusing to pay a validated winner risks lasting damage to consumer confidence, the one asset a regulated lottery can’t afford to squander.
What this says about apps that touch regulated markets
For now, the $71.5 million remains unpaid, and neither the commission nor DraftKings has commented publicly on the specific case. The broader takeaway is familiar across fintech and crypto: when a product sits between consumers and a regulated system, the “plumbing” matters as much as the user experience.
Jackpocket’s model looks like convenience, but regulators see incentives, ownership ties, and edge cases. And if a state can validate a ticket and still end up in court, what does “verified” really mean to the average customer?