How to win and make money on a 2p slot machine
84-year-old New Jersey woman won $10 million on a slot machine
An 84-year-old New Jersey woman won $10 million on a slot machine in an Atlantic City casino in what the operator said on Thursday was the largest prize in the city’s gambling history.
Great-grandmother Josephine Crawford of nearby Galloway Township was playing the nickel slots in Harrah’s casino in the game where each play costs 5 cents, or a nickel.
When she was down to her last $5 credit, the Megabucks machine suddenly flashed the news she had won the jackpot of $10,010,113.48, casino spokesman Christopher Jonic said.
“There were a whole lot of bells and whistles, and she had no idea really what had happened,” Jonic said.
The win on Tuesday evening was confirmed by Harrah’s staff and by International Gaming Technology, the owner of the machine, and Crawford was presented with a check, Jonic said.
She has the option of taking the money as a lump sum of around $5.5 million after taxes, or accepting a 25-year annuity.
“Somehow, I`ll spend it. I`m just happy I won it, for my family, although they don’t need it,” Crawford told the Philadelphia Inquirer.
The jackpot was accumulated by Megabucks, which operates hundreds of slots in Atlantic City’s 12 casinos, and takes a small portion of every play. The jackpot had not been won for about three years.
Crawford’s win beats the previous Atlantic City record of $8.54 million in August 1994. She had been a customer at the casino since 1980.
Slot machines burglary in California
Two men were caught feeding bogus $100 into the slot machines at the Sho-Ka-Wah Casino in California. Jack Daniels Ewing, 27, and Mikael Inturbe, 27, were arrested on charges of conspiracy, counterfeiting and burglary after a four-month investigation.The two men would bleach one dollar bills then use a home printer to reprint $100 bills onto the paper. The suspects would then take the counterfeit bills to the casino and feed them into the bill receptors, then immediately cash out and leave the casino. On a few occasions they played the machines winning up to $4,000. It is estimated that the pair bilked at least 20 casinos in Northern California and Nevada out of more than $100,000.
According to FBI statistics, there are approximately 100,000 forgery and counterfeiting charges filed in the United States annually.

