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Oregon man won cash for life in 2012 — then Publishers Clearing House went bankrupt. Now he may lose his home

Old Swessstakes TV Advertising once promised, “Only the cleaning house of publishers can make you very rich, very fast!”

However, as some unlucky winners discovered this year, the opposite is true: Publishers can quickly eliminate your reserves.

This was the 61 -year -old Oregon man John Wyllie, who won $ 5,000 a week for a lifetime of Pch award patrol in 2012.

According to NBC member KGW8 [1]Wyllie received annual checks for $ 260,000 in January. He allowed him to retire money and buy a six -acre house in Scenic Bellingham, Washington. However, this year, the controls suddenly stopped. A few months later, Wyllie learned the reason: Pch applied for bankruptcy without warning it or other winners.

Wyllie told the KGW8 that events “make it feel like a nightmare ,, worsened than the fact that it did not work for more than ten years and that it could not find a job now. As the bills accumulated, he sold big tickets such as jet ski and trailer, but still waiting to lose his house.

For anyone who has ever dreamed about a victory that changes life, Wyllie’s story is a reminder that easy money is not always forever. A reality control that can hit everyone who confuses themselves to balance the loss.

KGW8 reported that Wyllie is one of the at least 10 winners.

Because Arb Interactive, who paid $ 7.1 million to buy Pch, announced that he will honor the awards won only after his seizure in July. Still waiting for the past winners to pay, Wall Street Journal [2] “They will have to pay from the bankruptcy land”.

Andrea Coles-Bjerre, a professor of law at the University of Oregon, said that it is not likely to collect their earnings to KGW8. It will be considered as simply competing for non -existent money.

Pch’s collapse watched after a sharp pandemik [3] to reject. The company increased a little more than $ 180 million last year, an annual income of approximately $ 900 million. Analysts accuse competition with online giants such as Amazon together with the Federal Trade Commission of $ 18 million. [4] In April, for deceptive practices that deceive people to think that they have to buy products to improve their ratio ratios. The company applied for the same month bankruptcy.

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