Tag Archives: winning ticket

Video captures Colin Munro battering a shop assistant in Hamilton armed robbery

Shocking moment the son of a lottery millionaire battered a shop assistant over the head with a hammer during terrifying armed robbery This is the shocking moment the son of a lottery millionaire battered a shop assistant with a hammer during a terrifying armed robbery. Colin Munro attacked staff at Hillhouse grocery store in Hamilton, Lanarkshire, last September, storming in while dressed in a hoodie and scarf and wielding a hammer.

Video captures Colin Munro battering a shop assistant in Hamilton armed robbery

Shocking moment the son of a lottery millionaire battered a shop assistant over the head with a hammer during terrifying armed robbery This is the shocking moment the son of a lottery millionaire battered a shop assistant with a hammer during a terrifying armed robbery. Colin Munro attacked staff at Hillhouse grocery store in Hamilton, Lanarkshire, last September, storming in while dressed in a hoodie and scarf and wielding a hammer.

Lotto winner's son jailed for violent robbery bid

Munro failed in an attempt to get his hands on takings at the Hillhouse grocery store in Hamilton, South Lanarkshire last September – a decade after his now late mother Catherine won A 3.5 million on the lottery. The 32 year-old appeared at the High Court in Paisley after he earlier pled guilty to a charge of assault with intent to rob.

Your chances of becoming poor may be higher than you think

The odds of striking it rich by playing the Powerball are 1 in 292 million – worse than the odds of being struck by lightning – yet that doesn’t stop us from daydreaming about being flooded with wealth and sailing off to Bali. The opposite, however, doesn’t appear to be true: Most of us spend relatively little time imagining what it would be like to be plunged into poverty, even though the odds of that happening are far, far greater.

Your chances of becoming poor may be higher than you think

The odds of striking it rich by playing the Powerball are 1 in 292 million – worse than the odds of being struck by lightning – yet that doesn’t stop us from daydreaming about being flooded with wealth and sailing off to Bali. The opposite, however, doesn’t appear to be true: Most of us spend relatively little time imagining what it would be like to be plunged into poverty, even though the odds of that happening are far, far greater.