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Wife’s Lotto secret costs years of grief
I thought it was men who couldn’t keep a secret. This wife from hell should have kept her mouth shut. Update
[q
url="http://www.miamiherald.com/news/miami_dade/story/274123.html"]A
Miami-Dade judge on Thursday will hear the tale of a South Florida
woman, her ex-husband and a barroom opportunist mired in a legal battle
over a $28.5 million lottery jackpot.
Circuit Judge David Miller is expected to rule whether to seal the
1997 settlement agreement between Bernice Heslop and her ex-husband,
Ernest Moore Jr.
Heslop, 62, won the Florida Lotto in 1995, when she and Moore had
been separated for five years. She quickly divorced him and then
quietly claimed the money.
Moore was clueless about his ex-wife's riches for two years, until
another man, Marvel Rodriguez, told him about what Heslop had done.
In exchange, Moore agreed to give Rodriguez 35 percent of whatever money Moore recovered from his ex-wife.
But now Rodriguez is suing Moore, claiming Moore owes him 35 percent
of the original $300,000 windfall, plus 35 percent of the income taxes
Heslop paid on Moore's behalf, with interest.
Lawyers on both sides will argue at 8:30 a.m. Thursday about whether
to keep the 1997 settlement between Moore and Heslop public or to seal
it.[/q]
When Bernice Heslop opened the paper that Sunday in 1995 and saw the six Lotto numbers, her first thought must have been: ”I can’t believe it. I’m RICH!” And then, the evidence suggests, another thought formed, something like: “Hmmmm . . . no need to tell the hubby about this.””This case has money, greed and betrayal,” said attorney Richard Lara, whose law firm is representing the third party, the barroom bystander with rabbit ears. “All the elements of a soap opera.”
Instead of claiming her win right away, Heslop tucked the ticket away in a safe-deposit box and called her lawyer. She wanted a divorce, fast.
The divorce was finalized on Feb. 1, 1996. The next day, Heslop flew to Tallahassee and quietly claimed the prize for her and her kids. She was in and out of the lottery headquarters in minutes — no posing for photographs, no press interviews.
Heslop would be paid $1,426,000 a year for 20 years. Her ex husband Ernest Moore Jr. had no idea what was happening.
Moore agreed to the terms of the divorce — no child support or alimony payments — and the two went their separate ways.
Within weeks, Moore remarried a woman nicknamed Toots. And for the next two years, Moore had no idea his ex-wife had become a millionaire.
”Maybe he was living under a rock,” Baldwin said.
That’s where Rodriguez came in.
As the story goes in court files and published reports, Rodriguez was sitting in a bar one day in 1997. He overheard someone talking about a Miami-Dade woman who tricked her husband out of her lottery money by divorcing him before he found out.
Rodriguez — a part-time bouncer and martial-arts instructor — did some homework, realized the person was talking about Heslop and set out to find her ex-husband.
When Rodriguez caught up with Moore, he already had a crude contract drawn up, which states: “I, Marvel Rodriguez, received some information concerning money owed to Mr. Earnest [sic] Moore.”
Rodriguez demanded 35 percent of any money Moore recovered.
Moore agreed to those terms in a notarized contract.
In 1997, Moore sued his ex-wife, and in 2000 they settled out of court.
In the settlement, Moore received a lump-sum payment of $300,000, plus $57,000 a year for 15 years. His ex-wife was also required to pay any taxes.
Heslop has paid $57,000 annually to Moore, who in turn has paid Rodriguez his cut: $19,950.
The settlement terms were kept confidential, but Rodriguez’s attorney said his client always suspected he wasn’t getting his share. In August, a judge ordered Moore’s attorney to disclose the settlement agreement to Rodriguez.
Now Rodriguez says Moore owes him 35 percent of the original $300,000 windfall — about $175,000 including interest — plus 35 percent of the income taxes Heslop paid on Moore’s behalf.
Moore’s attorney, Alphonso Peets, also a defendant in the suit, declined to comment.
Heslop, 62, a Jamaican-born former nurse’s aide, lives in a gated Pembroke Pines development in a two-story lakeside home valued at $670,000.
Her ex-husband, Moore, 55, rents an apartment in South Miami-Dade, near the noisy Florida’s Turnpike and South Dixie Highway.
Rodriguez, 51, owns a place in North Miami-Dade with cracked windows and chipped paint near Dolphin Stadium.
Source: MH




Most RecentMost Recommended Comments (3)
at 04:32 on October 17th, 2007
mpress, good stuff indeed! Greed, greed, greed--and stupidity on many parts. BTW, is Lara's law firm out of Tampa or Miami? The name sounds so familiar to me. Also, I have wanted to email you to thank you for something, but I can't find a way to do that.
at 05:24 on October 17th, 2007
laras firm is from Miami. Thanks pep
at 14:40 on October 17th, 2007
Hi mpress--I'm wondering if there's a more "newsy" way you could intro this story; as it stands, your intro is fine if you want to add the tag "Opinions" to your tags. That way you'll get around the stickiness of passing judgment on the wife in your intro.
You're more than welcome to express your opinion, should your story be marked as such. Otherwise, I'd recommend crafting an intro that reflects the newsworthiness of the situation as opposed to your opinion abou the parties involved.
Let me know if you have any questions.