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gmb45
28th June, 2009, 05:31 AM
Four years ago we won ?9m..but the money destroyed us
Husband tells how hitting the jackpot left him divorced, alcoholic & heartbroken

A GOOD job, close friends and loving wife . . . Keith Gough felt he was the richest man in the world - then he RUINED it all by winning ?9 million on the Lottery.

The life-changing win four years ago became a recipe for disaster when baker Keith ended up blowing nearly ALL his dough.

Like most of us would, he thought scooping the incredible jackpot meant happiness for him and his family for the rest of their lives.

Instead Keith, 58, told last night how the fortune lost him his wife of 25 years and his friends - leaving him with only the comfort of the booze bottle to turn to.

In an exclusive interview, alcoholic Keith revealed that he now spends his time alone, and rues the day he ever bought the winning ticket.

He said: "My life WAS brilliant. But the Lottery has ruined everything. What's the point of having money when it sends you to bed crying?"

"Now when I see someone going in to a newsagent I advise them NOT to buy a lottery ticket."

Down-on-his-luck Keith also revealed how the windfall made him a TARGET for conmen, one of whom fleeced him out of ?700,000.

On top of that, he splashed out on posh homes, flash motors, racehorses . . . and a CALL GIRL.

Unshaven Keith, who sleeps in the spare room of his nephew's small semi, now spends most of his time indoors, only venturing outside for long, lonely walks in the Shropshire countryside. He admits it's a far cry from the simple life he once shared with devoted wife Louise, also 58.

Remembering how the pair were looking forward to retirement, Keith sighed: "If I could crawl back on broken glass to where I was, I would. The Lottery has ruined our lives.

"My life was brilliant and I was very much in love with Louise."

Keith earned his living in a bakery and Louise worked in a solicitors' office. They enjoyed a comfortable existence in a ?160,000 semi in Bridgnorth, Shropshire.

"And I had plenty of time for my passion, fly fishing," he added.

Then in June 2005 the couple got all six numbers on a National Lottery lucky dip ticket. It wasn't long before the pair, who have a 14-year-old son, started spending - and their first big buy was a ?500,000 house down the road.

Keith tried to maintain a normal life by keeping his job at the bakery but jealousy among his colleagues forced him to quit.

He recalled: "Without routine in my life I started to spend, spend, spend . . . and because I had the spare cash in my pocket."

After shelling out hundreds of thousands of pounds on RACEHORSES, he bought a BMW for ?60,000. He bought a sprawling ?1MILLION HOUSE in Cheshire, hired a GARDENER (?15,000) and CHAUFFEUR (?25,000).

He also spent ?35,000 on an EXECUTIVE BOX at his beloved footie team Aston Villa.

His flash behaviour lost him friends but worst of all he started drifting from his wife, mainly because he had sceretly begun drinking alone.

The boozing reached dangerous levels. He would spend ?45 a day - ?315 a week - on bottles of gin, whisky and brandy. He said: "I was drinking every day and it was taking its toll on me and my marriage."

Nearly two years after their win, the couple split. Keith's boozing and spending spiralled even more out of control and he reached his lowest ebb.

He says: "In the end I was just bored. Before the win all I would drink was some wine with a meal - but now I was making myself ill. I ended up in the Priory in Birmingham."

By the time his divorce from Louise was finalised, Keith had wasted a large chunk of his fortune but walked away with ?1.5 million. Louise still had several millions.

Instead of turning his life around, he plunged deeper into the mire.

While in rehab, he was visited by trickster James Prince, a bankrupt who deliberately targeted him for his money.

Vulnerable Keith, who was by now gambling heavily as well, was first of all persuaded by Prince to check himself out of the clinic and then to write big cheques for business ventures.

Prince - who also introduced Keith to a call girl he squandered eben more of his winnings on - conned a total of ?700,000 from Keith. The trickster was later caught and sentenced to three years in jail for fraud.

From spending thousands of pounds a day, Keith's biggest expense now is the weekly grocery shop. But he eats alone after losing all his friends.

Keith explains: "I used to be popular but I've driven away all my friends. I don't trust anyone anymore.

"Money doesn't matter to me. I thought the lotto win was going to be the answer to my dreams. Now those dreams have turned to dust."

Mr Pumpy
28th June, 2009, 09:36 AM
In answer to your question Gb, no ofcoarse it doesnt. All money buys you is possessions.

That guy seems to have gone a bit over the top with his spending.

Lainie
28th June, 2009, 04:33 PM
money makes me very happy. all donations greatly received

:vroam:

caveman_nige
28th June, 2009, 06:35 PM
some people can handle it and some can't...... he ~~~~ed up his life and and got himself conned... i can feel sorry for him but he knows as well as anybody that he could have done it differently,,, he can blame it on whatever he likes but when he eventually wakes up and blames himself then then he can move on...

lolo500
28th June, 2009, 07:02 PM
I say a healthy social life is the key to happiness. Money allows people to live more comfortably, drink more wine, vacation more...

Chimaera
28th June, 2009, 07:37 PM
Nope it does not

it can help get you material things

but true happiness does really come from within

ste6106
28th June, 2009, 07:54 PM
Its a tough one to answer because you owuld never know til it happened to you, we have all thought how we would spend the money if we ever won it, there were a guy in Bolton the other week won 25 million ont Euros, he is 73, good luck to them,

Id love to say money wouldnt change me id be lying course it would, would it make me happier, probably but for the sake of being able to pay the bills, I wouldnt want it if aided in my friends leaving as I value my friendships more than money, id rather have a million mates than a million quid..........

Mr Pumpy
28th June, 2009, 09:15 PM
Nope it does not

it can help get you material things

but true happiness does really come from within


Well said that man (or woman)

Mr Pumpy
28th June, 2009, 09:16 PM
Or both....its a strange ol world. :laugh:

jase555
28th June, 2009, 09:18 PM
dont think so

put it this way , i could change job tomorrow and lift salary by an easy 7k p/a

this would involve,

bigger commute
more stress
less time with family
longer hours

is it worth it - in my mind no

just my thoughts

J

gmb45
29th June, 2009, 06:18 AM
money makes me very happy. all donations greatly received

:vroam: yo lainie, typical female answer