oddly enough


oddly enough

Bartender in Oregon gets lottery-ticket tip worth $17,500

SPRINGFIELD, Ore.

An Oregon bartender got the tip of a lifetime this week.

The Register-Guard newspaper reports that a customer at Conway’s Restaurant and Lounge in Springfield often tips bartender Aurora Kephart with unplayed tickets for the state lottery’s Keno game.

This time, one of those tickets turned into a $17,500 winner.

Kephart says the look on the customer’s face was incredible.

The 25-year-old tried to give him back the ticket, but he wouldn’t take it.

After collecting her money, she gave the patron some of her winnings.

Kephart says she plans to use her share to buy a new couch and then save the rest.

Drug dealer accepts longer sentence to spare mate

HOLLIDAYSBURG, Pa.

A judge has agreed to a central Pennsylvania drug dealer’s chivalrous request to spend five extra years in prison — to spare his live-in girlfriend a felony conviction and the resulting loss of her business, a bar.

Blair County Judge Timothy Sullivan agreed to the unusual request, telling the defendant, 38-year-old Sean Graham, “Chivalry is not dead,” the Altoona Mirror reported last week.

Graham agreed to plead guilty to felony possession with intent to deliver cocaine and weapons-possession charges and to receive 15 to 30 years in prison, on the condition that his live-in girlfriend, 45-year-old Melissa Shaw, could plead guilty to a lesser misdemeanor drug charge and receive just 11 to 23 months in the county jail.

The charges stem from a March 2011 raid of the couple’s home, where police say they found nearly 10 ounces of cocaine and two guns owned by Graham.

Shaw’s attorney, Thomas Dickey, concocted the compromise so Shaw could avoid a felony conviction and the resulting automatic loss of her liquor license.

Graham agreed, despite the objections of his own defense attorney, but the judge wanted to ensure that Graham understood the serious consequences and asked why he was willing to participate in such a deal.

“Just so, hopefully, my girlfriend doesn’t lose the bar,” Graham said. “It was all my fault.”

District Attorney Richard Consiglio also signed off on the deal, which allows Graham to remain free until he reports to prison Jan. 7. Until then, he and Shaw will be allowed to work together in the bar.

The bar is in Juniata, and all parties agreed it was not related to the drug- possession allegations.

Associated Press