$10M Lotto-Winning Sex Offender Denies New Charges - East Idaho News
National

$10M Lotto-Winning Sex Offender Denies New Charges

  Published at

ABC 031714 LottoArrest?  SQUARESPACE CACHEVERSION=1395086497237Uxbridge Police Department(UXBRIDGE, Mass.) — A convicted Massachusetts sex offender whose $10 million lottery winnings may have been used to facilitate further abuse pleaded not guilty to new child sex abuse charges Monday morning, court officials said.

Daniel Snay, 62, of Uxbridge, Mass., was arraigned in Uxbridge District Court. He was arrested Friday on charges he sexually abused a boy over the course of several years and showed him pornography. Police say Snay may have used winnings from his 2008 $10 million lottery jackpot to groom and win favor with victims.

“Mr. Snay was the recipient of a 10 million dollar lottery award and that windfall aided the commission of the crimes,” Uxbridge police said in a news release.

The abuse allegedly occurred when the boy was between the ages of 8 and 14. Snay is charged with indecent assault and battery on a child under the age of 14, reckless endangerment of a child, enticement of a child and dissemination of pornography to a minor.

Uxbridge police will be working with officials in Rhode Island and Connecticut, as well, where abuse of the same boy is also alleged to have occurred, according to the release.

Snay is registered as a level-three sex offender, meaning he has been determined to be high risk to reoffend. He was convicted in 1974 and 1976 for indecent assault and battery on a child under the age of 14 and was sentenced to five to seven years in prison.

After his release, he won $10 million on a scratch-off lottery ticket while working as a truck driver in 2008.

“He used [the money] as a means for grooming the victims or enticing them because he had this large sum of money at his disposal,” Uxbridge Police Department Public Information Officer Melanie Blodgett-O’Toole told ABC News. Snay is being held on $5 million bail, it is unclear, even with Snay’s lottery winnings, whether he has enough cash on hand to make the payment.

He will be transferred to the Worcester County House of Corrections while he awaits his next court date, scheduled for April 16.

Snay’s attorney, Samuel B. Goldberg, did not immediately respond to ABC News’ request for comment.

Copyright 2014 ABC News Radio

SUBMIT A CORRECTION