Most casinos will look for some type of identification (perhaps only a players card) when cashing a large ticket.
Casinos are required by the Treasury Dept to make an earnest effort to aggregate cash transactions in complying with the requirement to report any daily sum (cash in & out) in excess of $10k (CTR - currency transaction report)
I don't believe a ticket is encoded with anything more than a serial number and machine number. (Of course, recorded in the accounting system under the number may be a player number, if a card was in the machine at cash out. If not, I expect it would be a straightforward matter to correlate whose card was in the machine at or just prior to cash out.)
- H.
--- In vpFREE@yahoogroups.com, GURU PERF <guruperf@...> wrote:
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> That's interesting - I've never encountered a photo ID request when cashing tickets. Is there a particular limit on a single ticket that triggers this? I've cashed individual tickets in excess of the magic $1200 mark, and multiple tickets that exceeded that by a factor of 3 1/2 to 4.
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> >>Some more interesting "facts" to ponder. When tickets get large enough, casinos require photo ID to cash them. They also match the ID to the information from the ticket >the information was actually on your ticket (your players club card was in the machine, wasn't it?).
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[vpFREE] Re: Credits left in machine; Trespass/ wasJean Scott's Frugal V LVA BLOG - 7/29
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