A small-time criminal who scooped £6.5million on the lottery but ended up homeless told yesterday how the win had been a ‘curse’.
Lee Ryan spent two years sleeping rough after blowing his fortune.
He now rents a two-room flat and earns less than £10,000 a year – but insists that he is happier today than when he was a millionaire.
Mr Ryan, 54, hit the jackpot in March 1995. At the time he was awaiting trial for handling stolen cars.
Nicknamed the Lotto Lag, he was jailed for 18 months for the offence six months after landing the jackpot.
The first British lottery millionaire to end up in prison, he served nine months of his sentence.
He says he was ‘a monster then’ and his win saved him from descending into serious crime, claiming he had been on the verge of carrying out an armed robbery.
Mr Ryan, then a used car trader, won £6,527,880 with girlfriend Karen Taylor just 17 weeks after the launch of the National Lottery.
At the time, the couple lived in a council house in Braunston, Leicester, with their three children.
They married that summer and Mr Ryan splashed out on a £1million country mansion and a fleet of cars, including a Bentley, a Ferrari, a Porsche and BMW with personalised number plates LEE 1, LEE 2, LEE 3 and LEE 4.
He also bought two Ducati superbikes, a £125,000 plane and a £235,000 Bell JetRanger helicopter.
He was later fined for using the aircraft to buzz homes.
In a newspaper interview yesterday, Mr Ryan told how he had prayed to God to make him a millionaire while serving a prison sentence in 1986 for stealing cars.
‘My cellmate warned me to be careful what I wished for,’ he told The Sun. ‘The money was cursed.’
He and Miss Taylor split in 2003 after he cheated on her.
He moved to London, where he met 24-year-old student Jyldyz Djangaracheva, known as Jika.
They moved to her homeland, the former Soviet republic of Kyrgyzstan in Central Asia, with their baby daughter.
But Mr Ryan lost around £2million in failed business ventures and property investments.
One venture to build a fish farm in the central Asian republic fell foul of local mafia bosses.
He claims crooked officials cheated him out of his cash in another scheme, a text message-based lottery in China.
By 2010, he had divorced Jika and returned to Britain with nothing but a sleeping bag. He says he spent the next two years sleeping rough – on park benches, in cemeteries or in doorways.
He added: ‘I travelled all over the country. I bumped into what I call “living angels” where I am not asking anybody for anything and someone turns up saying, “Are you all right, mate?”’
Mr Ryan now lives in a rented flat in South London – where he claims to take in the homeless as guests – and works as a cameraman.
He said he would probably have ended up spending life in prison if his lottery numbers had not come up and revealed that he had once threatened Miss Taylor with a shotgun.
At the time of the lottery win, he claimed, he was in the advanced stages of planning an armed robbery – ‘a really big job’ – in Belgium.
He said he had planned to carry a loaded gun, adding: ‘If they [the robbery victims] wanted to play silly b*****s, they’d get it in the knees at the very least.’
He added: ‘I’m not that person now but I was a monster then.
'There’s also no doubt that the lottery saved me as a person and saved the lives of my potential victims. The win saved me from that fate – and someone else from being my victim.’
Yesterday, Miss Taylor, 55, said she was no longer in contact with Mr Ryan, adding: ‘Neither are our children, as far as I know.’
She declined to comment further.
The couple’s youngest child, Nile, 26, also declined to comment.
In May 2001, ex-RAF engineer Nigel Gardner-Hale became the second lottery millionaire to be jailed.
Mr Gardner-Hale, who won £3.4million on a Lucky Dip ticket, was arrested when police raided a party at his home in Maesteg, South Wales.
He admitted possessing 44 ecstasy tablets, supplying the drug, and letting guests smoke cannabis.
He was jailed for 12 months.
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