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Dolores McNamara (born Dolores O'Donovan, 13 January 1960 in Blackpool, England, but resident in Limerick, Ireland from infancy) was Europe's largest individual lottery jackpot winner from 29 July 2005 until 8 May 2009. Her €2 quick-pick ticket for the 29 July 2005 EuroMillions drawing won her a nine-week rollover jackpot of €115,436,126. She received the jackpot as a tax-free lump sum, instantly becoming Ireland's 72nd wealthiest person. Numerous newspaper and magazine articles and profiles made her a well-known persona, especially in Ireland. McNamara's standing as Europe's largest individual lottery jackpot winner was superseded on 8 May 2009, when a 25-year-old woman from Majorca, Spain, won a EuroMillions jackpot of €126,231,764. Background and family The eldest child of Desmond and Elizabeth O'Donovan, she was born in the English seaside resort town of Blackpool, where her father was employed as a tailor at a local hotel. The O'Donovan family returned later that year to their hometown of Limerick, where Dolores' sister Deirdre was born in July 1961. At the age of 17, she married 27-year-old local bricklayer Adrian McNamara on 4 June 1977. Between 1978 and 1992, she gave birth to six children, three sons and three daughters. At the time of her lottery win, her husband was recuperating after coronary artery bypass surgery, while she was working as a part-time cleaning lady at Limerick Youth Centre, having recently left her job on a pharmaceutical factory production line. EuroMillions win McNamara had purchased her ticket at a convenience shop half a mile from her home. She discovered she had won the jackpot when she checked her numbers after the drawing in a local pub. As news of her win became national news, she and her family fled for privacy to the Crown Moran Hotel in London. She returned to Dublin five days later to claim her prize at the Irish National Lottery headquarters in Dublin. In the weeks after her win, McNamara's lifestyle and history came under intense scrutiny in the Irish and British press. Citing details from her social welfare records, one newspaper accused her of having committed welfare fraud by claiming unemployment benefits while she was working. When officials at the Department of Social and Family Affairs investigated these leaks, they discovered that 72 civil servants had accessed McNamara's electronic welfare records in the days following her windfall. McNamara was never charged in connection with the alleged fraud, but the civil servants were reprimanded for accessing her records without due cause. The case provoked public debate about the security of personal information stored in governmental computer systems. Life after EuroMillions For nine months after her win, McNamara continued to live in her modest Limerick bungalow. In April 2006, she moved with her husband and two youngest sons to Lough Derg Hall, a €1.7 million, home near Ogonnelloe, County Clare. The family had been plagued by threats of abduction since the windfall, and their new home was fitted with a comprehensive security system for their protection.
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