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Lawyers pushing for a class action suit against the sweepstakes gambling site HelloMillions.com are promoting their efforts via Facebook.

ClassAction.org features the following sponsored advertisement on the social media platform, claiming "users could be owed $100s".
Lost money on Hello Millions? You're not alone - and attorneys are gathering players like you to take legal action over potential violations of gambling and consumer protection laws. They believe Hello Millions may be an illegal gambling platform disguised as a harmless social casino and that affected players could have a change to get some of their money back. Find out how to join others taking action.
Hello Millions is a free-to-play sweepstakes casino that offers a variety of casino-style games—such as slots, Slingo, live dealer games, Megaways, and more. It utilizes virtual coins, which can be redeemed for real money prizes for gift cards or cash, once required playthrough conditions are met.
While many Facebook users anxiously responded to the ad wishing to join the proposed class action, not everyone believed Hello Millions to be acting in an untoward way.
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One individual relayed their experience.
Well, I've played and won $18,000 and received my money. People know it's a risk cause you are gambling just like going to the casino but instead of physically going you play on the phone. People shouldn't be able to sue all because they don't practice self-control.
Another noted that the lawyers will receive 40 percent of any monies won.
Class action lawsuits are nothing new in the world of social casinos.
High 5 Casino, which advertises heavily on television, became the latest sweepstakes casino to be targeted by attorneys.
A Franklin County, Alabama resident, Michael Sumerel, filed a statewide class action lawsuit against High 5 Games and High 5 Entertainment in Franklin County Circuit Court on June 9.
Jeffrey Bowling, Sumerel’s attorney, said in the lawsuit, “The social ills caused by 'social casino' and 'sweeps casino' games, even those that do not allow users to win real money, are well-documented. Media reports show gambling addicts spend enormous, and completely unaffordable, amounts of money on these casino games.”
“Companies in the social casino and sweeps casino industry, including Defendant, have extracted tens of millions of dollars from Alabama’s economy in the last five years, all without employing a single person in the state or paying a dime in taxes to Alabama’s treasury,” Bowling added. “The money extracted from Alabama’s economy ends up not only in Defendant’s home state of Delaware, but also in places like Hong Kong, Israel, Gibraltar, Australia, and Cyprus, where other major players in the industry are headquartered. High5 is estimated to have an annual revenue of fifteen million dollars per year. Even if Alabama consumers represent but a small percentage of that total, the reality is that a great deal of money is being removed from the state’s economy each year. Again, this money leaves the state without creating any Alabama jobs or generating any tax revenue for the treasury.”
- Jagajeet Chiba, Gambling911.com
