EuroMillions winner splashed £100,000 a week as he blew £40m in eight years after winning £161m jackpot

A LOTTO winner splashed £100,000 a week as he blew through £40 million in just eight years.

Colin Weir and his wife Christine bagged a whopping £161 million jackpot in a 2011 EuroMillions draw and Colin certainly made the most of the money before his death in 2019.

PAColin Weir and his wife Christine scooped the £161 million jackpot in 2011[/caption]

AFP – GettyColin blew through £40 million in just eight years before his death in 2019[/caption]

Colin, from Ayrshire, Scotland, snapped up luxury cars, pumped money into his favourite football club and even had stakes in Greggs and Irn Bru by the end of his life.

The investments were part of a £12 million share portfolio which included nearly £20,000 in both French multinational Moët Hennessy Louis Vuitton and supermarket giant Tesco.

He also shared out his vast fortune with his and Christine’s two children, Carly and Jamie, and gave heavily to charity.

At the time of his death from sepsis aged 71, he owned around £212,000 worth of furniture jewellery and artwork.

Meanwhile, his car collection included a vintage Bentley Arnage, worth £10,000, and a £35,000 Mercedes Benz V Class people carrier.

A keen racing fan, he owned three thoroughbreds, including two geldings and an Irish mare.

He also had assets of around £3.5 million in tax haven the Isle of Man, a stake of around £400,000 in tax-advantage Enterprise Investment Schemes (EIS) and the maximum £50,000 invested in National Savings and Investments Premium Bonds.

His generosity even stretched from beyond the grave as, when he knew he would die, he organised a luxury £1m farewell party for his friends and family to remember him.

Guests enjoyed lobster, £340-a-bottle champagne and £40-a-plate truffle soup as they celebrated a life well lived.

He owned a £1.1 million bachelor pad after he and Christine divorced last year, while she kept the £3.5 million mansion they had bought together.

Mourners lined the streets of Glasgow for his footie funeral, which saw him visit his beloved Partick Thistle’s home ground one last time.

The club renamed a section of the stadium the Colin Weir stand in his honour.

PAHe pumped money into his favourite football club and even held stakes in Greggs and Irn Bru[/caption]

PAThe lucky winner gave heavily to charity and was much-loved by the local community[/caption]  Read More 

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