Publishers Clearing House – the bankrupt sweepstakes company that told its past prize winners they would no longer receive their ‘forever’ payments – has a new CEO, who has a plan to protect the ...
Publishers Clearing House's recent bankruptcy filing left winners of the "$5000 a week for life" sweepstakes hanging.
The company that acquired Publishers Clearing House announced the appointment of a new chief executive officer and a program it says will protect future sweepstakes payouts.
‘It’s not a good way to treat anyone. Pretty sure I’m going to lose my home,’ one winner says.
NPR's Scott Simon speaks with Publishers Clearing House winner Tamar Veatch, who stopped getting annual payments earlier this year as the company behind the sweepstakes fell into bankruptcy.
John Wyllie was awarded $5,000 a week by Publishers Clearing House in 2012. With the money, he retired and restructured his ...
An old TV commercial once promised, “Only Publishers Clearing House can make you so rich, so fast!” But, as some unlucky ...
The couple also said that they initially called Publishers Clearing House when they did not receive their annual check, and ...
John Wyllie, a 61-year-old man from White City, Oregon, believed his life had turned a corner. In August 2012, Publishers ...
For nearly 60 years, Publishers Clearing House had been known for changing individuals’ lives, fulfilling their dreams with prize money it promised would keep coming for as long as they lived.
The online casino operator that acquired Publishers Clearing House out of bankruptcy protection said that it would pay only those who won after July 15.