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Man who mysteriously died after winning lottery had made business deal for wife’s benefit

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(MCT) — CHICAGO—Weeks before he died mysteriously from cyanide poisoning after winning a $1 million lottery jackpot, a North Side businessman inked a deal with his business partner to ensure that his share of several dry cleaning stores went to his wife in the event of his death.

The unusual agreement is sure to fuel the fight among relatives of Urooj Khan over his estate, once estimated at $2 million. Khan’s siblings had already raised concerns that his widow, Shabana Ansari, might keep the lottery winnings for herself instead of sharing the proceeds with Khan’s 17-year-old daughter from a previous marriage.

In an interview with The Chicago Tribune, Khan’s sister, Meraj Khan, said the her suspicions of Ansari’s motives have intensified since learning Thursday of the business agreement.

“Things are getting more clear about why my brother is gone,” the sister said. “Out of nowhere she’s the beneficiary for...the business?”

Ansari has been questioned by Chicago police detectives in her husband’s death, but she has denied any wrongdoing and has not been accused of a crime.

The business contract means that Ansari owns half of the dry cleaning operation and its real estate, valued at more than $1 million, instead of those assets being divided among heirs in probate court, according to Ansari’s lawyer, Al-Haroon Husain.

“It’s a bit unusual,” Husain said following a hearing in the Daley Center. “I just think he wanted to make sure his wife had a business and had attachment to the commercial property if something happened to him.”

In addition, a real-estate agreement Khan signed with his wife in 2007 entitles her to sole ownership of their Rogers Park home, which is valued at almost half a million dollars, Husain said.

If those assets are not included, Khan’s estate is worth only about $680,000, including the $425,000 in lottery winnings, according to documents filed Thursday by Husain. When a final value for the estate is determined, it will likely be split evenly between Ansari and Khan’s daughter, he said.

“He died without a will, so under Illinois law it would be split 50-50,” Husain said. “The only difference is 50-50 of what?”

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