Thousands of British Columbians are asking the same question after they sold tickets through VANOC's website: Where is my money?

It's been two months since Sidney Crosby scored the golden goal, and that means VANOC has had some time to pay its debts to people like Oxana Mattchak.

Like thousands of others, she decided not to go to all of the events she had tickets for, and sold some of them on VANOC's fan-to-fan website.

The Olympic Committee promised she would receive her nearly $5,000 cheque by April 30, but it has yet to turn up.

"At this point I would be lucky. I would feel like I won the lottery if I would ever get the money back," Mattchak told CTV News.

Robert Meister is owed even more -- almost $8,000 for gold medal hockey tickets.

He wanted to use the money to pay for his wedding.

He says he called the site's customer service line looking for answers, and was told, "It's taking longer than we've anticipated. There's nothing we can do."

Meister and Mattchak are not alone. CTV News has received an enormous amount of email from people who also feel cheated.

VANOC says that more than 10,000 cheques are being sent out, and blames the popularity of the ticket resale site for the delay.

Representatives say they're not scamming anyone, and everyone should have their money by the middle of May.

With a report from CTV British Columbia's St. John Alexander