Couple wins $128 M Jackpot

j41181

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Kentucky couple win $128M Powerball prize</font>

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By DYLAN LOVAN

The Associated Press

Updated: 9:26 p.m. Wednesday, Jan. 6, 2010

Published: 4:31 p.m. Wednesday, Jan. 6, 2010

LOUISVILLE, Ky. â€" A central Kentucky autoworker is lucky he held on to the $128 million Powerball ticket he bought on Christmas Eve during some last-minute shopping â€" after all, it was printed by mistake.

Lottery officials said Rob Anderson and his wife, Tuesday, were winners of the largest jackpot in the state's history.

On Wednesday the couple was introduced at the state lottery headquarters in Louisville. The Andersons said they didn't initially believe they had won the $128.6 million jackpot after buying lottery tickets together for 12 years.

"We didn't hit it, that's not us," Rob Anderson said he told his wife after showing her the winning ticket the morning after the Dec. 26 drawing. "Something's not right!"

Rob Anderson, 39, said the winning ticket was a misprint that he decided to keep while buying stocking stuffers at a Georgetown, Ky., gas station. He wanted to buy $1 lottery tickets for three people, but the clerk goofed.

"The clerk ran the $3 Quick Pick but he put it all on one ticket, and I was like, doggone it, I needed three separate tickets," Anderson said.

The clerk asked him if he wanted to keep the ticket, which had three sets of random numbers.

"Yeah, I got a couple extra dollars," Anderson said, and he bought three more tickets to give as gifts.

When he arrived at home, he tossed the ticket on his dresser and didn't think about it until the Sunday morning after the drawing. When he remembered it, he checked the Powerball numbers and they matched one of the sets of numbers on the botched ticket: 32-36-37-41-53 and Powerball 30.

The couple, who work at a plant building seats for Toyotas, said they were hesitant to go public about the winnings. They declined to say if they had children.

"We're really grounded people," Rob Anderson said. "My wife taught me well, so to speak, to hang on to that dollar and see how far it gets you. We'll still clip coupons and still look for the clearance rack."

He said they would like to go back to school. His proposed major? Finance.

Tuesday Anderson said they have a dream of visiting Hawaii and she wants a new car.

The couple said they haven't decided if they'll return to work and whether they'll take a lump sum payment, which would be worth about $63 million.

Prior to this jackpot, the largest ever won in Kentucky was $89.3 million in 1996.

(This version CORRECTS Corrects amount of jackpot thruout, $128.6 million sted $126.6 million.)Edited by: j41181
 
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whiteathlete33 said:
I'd be happy to win a million.
Yes! Me too! But big money sometime can be a bad thing.. I believe most times it makes your life worse! I know some super rich people and they have a bunch of fake firends around them.. Fake lovers.. And they know their "Fake"!Edited by: lost
 

DixieDestroyer

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No doubt winning a big windfall of $$$ like that would bring some hurdles. You'd probably have "family" (you'd not seen/heard from in years) coming out of the woodwork, folks from the past trying to make claims (extortion, etc.) & con-men as well. I'd be quick to hire a top notch attorney & security firm to protect my family from the parasites & grifters who'd quickly crawl out from under their rock(s).
 

white is right

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Here is a cautionary tale of a White winner. His story almost sounds like a ghetto *******/Aboriginal North American who won millions.....Andrew Jackson "Jack"Â￾ Whittaker, Jr. (born c. 1947 in Jumping Branch, Summers County, West Virginia) is a West Virginia businessman who became famous when he won US$315 million in the Powerball multi-state lottery. At the time it was the largest jackpot ever won by a single winning ticket in the history of American lottery. He has garnered even more publicity since his win due to several well-publicized brushes with the law as well as personal tragedies.
Contents
[hide]

* 1 Powerball win
* 2 Philanthropy
* 3 Legal / personal problems
* 4 References
* 5 External links

[edit] Powerball win

Whittaker was the 55-year-old president of Diversified Enterprises Construction, a successful contracting firm in Putnam County, West Virginia, when he chose the correct numbers for the December 25, 2002 drawing. Whittaker had a net worth of over US$17 million even before his Powerball windfall. Whittaker purchased the winning Powerball ticket at a supermarket in Hurricane, West Virginia, where he had stopped for a deli breakfast sandwich and to get fuel for his Lincoln Navigator.

The jackpot that day was a US$314.9 million annuity or US$170 million cash. Whittaker chose the cash option and received a check for approximately US$114 million[1] after tax withholdings.
[edit] Philanthropy

Whittaker pledged 10% of his winnings to Christian charitiesâ€"including several churches affiliated with the Church of Godâ€"in southern West Virginia. One of the beneficiary congregations constructed a multi-million dollar church in Hurricane. He also donated $14 million to establish the Jack Whittaker Foundation, a non-profit organization that provides food and clothing to low-income families in rural West Virginia. Furthermore, he tipped the woman who worked the biscuit counter at the convenience store where he bought the winning ticket by buying her a $123,000 house, a new Jeep and giving her $44,000 cash.
[edit] Legal / personal problems

On August 5, 2003, thieves broke into his car while it was parked at the Pink Pony, a strip club in Cross Lanes, West Virginia. The thieves went away with $545,000 in cash.[2][3] Two employees at the same club, the manager and dancer's manager who were romantically linked, were later arrested and charged with a plot to put drugs in Whittaker's drinks and then rob him. On January 25, 2004, thieves once again broke into his car, this time making off with an estimated $200,000 in cash that was later recovered.

In September 2004, Jesse Tribble, a 17-year-old, on-and-off-again boyfriend of Jack's granddaughter, Brandi Bragg, was found dead in Whittaker's home in Teays Valley, West Virginia. A coroner's report indicated that he died of a drug overdose. Several months later, on December 20, 2004, Brandi, 17, was found dead after a drug overdose. After she had been missing for several weeks, her body was discovered lying under a tarpaulin near her then boyfriend's home.

At an October 11, 2005 hearing related to his January 2003 DUI, a visibly shaken Whittaker lashed out at area law enforcement agencies for focusing on his troubles while failing to arrest anyone in relation to his granddaughter's death,[4]
" Go after whoever killed my granddaughter with as much zealous [sic] as these butt holes are trying to convict me of something I didn't do. "Â￾

Whittaker is also being sued by Caesars Atlantic City casino for bouncing $1.5 million worth of checks to cover gambling losses. Whittaker is also countersuing them, claiming that his losses were supposed to be credited due to a slot machine he developed and that they in fact owe him money.[5]

On January 11, 2007, a legal complaint against Whittaker alleged that Whittaker claimed that on September 11, 2006 thieves took all of his money.[6][7] The robbers, according to the account, went to 12 branches of the City National Bank and cashed 12 checks. The incident came to light because Whittaker had not been paying money to a woman who had previously sued him. Kitti French filed the complaint earlier in the week, requesting court costs and money from Whittaker.

On July 5, 2009, Ginger Whittaker Bragg, Jack's daughter and the mother of Brandi Bragg, was found dead in Daniels in Raleigh County, West Virginia. Foul play is not suspected, but toxicology tests are expected.[1]
 

Jimmy Chitwood

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being broke sucks! that being said, being wealthy doesn't solve all your problems either ...

with regards to the lottery, here in Arkansas the voters recently legalized a lottery. in less than 4 months, the company behind it profited somethingin the neighborhood of$40 million. they also released that they pay out approximately 10 cents for ever $1 spent in buying tickets ... in other words, for every dollar people tear into little pieces and set on fire, they'll find a dime. what a great deal and an even better way for poor people to spend their money!
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i call the lottery the Stupid People Tax, as it's about the only way illegals, negroes, and other worthless piles of welfare-handout pieces of crap will ever pay any.
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white is right

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So true.....
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I have read numerous stories about the 1st of the month being the highest drop at various casinos. Because Social Security/Disability and even regular Welfare come in. It's a very scary time of the month for dependents of these people.
 

DixieDestroyer

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white is right

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Come on Dixie that's nothing I saw Latrell Sprewell collecting pop cans and beer bottles on the side of the freeway he used to drive backwards on.....:scared:
 
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