South Carolina lottery winner claims
record $877 million cash prize
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[March 05, 2019]
By Steve Gorman
(Reuters) - The anonymous sole winner of a
$1.5 billion U.S. Mega Millions drawing last fall has come forward to
claim the jackpot, choosing to collect a record one-time cash sum of
more than $877 million, South Carolina's lottery commission said on
Monday.
The winning Quick Pick Mega Millions ticket for the Oct. 23 drawing was
purchased at a KC Mart convenience store in Simpsonville, South
Carolina, officials said.
The victorious player has opted not to be publicly identified, with
lottery officials describing the winner only as a "South Carolinian."
But in a fortuitous gesture recounted by lottery officials, the lucky
contestant had allowed a fellow customer at the KC Mart to jump ahead in
line to buy a ticket just before the winning ticket was sold.
"A simple act of kindness led to an amazing outcome," at the commission
said in a statement announcing that a winner had come forward.
The buyer of the winning ticket beat the odds of 1 in 303 million to win
the drawing for a grand prize of $1.537 billion, just short of a word
record Powerball jackpot of $1.586 billion in January 2016.
But the cash option payment chosen by the South Carolina Mega Millions
winner amounts to a lump-sum total of $877,784,124 - the largest jackpot
payout to a single winner in U.S. history, the state lottery commission
said.
The winner could otherwise have elected to accept the full amount of the
jackpot paid out in installments over 29 years.
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A man enters the KC Mart in Simpsonville, South Carolina, U.S.
October 24, 2018. REUTERS/Charles Mostoller
The KC Mart in Simpsonville will receive a $50,000 prize for selling
the claimed lucky ticket, and the state of South Carolina stands to
collect $61 million in income taxes from the winner.
The triumphant Mega Millions contender has retained a New York
lawyer, Jason Kurland, who specializes in representing lottery
winners, and a news conference is to be held following completion of
the payment process in the near future, the commission said. Kurland
could not immediately be reached for comment.
In the four days leading up to the drawing, about 370 million of the
$2 Mega Millions tickets were sold in 44 U.S. states, the District
of Columbia and the U.S. Virgin Islands.
In South Carolina, state lawmakers have appropriated more than $5.4
billion in lottery proceeds for education since its inception there
in 2002.
(Reporting by Steve Gorman in Los Angeles; Editing by Alistair Bell)
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