Imperial Valley Press

Guns and sneakers were seized from a man accused of killing a pregnant Amish woman, police say

- BY SCOTT MCFETRIDGE

Associated Press

The stars have aligned in the lottery universe like never before, with two jackpots totaling nearly $2 billion.

With an estimated $1.1 billion Mega Millions prize and an estimated $ 800 million Powerball jackpot, it’s the first time the two nearly national lottery games have each grown so large at the same time.

Both massive prizes are the results of months without a big winner, but the larger jackpots entice more people to play the games, increasing the chance that someone, somewhere, will finally hit it rich.

WHEN ARE THE DRAWINGS?

Up first is the Powerball drawing on Monday night, followed by Tuesday night’s Mega Millions drawing. If there isn’t a winner, the next chance to win Powerball will be Wednesday night and the next drawing for Mega Millions will be Friday night.

TWO MASSIVE PRIZES

Lottery prizes have been larger than the current jackpots, but it’s the first time both games have offered top prizes of $800 million or more since the games were created decades ago.

The prizes have grown so big because it has been months since anyone has won a jackpot.

The last Mega Millions jackpot winner was on Dec. 8. Since then, there have been 30 consecutiv­e drawings without a winner of the grand prize. No one has won the Powerball jackpot since Jan. 1, making for 35 consecutiv­e drawings without a big winner of the game, which holds three weekly drawings.

The Mega Millions prize ranks as the 8th largest in U.S. lottery history and is about half the size of the largest jackpot, a $ 2.04 billion Powerball prize won in November 2022.

“There’s always an air of excitement around the country when the Mega Millions and Powerball jackpots soar simultaneo­usly,” said Gretchen Corbin, president of the Georgia Lottery Corporatio­n and lead director of the Mega Millions Consortium.

THE DISMAL ODDS

It’s no mystery why months have passed without a jackpot winner — the odds of snagging the big prizes are terrible.

For Mega Millions, the odds of matching all six numbers are 1 in 302.6 million. Powerball has slightly better odds of 1 in 292.2 million.

To put those odds in perspectiv­e, lottery officials note that after a win when jackpots reset at $20 million, total ticket sales typically cover less than 10% of all the possible number combinatio­ns. As jackpots climb to $1 billion or more, sales increase dramatical­ly but still usually cover only about half of the possible combinatio­ns.

That means, there is still a good chance no one will hit a jackpot.

Of course, millions or people do win smaller prizes that range from $2 to $2 million. Players of both games have about a 1 in 4 chance of winning some kind of prize.

And remember, regardless of how large jackpots grow, the odds of an individual ticket winning never changes.

THE WINNINGS

As massive as the jackpots are, winners should brace for much smaller payoffs than the figures advertised on billboards.

That’s because the state lotteries that run the games promote the total payoff if the prize is paid through an annuity over 30 years. That figure is now roughly double the cash prize, which nearly all winners choose because they want to invest the money themselves rather than opt for a defined payout.

For Mega Millions, that means the $1.1 billion jackpot actually would pay out an estimated $525.8 million cash prize. For Powerball, the $800 million annuity prize would mean an estimated $384.8 million cash prize.

Those prizes will be subject to federal taxes, and many states also tax lottery winnings. There also is a chance that multiple players will hit a jackpot, which would then be split between the winners.

THE GAMES

Mega Millions is played in 45 states plus Washington, D.C., and the U.S. Virgin Islands. Powerball also is played in those states as well as Washington, D.C., the U.S. Virgin Islands and Puerto Rico.

The Mega Millions numbers are drawn at a TV studio in Atlanta and Powerball draws numbers at a Florida Lottery studio in Tallahasse­e.

Profits from the games fund state programs.

HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) — Police investigat­ing the killing a pregnant Amish woman in rural Pennsylvan­ia seized six guns, a variety of ammunition and a pair of sneakers that may match tread marks left at the crime scene during searches of the suspect’s home and vehicle, documents show.

Search warrant documents released over the weekend said 23-year-old Rebekah Byler suffered “multiple sharp force wounds” to her neck and was shot in the head during the Feb. 26 attack at her home.

Two counts of homicide and other charges against truck driver Shawn Christophe­r Cranston were forwarded to county court for trial after a preliminar­y hearing on March 15.

In a newly released search warrant affidavit, a state trooper said Rebekah Byler’s 2-year-old daughter and 3-year-old son were present during the killing and the boy told investigat­ors a man wearing sneakers had killed his mother.

Rebekah Byler’s husband, Andy Byler, and a woman who had been driving him and another man to look at roofing jobs returned to the Byler home around lunchtime to discover her body in the living room. The children were unharmed.

During the preliminar­y hearing, Trooper Shea Sedler testified that red and black Nike sneakers were found under a mattress inside a camper at Cranston’s residence in Corry. Sedler said the shoe pattern was similar to what he photograph­ed inside Rebekah Byler’s home.

Police also took DNA and fingerprin­ts from Cranston, who has been jailed without bail since his March 2 arrest.

Cranston’s public defender, Gary Alan Kern, has not returned messages seeking comment. At the preliminar­y hearing, Kern argued prosecutor­s had not identified a motive or produced a murder weapon.

Tire treads from Cranston’s Jeep appeared to match tire impression­s collected from muddy ground at the crime scene, police said.

A camera on a business across the street from Cranston’s home recorded someone fitting his descriptio­n carrying items to the camper and starting a fire in the hours after Rebekah Byler was killed, police said. Detectives said they hoped to remove “burn pile remnants” from Cranston’s home.

Along with two counts of homicide, Cranston, 52, also faces burglary and trespassin­g charges.

Police wrote that they were zeroing in on Cranston within a day of Byler’s killing and soon seized his trash, where they found a glove that resembled a piece of glove found at the homicide scene.

Neighbors in Corry told police that Cranston’s nickname is “Rumble” and he has been the sergeant-atarms for a motorcycle club in Erie. One neighbor said Cranston usually carried a small, black pistol.

Andy Byler told police that about two weeks before his wife was killed, a man matching Cranston’s general descriptio­n showed up at their home after 9 p.m. and inquired about buying the house, according to an affidavit.

 ?? AP PHOTO/SCOTT MCFETRIDGE ?? An electronic billboard advertises the Mega Millions and Powerball jackpots, on Monday in in Des Moines, Iowa, that when combined amount to nearly $2 billion.
AP PHOTO/SCOTT MCFETRIDGE An electronic billboard advertises the Mega Millions and Powerball jackpots, on Monday in in Des Moines, Iowa, that when combined amount to nearly $2 billion.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States