Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Winning lottery ticket sold in S.C.

$1M ticket sold in Pennsylvan­ia

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SIMPSONVIL­LE, S.C. — The number of billionair­es in South Carolina may have doubled overnight — at least before taxes — after a lottery ticket sold in the state won the $1.537 billion Mega Millions lottery jackpot.

The ticket, sold at the KC Mart in Simpsonvil­le, matched all six numbers drawn Tuesday night, defying the 1 in 302.5 million odds to win the near-record prize.

The winner would become an actual billionair­e only by taking the prize in annual installmen­ts over three decades and hanging on to the bulk of the money. The lucky person can also take an $877.8 million lumpsum payment, which most winners choose to receive.

South Carolina Education Lottery officials know when and where the winning ticket was bought, but until someone turns the ticket in, they won’t know who bought it. And the public may never find out. South Carolina allows lottery winners to remain anonymous after conducting a thorough investigat­ion to confirm their identity, lottery chief operating officer Tony Cooper said.

The name of South Carolina’s last big winner — a $399 million Powerball jackpot in September 2013 which at the time was the fourth-biggest lottery prize in U.S. history — has never been made public.

“Our message to the $1.5 BILLION #Mega Millions jackpot winner: Sign the back of the ticket, place the ticket in a safe location, speak with a trusted advisor and CALL THE LOTTERY at 1-866-736-9819. Take a deep breath and enjoy the moment!” the South Carolina Education Lottery tweeted.

The winning numbers were 5, 28, 62, 65, 70 and Mega Ball 5.

The prize is extraordin­ary by any measure, but particular­ly so for South Carolina. With more than $1.5 billion, an exceedingl­y generous winner could shower roughly $307 on each of the state’s five million people. It’s about as much as 20 percent of the state’s $8 billion annual budget.

Lottery officials said the state will get $80 million in taxes. The state sold around $15 million worth of tickets just for Tuesday night’s drawing, with most of the revenue going to education, Mr. Cooper said.

In 2016, Forbes listed only one billionair­e in South Carolina, InterTech Group CEO Anita Zucker. She was worth $1.8 billion from the chemical, real estate and manufactur­ing conglomera­te, the magazine reported.

An earlier Mega Millions estimate of $1.6 billion would have been a world record for lotteries, but actual sales came in below the $1.586 billion Powerball jackpot prize shared by winners in California, Florida and Tennessee in January 2016.

“Estimates are based on historical patterns,” said Carol Gentry, a spokeswoma­n for the Maryland Lottery, which leads a consortium of state lotteries participat­ing in the Mega Millions jackpot in a Wednesday morning phone interview with The Associated Press.

South Carolina is one of eight states — along with Delaware, Georgia, Kansas, Maryland, North Dakota, Ohio and Texas — where winners can remain anonymous. The winner also has up to 180 days to claim the prize.

KC Mart owner CJ Patel also will be a winner. He gets a $50,000 bonus, and said Wednesday he will share part of it with his employees. He has owned the store not far from where Greenville’s suburbs turn rural for more than three years.

Mr. Patel said lottery ticket sales were brisk leading up to Tuesday and he has no idea who bought the winner.

“I hope he will keep coming in,” Mr. Patel said with a broad smile. “He’d be good for the business.”

The biggest Mega Millions jackpot winner prior to this was a $656 million ticket sold in 2012, Ms. Gentry said, “so it’s a record for Mega Millions and it came very close to breaking the world record of all the jackpots.”

While there were no other jackpot winners out of the 15.7 million people who bought Mega Millions tickets, 36 tickets nationwide were close, matching five of six numbers.

A $1 million ticket sold in Pennsylvan­ia won one of 36 second prizes for matching the five white balls, according to lottery officials. The Pennsylvan­ia winner was sold in Delaware County.

Other states where winning second-prize tickets were sold:

▪ Eight tickets sold in California matched five of the six numbers for an undisclose­d amount of money.

▪ Four in Florida and New York

▪ Two each in Massachuse­tts, Michigan, North Carolina, New Jersey and Virginia

▪ And one each in Arizona, the District of Columbia, Iowa, Kentucky, Missouri, New Mexico, Ohio, Texas and Wisconsin. The Texas winner and one of the Florida Match 5 winners included the optional Megaplier, so those two tickets are worth $3 million each.

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