San Diego Union-Tribune

4 PEOPLE IN MICHIGAN WON $1.05B JACKPOT

Detroit-area lottery club members chose lump sum option

- BY ED WHITE White writes for The Associated Press.

A four-member suburban Detroit lottery club won a $1.05 billion Mega Millions jackpot and will receive $557 million after taxes, officials said Friday.

The winners claimed their prize weeks after the Jan. 22 drawing and chose the immediate lump sum option. After taxes, the $776 million payment was reduced to about $557 million, the Michigan Lottery said.

The names of the four Oakland County club members were not released. The Wolverine FLL Club had the only jackpot-winning ticket.

“This kind of money will impact the families of our club members for generation­s to come. We plan to stay humble and pay it forward through charitable giving in southeast Michigan,” attorney Kurt Panouses said on behalf of the winners.

The $1.05 billion jackpot was the largest in Michigan Lottery history and the thirdlarge­st in the United States. Mega Millions is played in 45 states as well as Washington, D.C., and the U.S. Virgin Islands.

The winning ticket was purchased almost as an afterthoug­ht at a Kroger grocery store in the Detroit suburb of Novi.

“A club member saw a sign that the jackpot was up to $1 billion and remembered that they hadn’t bought their tickets yet so they pulled into the Kroger,” Panouses said. “When you play, of course, you dream of winning, but the reality of it has been incredible.“

Kroger said it would donate its $50,000 commission to the Food Bank Council of Michigan.

There was much public speculatio­n immediatel­y after the drawing that a group of Novi teachers had won. David Ascher, principal at Novi Woods Elementary School, shot down the rumors.

“Everyone showed up for work today, which was really good,“Escher said two days after the drawing. “I bought them all doughnuts today, which seemed to help, too.”

More than 1,000 National Guard members will be leaving Washington, D.C., over the next few days, but several thousand others will stay on for days or weeks, in the ongoing mission to provide security for the U.S. Capitol that has drawn criticism from lawmakers and reluctance from the military.

Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin earlier this week approved the Capitol Police request to extend the deployment of nearly 2,300 Guard members for about two more months because possible threats of violence remain.

According to the National Guard, troops from some states will stay in Washington for the entire two months. Others will return home but will be replaced by service members from the same state. But some states, such as Michigan, will no longer participat­e in the mission.

The Capitol Police request for an extension triggered a lengthy debate in the Pentagon, as Army and Guard officials questioned the need, and wanted to know if all other options had been exhausted. Military leaders were also concerned because governors initially expressed reluctance to have their

troops stay in the city.

Democratic Gov. Gretchen Whitmer made it clear that she did “not have any intention of agreeing to an extension of this deployment.” Some of the roughly 1,000 Michigan troops that have been in Washington have gone home, and others are leaving this weekend.

Darla Torres, spokeswoma­n for the National Guard Bureau, said that 11 states have agreed to provide troops for the two-month mission, including three — New Jersey, Washington and Wisconsin — that don’t currently have Guard forces in the city. The other eight — Delaware, Hawaii, Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Massachuse­tts, Missouri and Ohio — have forces already on Capitol Hill and have agreed to continue. Troops from the District of Columbia Guard

will continue in the security mission.

As of Friday there were about 4,300 Guard troops in the city. Military officials are scrambling to juggle the logistical challenge of getting several thousand home over the next two weeks, while others flow in.

The continued deployment drew some criticism from Capitol Hill, where lawmakers expressed frustratio­n at tall black fencing around the building and the troops on the streets, comparing it all to a walled city. But it also underscore­s concerns about security at the Capitol, two months after rioters breached the building in an attack that left five people dead.

Washington Democratic Rep. Adam Smith, who is chairman of the House Armed Services Committee, and Rep. Mike Rogers, RAla., the ranking Republican, said that while some level of support from the Guard is needed, they expressed concerns about the deployment’s long-term effects.

“We cannot ignore the financial costs associated with this prolonged deployment, nor can we turn a blind eye to the effects it will soon have on the National Guard’s overall readiness,” they said in a statement. “It’s time for us to review what level of security is required, so they can return home to their families and communitie­s.”

Many states have been using National Guard troops to help with COVID-19 vaccinatio­ns and other coronaviru­s missions.

The National Guard Associatio­n of the United States also questioned the extension, noting that it was difficult for Guard leaders to find enough volunteers for the mission.

“National Guard soldiers and airmen here in Washington need to return home to their families, civilian employers and regular military obligation­s,” said Maj. Gen. Michael McGuire, the NGAUS chairman, and retired Brig. Gen. J. Roy Robinson, the NGAUS president. “They have completed their mission. They have made us all proud. It’s time for local law enforcemen­t to take it from here.”

 ?? MICHIGAN LOTTERY VIA AP ?? Attorney Kurt Panouses poses with a check on behalf of the winners of a Mega Millions lottery jackpot.
MICHIGAN LOTTERY VIA AP Attorney Kurt Panouses poses with a check on behalf of the winners of a Mega Millions lottery jackpot.
 ?? CAROLYN KASTER AP ?? National Guard stand their posts around the Capitol at sunrise in Washington on Monday.
CAROLYN KASTER AP National Guard stand their posts around the Capitol at sunrise in Washington on Monday.

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