San Diego Union-Tribune

MAN WHO WON $10M IN LOTTERY GETS LIFE IN SHOOTING DEATH

- BY SIMONE JASPER Jasper writes for The (Raleigh) News & Observer.

A North Carolina man who scored a $10 million lottery prize is now convicted of first-degree murder.

In August 2017, Michael Hill said he bought a nonwinning ticket before deciding to try his luck on another scratch-off game. When he checked the new ticket, he discovered his “life changing” jackpot win.

“I saw the one and then the zero and it still didn’t hit me,” he told the N.C. Education Lottery at the time. “But then I saw the ‘M.’ My heart dropped down to my toes and I lost my breath.”

Years after the big win, Hill has been sentenced to prison in a woman’s shooting death. Prosecutor­s in a May 27 news release didn’t list attorney informatio­n for him.

The woman — 23-year-old

Keonna Graham — was reported missing on July 20, 2020. Later, she was found dead with a “gunshot wound to the back of the head,” according to the 15th Prosecutor­ial District of North Carolina.

The woman reportedly had been in a relationsh­ip with Hill for more than a year before her body was discovered at the SureStay Hotel in Shallotte, roughly 40 miles southwest of Wilmington.

“Surveillan­ce footage from the hotel showed Hill as the only individual in the hotel room with Graham,” prosecutor­s wrote in their news release. “Hill was later arrested by law enforcemen­t in Southport, N.C., and confessed to shooting Graham after she had been texting other men while at the hotel.”

Hill worked at a nuclear plant and lived in Brunswick County at the time of his lottery win. He was 52 years old when he was arrested and charged with murder in July 2020, McClatchy News reported.

Then on May 27, a jury found Hill guilty of first-degree murder. He was ordered to serve “life in prison without the possibilit­y of parole and 22-36 months in prison for Possession of Firearm by Felon to run concurrent with his life sentence,” officials said.

“The District Attorney’s Office would like to thank our local law enforcemen­t agencies for their collaborat­ive efforts in the investigat­ion of Graham’s death,” Assistant District Attorney Shirley Smircic said in the prosecutor­s’ news release. “The hard work of these officers ensured a just result in this case.”

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