Nearly $2 Billion Powerball Jackpot Sparking Lottery Fever

Wednesday’s $1.73 billion Powerball jackpot has old and new lottery players coming out of the woodwork.

Wednesday’s $1.73 billion Powerball jackpot has old and new lottery players coming out of the woodwork.   

West Virginia Lottery Director John Myers said the second largest U.S. lottery jackpot in history has ticket machines and lottery vendors working overtime.

“You’ll see lines in some cases to purchase tickets,” Myers said. “We have a group of base players that do play regularly, but when the jackpot is a higher number, usually around $400 million or so, we start seeing other people that don’t normally play, start buying tickets.”

Myers said with a giant jackpot like this, the office pools for Powerball tickets gain more members. 

“The joke is you always want to make sure you get in the pool,” he said.  “Because you’re not going to want to be the only person that has to show up for work tomorrow.”

Myers said when you see the winning numbers on your ticket, be sure to immediately sign the back, since it instantly becomes a bearer instrument.  

“If it would be lost and picked up by somebody else, and your name’s not on the back of it, they could cash your ticket.” Myers said. “So, please sign your ticket, then put it in a very safe place, and then seek guidance from one, an attorney and two, a financial adviser.” 

Myers said about $200 million a year from lottery ticket sales goes back into three statute-designated state programs. 

“It goes to education, senior citizens and tourism,” Myers said. “Also, if that $1.73 billion was hit here in West Virginia, there would be a 6 percent personal income tax that would go into the state coffers as well, so that would be a significant number.”

Perhaps the most significant number, Wednesday’s Powerball jackpot whittles down to a cash value of a little more than $750 million. 

The odds of hitting that jackpot are one in 292.2 million. Good Luck!   

$1M Powerball Ticket Sold in Northern W.Va.

A Powerball ticket worth $1 million has been sold in northern West Virginia.

The ticket that matched the first five numbers in Saturday’s drawing was sold at a Circle K in Worthington near the Harrison-Marion county line.

The numbers were 11, 17, 21, 23, 32. The Powerball was 5.

Two other $1 million Powerball tickets have been sold in West Virginia since late June. An Elkview couple claimed the prize from the June 25 drawing and a Fairmont man won $1 million in the July 6 drawing.

Coal miner wins $1 million Powerball

A coal miner is the state’s newest millionaire after winning the West Virginia Powerball.

State Lottery Commissioner John Musgrave announced Monday David Feamster from Rupert is the latest one million dollar Powerball winner. He matched five numbers from last Wednesday’s drawing, missing only the Powerball number.

A father of three, Feamster and his wife say they already have plans for the money. He says they will donate to their church, pay off their mortgage and put some in savings.

His ticket was one of only three nationally to match five from that particular drawing and no one won the jackpot by matching all six numbers. Feamster bought his winning ticket at a gas station in Rainelle.
 

Exit mobile version