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Winner of $1.5 billion lottery comes forward (well, their lawyer, anyway)

Winner of $1.5 billion lottery comes forward (well, their lawyer, anyway)
Winner of $1.5 billion lottery comes forward (well, their lawyer, anyway)

An anonymous person in South Carolina finally claimed the record-setting prize from October’s $1.54 billion Mega Millions jackpot, opting to collect a one-time lump sum of $877,784,124.

The state’s lottery commission announced Monday that the person had stepped forward, ending questions about why, five months after the winning numbers were announced, no one had claimed the money. It was the largest payout to a single lottery winner in U.S. history.

The winner had until April 19 to claim the money.

Winning the lottery comes with a long list of difficult decisions, which may explain the delay in making the claim. Thus far, the winner has followed the typical playbook to minimize or avoid potential complications: The person has stayed anonymous, and has gotten help.

The winner retained Jason M. Kurland, a New York lawyer who has branded himself the “Lottery Lawyer” after representing several high-profile winners. In October, Kurland told The New York Times that the biggest challenge is making sure the windfall does not ruin personal relationships.

“It’s natural there’s going to be a strain,” Kurland said. “It depends on how strong your relationships are before the lottery. If you’re really close with someone and they feel they deserve a gift, it’s really difficult. It’s one of the things winners are freaked out about when they come to me.”

The winner was fortunate to be a resident of South Carolina, one of a handful of states where winners are allowed to remain anonymous. In other states, winners have to sit through a news conference, and the publicity can attract all varieties of vultures who would look to take advantage.

The winning $2 ticket — 5, 28, 62, 65, 70; and the Mega Ball: 5 — was sold at a convenience store, KC Mart No. 7, in Simpsonville. The store’s owner, C.J. Patel, will receive $50,000.

The winner had about a 1 in 302 million shot to get it right.

The South Carolina Education Lottery Commission said in a statement that the winner “marvels at how every decision made that day brought the winner to the store, at that very moment, to make the Quick Pick Mega Millions lottery ticket purchase.” The winner had allowed another customer to make a ticket purchase in front of him or her in line, the commission said.

“A simple act of kindness led to an amazing outcome,” it said.

Lottery profits support higher education, scholarships, K-12 programs and community education programs, the lottery commission said. South Carolina will receive about $61 million in income taxes from the winner.

The winner chose the smaller lump sum over an annuity, which would have paid out the full $1.54 billion in smaller payments over 30 years. Most people take the one-time cash payment, but it is not an easy decision.

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

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