Florida lottery winner claims $1.6 billion prize, but identity still secret

FILE PHOTO: The display in a store shows the Mega Millions lottery jackpot at $1.55-billion

(Reuters) -The second-largest lottery winner in U.S. history has come forward to claim the $1.6 billion prize, but the person’s identity may remain a secret for another 90 days, the Florida Lottery said on Wednesday.

The Mega Millions jackpot was claimed on Monday, seven weeks after the Aug. 8 drawing, Florida Lottery said in a statement. Florida is one of 45 states plus Washington, D.C., and the U.S. Virgin Islands to participate in Mega Millions.

The lottery went for 31 twice-weekly drawings without a winner until a ticket buyer at a Publix supermarket in Neptune Beach, about 15 miles (24 km) east of Jacksonville, matched all six numbers.

Mega Millions said the $1.602 jackpot was the largest in its history, topping a $1.537 billion prize that was won in South Carolina in 2018.

That would rank it second behind the record set in the rival Powerball lottery, which was a $2.04 billion jackpot for a ticket sold in California in November 2022, according to Powerball’s website.

The Florida Mega Millions winner will have the option of claiming the full amount paid in a 30-year annuity or taking a lump sum of $794.2 million cash, according to the Mega Millions website. Winnings are taxed.

Under Florida law, lottery winners who claim prizes of $250,000 or more do not have to reveal their identities publicly until 90 days after the prize is claimed.

For a $2 ticket, the odds of winning the jackpot are about 1 in 300 million.

(Reporting by Daniel Trotta; Editing by Jamie Freed)

Reuters

Related posts

New Jersey Assemblyman Paul Kanitra Discusses Mikie Sherrill, Offshore Wind, and “Crazy Leftist Policies” on Fox News

Mikie Sherrill Doubles Down on One Big Beautiful Lie, Blaming Trump for New Jersey’s Energy Crisis

Phil Murphy’s Solar Shift Blocked by Trump as “Solar for All” Federal Grants Terminated