First winner of big Illinois Lotto jackpot didn't let riches change him

Dec 27, 2014, 12:42 pm (31 comments)

After the Big Win

Mike Wittkowski is no longer famous, and he's just fine with that.

In 1984, he was a 28-year-old North Side bachelor dreaming of hitting it big — just like everybody else — in a relatively new Illinois Lotto game that was building to a $40 million jackpot.

Unlike everybody else Sept. 1, he did win, picking the numbers 2-3-10-26-30-43 and pocketing what was at the time the single-largest lottery prize in U.S. history.

Flashback reader Bob Angone, of the South Loop, said he was at a wedding that Saturday and the "whole affair was put on hold" while the winning numbers were announced. Jim Michie, of Palatine, remembered the hype and asked about the winner. "I always wondered what happened to the man and how the prize affected him," Michie wrote.

Well, by all reports, the prize didn't change Wittkowski one little bit, which is exactly what his friend predicted. Mike Jarecki told the Tribune on Sept. 3, 1984, "He's not going to change much. I mean, he'll be wearing jeans and gym shoes a few months from now, but he'll have that $40 million in his pockets."

Wittkowski said last week that he survived the tumult and temptation because of his family. "The first couple of months were crazy. Insane," he said. "I was getting death threats and bomb threats. But I had all the support in the world," he said.

He shared the money with his father, brother and sister, successfully appealing to the Illinois Lottery Control Board that November to declare all four of them equal winners, which saved the family tons of dough in taxes versus Wittkowski collecting the money and gifting portions of it to them.

While he tried to go back to his $20,000-a-year printing job, it didn't in the end make much sense, and he retired. He married his fiancée and started a family. "(The lottery win) gave me freedom and made things a whole lot easier," he said.

One of the enduring elements of Wittkowski's story, something that helped cement his guy-next-door reputation that so many Chicagoans remembered, was a comment he made — he thinks he said it on that first crazy day — that he was going to buy a bowling alley with his newfound fortune.

"That was just an offhand comment," Wittkowski explained last week in setting the record straight. "It blew up into something. I never did buy a bowling alley."

The lottery checks stopped coming 10 years ago, and Wittkowski said the historic windfall never comes up in conversation anymore, and "that's the way I like it."

For Wittkowski, winning the lottery 30 years ago was "absolutely" the luckiest thing that ever happened to him, but it wasn't the best thing. "That's gotta be my kids — my three boys — and my wife," he said.

Chicago Tribune

Comments

music*'s avatarmusic*

Mike Wittkowski , I hope you win big again.    Death threats and bomb threats the first couple of months? There are crazy people out there.  I would love to go public for the sake of all the Lottery employees across the nation. But reading about the crazies makes me cautious.

 Good for him that he survived and thrived on the annuity payment plan. Mike shared with his family. 

Party

Ron5995

While smallish jackpots, say under a million or so, tend to be of little issue to most winners, anything much larger presents huge risks, as the subject of the article experienced - even relatives and close friends can be threats.

Thankfully, lotteries have taken note and are increasingly allowing winners to remain more anonymous than was possible in the past. For example, about a year ago, Pennsylvania stopped publishing winner's full name and city. Winners are identified by first name and initial only, along with their county of residence. A huge improvement.

lottoguysocal's avatarlottoguysocal

Talk about a feel good story.  This lottery winner, while there are probably a few more out there, is the epitome of a winner who hadn't gone crazy.  No outlandish spending that was reported, divided the money up with family the smart way, and really just enjoyed his fortune and good luck.  Hats off to Mr. Wittkowski and his lucky days.  While times are different now, the old school method of living within ones means still applies today.  Future lottery winners should look at him as an example of what to do.  Bravo, Mr. Wittkowski, Bravo.  The only thing that hasn't changed, is that no matter the time, win big, and you still have to deal with the threats and foolishness...lol.

ThatScaryChick's avatarThatScaryChick

He sounds well-adjusted and he obviously handled his windfall very well.

Drenick1's avatarDrenick1

Good story. His friend like most others were delusional thinking he received the ENTIRE $40 million up front with absolutely no taxes. He ended up splitting the $40 million annuity with his family 4 ways giving each a pre-tax yearly amount of $500k for 20 years.

I am sure his father , brother and sister all had enjoyed their lives as well thanks to their brother's/son generosity.

MADDOG10's avatarMADDOG10

For only being 28 yrs old when he won the Lottery, he was well adjusted beyond his years.

Also the fact he shared with his family shows a true upbringing from his parents.  Good Story...!

HaveABall's avatarHaveABall

Quote: Originally posted by ThatScaryChick on Dec 27, 2014

He sounds well-adjusted and he obviously handled his windfall very well.

Group Hug Yes, Mike's own young family of five lived very comfortably, not extravagantly these past 30 years.  That's the only way he was able to retire and take on the huge responsibility of paying for rearing four additional people in a very comfortable lifestyle.

If Mike paid for his three sons to earn their own Bachelors degree, he and his wife probably only have $1.5M left to live on the interest of for the rest of their lives.  It would have been smarter for him to have only split the jackpot money 3 ways ... and each of those 3 'max. amount gifted' the 4th person each year for the rest of their life (taking rotation letting that person live 10 years or so with each of the 3 jackpot splitters).  Ah well.

Santa Snowman Christmas

HaveABall's avatarHaveABall

Seeking help from a fellow gambling Illinoisan ... Rudolph

Concerning the twice daily drawn Illinois pick 5 game (called Lucky Day Lotto).  I am wondering which drawing during the past 12 months has garnered more jackpot wins -- is it the midday drawing or evening drawing, please?  [Sadly, the lotterypost.com's results pages doesn't specify via a chart breakdown.]

Also, if you could direct me to where this vital information is being tracked, I would be super thrilled for that future reference information too.  Thanks, in advance, for your strong technical/analytical efforts and help!

orca1537

i had 5 numbers and knew he won 40 million glad this was posted lots of memories i had 25 instead of the number 26 glad his life turned out like it did !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

noise-gate

Well said Mike: Family!!!

Great story.l love happy endings- don't you?

Coin Toss's avatarCoin Toss

This is the guy that said he was going to keep working.

We had just got cable TV and Super Stations in Vegas at that time and we saw WGN with this report in the break room. One of the guys on break was from Detroit and when Wittowski said he's keep working the guy from Detroit said, "What else could you expect from a 'poll**k'.

Green laugh

HaveABall's avatarHaveABall

Quote: Originally posted by orca1537 on Dec 27, 2014

i had 5 numbers and knew he won 40 million glad this was posted lots of memories i had 25 instead of the number 26 glad his life turned out like it did !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Wow, close.  What a horrible loss memory dredged up then! Confused

mypiemaster's avatarmypiemaster

Quote: Originally posted by Coin Toss on Dec 27, 2014

This is the guy that said he was going to keep working.

We had just got cable TV and Super Stations in Vegas at that time and we saw WGN with this report in the break room. One of the guys on break was from Detroit and when Wittowski said he's keep working the guy from Detroit said, "What else could you expect from a 'poll**k'.

Green laugh

Sour grapes and jealousy make the mouth say the dumbest things. Red Devil

Teddi's avatarTeddi

Three things struck me

  1. That $40 million was at some point, a record breaking amount, now it's a starting off point. 30 years from now will people consider $600 million jackpots blasé?
  2. He actually won a fight in which he got to pay LESS taxes. Wow.
  3. He was getting death threats even before the information age swung into gear. Unnecessarily stressful, fear-filled situation. Anonymity needs to be an option in every state.

Anyway, good for him. It's good to read stories about  grounded Winners who haven't lost it all. Party

HaveABall's avatarHaveABall

Quote: Originally posted by Teddi on Dec 28, 2014

Three things struck me

  1. That $40 million was at some point, a record breaking amount, now it's a starting off point. 30 years from now will people consider $600 million jackpots blasé?
  2. He actually won a fight in which he got to pay LESS taxes. Wow.
  3. He was getting death threats even before the information age swung into gear. Unnecessarily stressful, fear-filled situation. Anonymity needs to be an option in every state.

Anyway, good for him. It's good to read stories about  grounded Winners who haven't lost it all. Party

I Agree!, Teddi! See Ya!

noise-gate

It would seem that even though the checks stopped coming a decade ago- he has no regrets. One can only think of those who won and decided to take the " Cash option" and blew through their winnings in 5-10 years.. or less.Shocked

shadowlady's avatarshadowlady

I am happy to read a story about someone who did well with their life after a big win.   My husband and I are not sure whether we would take an annuity or cash.  It would depend on the amount won.

Coin Toss's avatarCoin Toss

Teddi,

Didn't need the information age back then. He was working in a print shop in Chicago, the story appeared on WGN-TV which was/is a "super-station" back then, so the story went nation-wide to anyone with cable.

Have A Ball.

The only thing I know to do is track it day by day on the Illinois lottery site. On the home page just click on Lucky Day Lotto and then payouts for Midday and Evening.

PrinceRene

Quote: Originally posted by Teddi on Dec 28, 2014

Three things struck me

  1. That $40 million was at some point, a record breaking amount, now it's a starting off point. 30 years from now will people consider $600 million jackpots blasé?
  2. He actually won a fight in which he got to pay LESS taxes. Wow.
  3. He was getting death threats even before the information age swung into gear. Unnecessarily stressful, fear-filled situation. Anonymity needs to be an option in every state.

Anyway, good for him. It's good to read stories about  grounded Winners who haven't lost it all. Party

That $40 million was at some point, a record breaking amount, now it's a starting off point. 30 years from now will people consider $600 million jackpots blasé?

I have no doubt that will be the case. It's 2014 and there are already some people who consider any jackpot under $200 million unimpressive. I'm not one of these people.

One-Day

Edit: sorry, wrong article.

SoleWinner21

That gift tax BS really pisses me off. They already take out a good amount in tax when you win. Now you shell out more for giving someone as a gift. What about all that wasteful spending the government does yearly. Fcuking unbelievable

HaveABall's avatarHaveABall

Quote: Originally posted by SoleWinner21 on Dec 29, 2014

That gift tax BS really pisses me off. They already take out a good amount in tax when you win. Now you shell out more for giving someone as a gift. What about all that wasteful spending the government does yearly. Fcuking unbelievable

Yeah, SoleWinner21, I would be okay to have a max $4M gifting amount during one's LIVING lifetime without taxation ... where one could give that $4M as a lump sum; rather than dragging/spreading it out at the current good 'ole U.S.A. limit of $14K (tax free to both sender and receiver) per year!

Teddi's avatarTeddi

Quote: Originally posted by noise-gate on Dec 28, 2014

It would seem that even though the checks stopped coming a decade ago- he has no regrets. One can only think of those who won and decided to take the " Cash option" and blew through their winnings in 5-10 years.. or less.Shocked

I've seen more than a few people on TLCML and COTL who filed for bankruptcy or simply lost it all who took the annuity. Graduated payments mean nothing to those who simply can't live within a set budget.

Teddi's avatarTeddi

Quote: Originally posted by PrinceRene on Dec 29, 2014

That $40 million was at some point, a record breaking amount, now it's a starting off point. 30 years from now will people consider $600 million jackpots blasé?

I have no doubt that will be the case. It's 2014 and there are already some people who consider any jackpot under $200 million unimpressive. I'm not one of these people.

You're probably right. Less than $300 million doesn't even make it in the News any more. I'm with you. I get excited about any win. A $20 win had me grinning like an idiot for an entire day. I'd probably do backflips if I won $40 million.

DC81's avatarDC81

Quote: Originally posted by Teddi on Dec 28, 2014

Three things struck me

  1. That $40 million was at some point, a record breaking amount, now it's a starting off point. 30 years from now will people consider $600 million jackpots blasé?
  2. He actually won a fight in which he got to pay LESS taxes. Wow.
  3. He was getting death threats even before the information age swung into gear. Unnecessarily stressful, fear-filled situation. Anonymity needs to be an option in every state.

Anyway, good for him. It's good to read stories about  grounded Winners who haven't lost it all. Party

That 40 million in 1984 would be equal to a bit over 90 million today though.

Teddi's avatarTeddi

Quote: Originally posted by DC81 on Dec 29, 2014

That 40 million in 1984 would be equal to a bit over 90 million today though.

Good point. I completely forgot to factor in inflation. Even so, a $90 million jackpot win would only make it into local news...if it even does. No one would care unless there was something else involved to make it newsworthy, like being won by a vet or a homeless person or the winner gave it all away...something in that vein. It just seems unbelievable that at some point a $40 million was a big enough deal to be a national event.

haymaker's avatarhaymaker

Quote: Originally posted by Teddi on Dec 29, 2014

Good point. I completely forgot to factor in inflation. Even so, a $90 million jackpot win would only make it into local news...if it even does. No one would care unless there was something else involved to make it newsworthy, like being won by a vet or a homeless person or the winner gave it all away...something in that vein. It just seems unbelievable that at some point a $40 million was a big enough deal to be a national event.

True enough,

But the thing is, back then many states did'nt have lottery and there was no MM or PB.

fwlawrence's avatarfwlawrence

Quote: Originally posted by PrinceRene on Dec 29, 2014

That $40 million was at some point, a record breaking amount, now it's a starting off point. 30 years from now will people consider $600 million jackpots blasé?

I have no doubt that will be the case. It's 2014 and there are already some people who consider any jackpot under $200 million unimpressive. I'm not one of these people.

I remember waiting in line for a $70 million jackpot but that was over 25years ago!

dallascowboyfan's avatardallascowboyfan

Good for your Mike Wittkowski Hurray!

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