Starr920's Blog

Massachusetts NYE Lottery Grand Prize Winner Hid Ticket Worth $7Million In Thermos

Kathleen Crewe, 57, of Millbury...

A Millbury woman who won the $7 million grand prize in the state’s first raffle game hid her winning ticket in a thermos and reported to work at a grocery store before surprising her kids with the good news this week.

Yesterday, Kathleen Crewe, 57, broke the news to her son and daughter that she’s one of the state’s newest millionaires.

After the New Year’s Eve drawing, she slipped the $20 ticket into a thermos and packed that safely inside a fire-resistant bag, according to the state Lottery. She brought her kids to the Lottery’s Braintree headquarters yesterday to claim her prize once it reopened after the long holiday weekend.

The overwhelmed lottery winner, who said her full address was printed in her hometown paper,Scared declined to be interviewed when reached at work today, as did a manager at Goretti’s Market in Millbury, where Crewe is the store controller and purchased the ticket.

She told lottery staffers she was “absolutely stunned” and planned to use some of the cash to help her mother complete home repairs.

The game’s second place winner, Ronald Tiemann, 47, of Plymouth, landed a $1 million prize. Tiemann, his wife and mother-in-law all purchased tickets and checked the winning numbers together. The self-employed IT specialist and father of two told the Lottery he plans to put some of the cash toward his daughter’s college fund and send his mother-in-law on an Italian vacation.

Crewe and Tiemann were not the only winners who showed up at lottery offices yesterday to collect their lump sum winnings. The lottery announced that there were 1,022 winners in the game, including 20 who won $50,000 each and 1,000 people who won prizes of $1,000.

Source:  http://www.bostonherald.com/news/regional/view/202201047m_lottery_winner_hid_ticket_in_thermos/srvc=home&position=5

Entry #230

Lawyer Must Reveal "Trust" Behind $14.3M Iowa Lottery Ticket Or No Payout

IOWA CITY, Iowa — A New York lawyer representing a trust that turned in a lottery ticket hours before the one-year deadline for a $14.3 million jackpot said Wednesday he will come to Iowa to explain the mysterious circumstances, including who will get the money and why they waited to claim it.

In his first comments on one of the nation’s biggest lottery mysteries, Crawford Shaw of Bedford, N.Y., told The Associated Press he is not the winner himself but is acting as the trustee for Hexam Investments Trust.   Asked who were the members of the trust, Shaw said, “That’s what I’m going to reveal to everybody” when he meets with Iowa Lottery officials in Des Moines next week. He promised to bring and release key documents, including a copy of the trust agreement.

Shaw signed the winning Hot Lotto ticket, which was turned in to Iowa Lottery headquarters by a Des Moines law firm he retained less than two hours before last week’s deadline. Lottery officials feared that no one would claim the ticket and were shocked when it surfaced with 110 minutes left to spare before its expiration. They say it’s unprecedented in the 26-year history of the lottery for a winner not to immediately reveal their identity and for a big jackpot to be claimed so close to the deadline.

Lottery spokeswoman Mary Neubauer said Wednesday that investigators had an initial conversation with Shaw, a 76-year-old international lawyer and business consultant, and were planning to meet him soon in-person to get their questions answered. She reiterated that Lottery officials will not pay the money until they are certain “there has been nothing amiss with the purchase of this ticket or with the possession of this ticket up to and including the time it was presented.”No No

Shaw said the meeting would likely happen next Tuesday or Wednesday.

“I think we have an interesting situation. I think everything will be OK when all the facts are put on the table,” he said in a telephone interview.

Shaw scoffed at claims made by several individuals that the ticket was stolen from them. Lottery officials say they are investigating the claims, which are routine for big jackpots that receive publicity.

“Crazy people are going on the Internet and saying the lottery ticket was stolen,” he said. “I didn’t steal for anybody.”

Neubauer said she does not believe Lottery officials have identified the person seen on surveillance footage purchasing the ticket on Dec. 29, 2010, at a Des Moines gas station near two busy interstates. She said investigators would “follow the trail” of the ticket from the time it was presented back to the person who bought it.

The winner has to decide within 60 days whether to take annuity payments valued at $14.3 million or a cash payment of $10.75 million.

Source: http://www.washingtonpost.com/national/new-york-lawyer-says-hell-come-to-iowa-to-reveal-mystery-behind-winning-143m-lottery-ticket/2012/01/04/gIQA6CJGbP_story.html

Entry #229

Smart Move - $50M Florida Lotto Winner A No-Show For Celebration

The Florida Lottery held a celebration at the Circle K on Capital Circle Northeast on Wednesday. Cynthia O'Connell presented the manager of the Circle K, Patrice Richardson, with a $150,000 check and a plaque to commemorate Florida's 1,000th jackpot winner, who bought his ticket at the Circle K that Richardson manages.

The Florida Lottery held a celebration at the Circle K on Capital Circle Northeast on Wednesday. Cynthia O'Connell presented the manager of the Circle K, Patrice Richardson, with a $150,000 check and a plaque to commemorate Florida's 1,000th jackpot winner, who bought his ticket at the Circle K that Richardson manages.


It can be hard to tell who is more impacted by a $50 million lottery ticket.

Richard McMullen, the 54-year old Tallahassee resident and jackpot winner, has stayed out of the public eye since the lottery results were announced last week. Florida Lottery officials said he has requested "minimal media coverage."

The Circle K where he bought the multi-million-dollar ticket, on the other hand, hasn't stopped buzzing with attention and customers hoping for lightning to strike a second time.

It's a strange situation, and one that was completely unexpected, said store manager Patrice Richardson. She was not in the store when McMullen bought his ticket, but she said figuring things out was easy once the media started calling.

"Tuesday (Dec. 27) we started getting the calls," she said. "By Wednesday (Dec. 28) everyone was coming in asking, 'Can I get a ticket?' It's everybody. Even people who have never even played before are coming in." Florida Lottery officials honored the Circle K on Capital Circle Northeast by Miccosukee Road on Wednesday for its contributions to the Lottery and for selling the ticket that created Florida's 1,000th jackpot winner — the ninth in Tallahassee.

McMullen was conspicuously absent from the celebration where Florida Lottery Secretary Cynthia O'Connell presented Richardson with a plaque and a check for $150,000 to commemorate Circle K's contributions to the lottery and the educational funds the lottery aids.

O'Connell said it's up to individual winners whether or not they choose to step into the spotlight after picking up millions of dollars. She said the real purpose of the lottery is to provide funds for education.Thumbs UpThumbs Up

Connie Barnes, spokeswoman for the Florida Lottery, said since 2001, Circle K stores across Florida have made $1.459 billion in revenue from lottery sales. More than $400 million of that has gone back to educational funds.

"It's all about education," she said. "The mission of the Florida Lottery is to build revenue for education. We make monthly transfers to the Department of Education. Hundreds of millions of dollars."

She added the lotto's partnership with Circle K and other retailers is "symbiotic." Jeff Powell, the regional operations director for Circle K in Florida, agreed. He was also present for the presentation of the $150,000 check.

"I'm very excited to be working with the Florida Lottery in this," he said. "This is some great exposure for us at Circle K and our partnership with the lotto is very strong."

Powell wasn't the only excited one. Tiffany Mitchell, a customer service representative at the now-famous Circle K, said she might try playing the same numbers for the next decade in the hope of winning a $50 million bonus. That was the strategy McMullen employed until he won the jackpot.

The winning numbers were 2, 11, 15, 19, 24 and 26. McMullen got all six correct on Christmas  Eve.

"As soon as they found out (McMullen) won, I was here in the store to hear all the hoopla," she said. "It was awesome. They say we have the lucky touch or the magic touch. Everyone is feeling the aura out here.

Entry #228

Texas Police Kill Eight-Grader - Handgun Turn Out To Be A Pellet Gun

BROWNSVILLE, Texas (AP) - The parents of an eighth grader who was fatally shot by police inside his South Texas school are demanding to know why officers took lethal action, but police said the boy was brandishing—and refused to drop—what appeared to be a handgun.

The weapon turned out to be a pellet gun that closely resembled the real thing, police said late Wednesday, several hours after 15-year-old Jamie Gonzalez was repeatedly shot in a hallway at Cummings Middle School in Brownsville. No one else was injured.

"Why was so much excess force used on a minor?" the boy's father, Jaime Gonzalez Sr., told The Associated Press outside the family's home Wednesday night. "Three shots. Why not one that would bring him down?"

His mother, Noralva Gonzalez, showed off a photo on her phone of a beaming Jaime in his drum major uniform standing with his band instructors. Then she flipped threw three close-up photos she took of bullet wounds in her son's body—including one in the back of the head.

"What happened was an injustice," she said angrily. "I know that my son wasn't perfect, but he was a great kid."

Interim Police Chief Orlando Rodriguez said the teen was pointing the weapon at officers and "had plenty of opportunities to lower the gun and listen to the officers' orders, and he didn't want to."

The chief said his officers had every right to do what they did to protect themselves and other students even though there weren't many others in the hallway at the time. Police said officers fired three shots.

Shortly before the confrontation, Jaime had walked into a classroom and punched a boy in the nose for no apparent reason, Rodriguez said. Police did not know why he pulled out the weapon, but "we think it looks like this was a way to bring attention to himself," Rodriguez said.

About 20 minutes elapsed between police receiving a call about an armed student and shots being fired, according to police and student accounts. Authorities declined to share what the boy said before he was shot.

The shooting happened during first period at the school in Brownsville, a city at Texas' southern tip just across the Mexican border. Teachers locked classroom doors and turned off lights, and some frightened students dove under their desks. They could hear police charge down the hallway and shout for Gonzalez to drop the weapon, followed by several shots.

Two officers fired three shots, hitting Gonzalez at least twice, police said.

David A. Dusenbury, a retired deputy police chief in Long Beach, Calif., who now consults on police tactics, said the officers were probably justified.

If the boy were raising the gun as if to fire at someone, "then it's unfortunate, but the officer certainly would have the right under the law to use deadly force."

Administrators said the school would be closed Thursday but students would be able to attend classes at a new elementary school that isn't being used.

Superintendent Carl Montoya remembered Gonzalez as "a very positive young man."

"He did music. He worked well with everybody. Just something unfortunately happened today that caused his behavior to go the way it went. So I don't know," he said Wednesday.

Gonzalez Sr. said he had no idea where his son got the gun or why he brought it to school, adding: "We wouldn't give him a gift like that."

He said he last saw his son around 6:30 a.m. Wednesday, when the boy said goodbye before leaving to catch the bus to school. And he said nothing seemed amiss the night before when he, his wife and their son went out for nachos then went home and watched a movie.

Gonzalez Sr. was struggling to reconcile the day's events, saying his son seemed to be doing better in school and was always helpful around the neighborhood mowing neighbors' lawns, washing dogs and carrying his toolbox off to fix other kids' bikes.

Two dozen of his son's friends and classmates gathered in the dark street outside the family's home Wednesday night. Jaime's best friend, 16-year-old Star Rodriguez, said her favorite memory was when Jaime came to her party Dec. 29 and they danced and sang together.

"He was like a brother to me," she said.

___

Source:  http://www.breitbart.com/article.php?id=D9S2MBH03&show_article=1

Entry #227

At 75, Marion Barry Gears Up For Another Campaign

WASHINGTON (AP) - As HBO considers making a movie about Marion Barrywith Eddie Murphy in the title role, the real Barry is doing something that comes naturally: running for re-election in the nation's capital.

Barry, the former four-term District of Columbia mayor whose legacy will always be tainted by his 1990 arrest after being caught on video smoking crack cocaine in an FBI sting operation, now plays the role of elder statesman on the D.C. Council, where he represents a poor, predominantly black ward.

At 75, Barry walks stiffly and slowly, having survived prostate cancer, a kidney transplant and a gunshot wound he suffered when Hanafi Muslims attacked city hall in 1977. But the man once dubbed the city's "Mayor for Life" says he has more influence than in more than a decade and fully intends to seek a third straight council term this year, even if the prospect makes some wince. He goes so far as to predict his victory margin in Ward 8, the neighborhood east of the Anacostia River where he remains popular, saying he'll capture at least 70 percent in the April Democratic primary.

"I have more white support than people say I do, but I don't worry about that," Barry said, referring to the ward he represents. "That's what frustrates some of these white people out here. They get frustrated, all worked up. They can't do a <snip> thing to me or about me. Isn't that funny?"

While Barry is quick to dismiss his critics and boast that he's won 10 of 11 election contests, there is one subject he won't discuss: the possible Spike Lee film about Barry that could star Murphy.

Barry's only comment on a project that could largely define his legacy for a younger generation came in the form of a Tweet addressed to Lee: "Please DM me."

And so it goes with Barry, the former 1960s civil rights activist who is a walking embodiment of Washington's complicated legacy of self-rule.

He's the most quotable and least politically correct of the 13 councilmembers, quick to call out his colleagues and unafraid to play the race card. During council hearings, he can seem distracted and disengaged—more interested in reminding people about his four terms as mayor than dealing with the issue at hand.

But he remains a player in district government.

While Barry initially supported former Mayor Adrian Fenty, he quickly turned on him, accusing him of ignoring Ward 8 to pursue projects in wealthier parts of the city. Barry is much closer, though, to Mayor Vincent Gray and Council Chairman Kwame Brown, who also hail from east of the Anacostia River, long a dividing line between the city's haves and have-nots.

Barry and Gray have known each other for three decades and worked together frequently. And Barry said he considers himself a mentor of sorts to Brown.

Asked about his clout, Barry said: "I've got more now than I've had since 1995, before the control board came in."

Barry was referring to his fourth and final term as mayor, when Congress seized control of city government following years of poor fiscal stewardship, much of it under Barry. He stepped down after that term ended but staged a comeback in 2004, winning the Ward 8 council seat. He was re-elected in 2008.

Councilmember Jack Evans said Barry "has more opportunity to make his voice heard" with Gray in office. But, at least so far, that hasn't translated into notable legislative accomplishments. While Evans considers Barry a friend and agrees with him on some issues, Evans said much of the legislation Barry introduces "is very costly, and as a consequence there's no way to pay for most of it, and it does not get passed for that reason alone."

Barry is quick to offer advice to Gray and Brown.

"He's somebody who's got a lot of experience," Gray said. "If he's going to talk to me about something, I'm going to listen, but at the end of the day, I'm going to make my own decisions."

Brown is more blunt about the limitations of Barry's influence. He has occasionally distanced himself from Barry's public statements and feuded with him on the council dais.

"Everyone wants to automatically—because I'm young and black—assume that I'm just Marion Barry," Brown said.

Last week, Brown sent Barry a letter warning him that he may have violated the council's code of conduct by using government resources to issue a news release criticizing Natalie Williams, one of his opponents.

Barry said he understands the political considerations that factor into city leaders' treatment of him. Barry served six months in prison for cocaine possession following his 1990 arrest, and controversy continues to dog him.

In 2006, he was sentenced to probation for failing to file tax returns for several years, and he still hasn't paid all the debts and penalties he owes. Last month, the IRS filed a lien against him for $3,200 in unpaid 2010 taxes. Barry makes $125,000 a year as a councilmember, and unlike some of his colleagues, he has no outside income.

In 2009, he was arrested for stalking a former girlfriend. The charges were dropped but drew attention to a $15,000 city contract he had steered to the woman. The following year, the council—then led by Gray—censured Barry and stripped him of his committee assignments. City ethics officials ultimately concluded Barry hadn't broken any rules.

Barry's time in exile lasted less than a year. After Brown became council chairman in January 2011, he tapped Barry as chairman of the Committee on Aging and Community Affairs. Barry now sits on five other committees—as many as any councilmember.

Meanwhile, current city leaders have faced ethical questions of their own.

Gray, Brown and Councilmember Harry Thomas Jr. are all under federal investigation—Gray and Brown for alleged campaign improprieties and Thomas for allegedly diverting more than $300,000 in city funds for personal use. Barry has cautioned against any rush to judgment and argued that the controversies swirling around district politics are largely media-driven.

"In America, you're innocent until proven guilty," Barry said.

Barry has also suggested that black officials are scrutinized more heavily than their white counterparts are, and he blamed three white councilmembers for deepening the racial divide by asking Thomas to resign.

If Barry is viewed as a pariah in some parts of the city, many of his constituents see him differently—as a champion of the underprivileged who as mayor used city government to put district residents back to work.

"He empowered African-Americans," said Vincent Hopkins, 48, an insurance salesman who lives in a gated community in Barry's district.

Former councilmember Sandy Allen was defeated by Barry in 2004, but worked on his 2008 re-election bid and is now his campaign manager.

"Marion is one of the greatest politicians that I have ever known," Allen said. Ward 8 voters have forgiven his many foibles, she said, because "they feel that he is one of them. ... He has not gotten so far above them that he does not understand their plight."

There is some discontent with Barry in Ward 8, but it has yet to coalesce around a single candidate. Several are challenging him in the April Democratic primary. Barry's opponents say the ward needs a councilmember who will bring more energy to the job.

"The same problems people had before he came to the city, they still have ... jobs, housing, the same problems," said Sandra Seegars, a longtime community activist who's running against Barry. "Ward 8 has not really improved."

Barry doesn't seem worried about his chances. And he enjoys needling his critics, including The Washington Post, which endorsed Barry's first three successful campaigns for mayor but wrote in 1994 that it wished it could have the third one back. The paper has extensively reported on his missteps.

"They can't touch me politically," Barry said of his critics. "The more they jump on me, the stronger I get.

Source: http://www.breitbart.com/article.php?id=D9S2MH501&show_article=1

Entry #226

Coulter Op-Ed: Iowa Shows Republicans Determined To Beat Obama

Some Republicans, we were led to believe, would only be satisfied with angry denunciations of Obama as a Kenyan colonialist and demands for Barack Obama's birth certificate -- without ever spending five minutes of calm contemplation to see that he had already produced it.

And if there's any place for a zealot to shine, it's in a caucus state like Iowa.

But Romney won -- in a razor-close finish with another plausible candidate, Rick Santorum.

So the fact that the Iowa caucuses avoided giving the gold to Newt Gingrich, Ron Paul or some other sure-to-lose candidate shows that Republicans are dead serious about beating Obama this fall. Even in Iowa, the only Republican with a chance of doing that won.

Conservatives are naturally suspicious of any candidate deemed "electable" on the grounds that the mainstream media always anoint the most liberal Republican, preferably pro-choice, as the "electable" one. And then that guy goes on to lose.

But just because liberals misuse the word doesn't mean there is no such thing as "electable."

Michele Bachmann was not electable as president because she is only a congresswoman, which is why she has now dropped out.

Newt Gingrich is not electable for many reasons including that he, too, was only a congressman; he took $1.6 million from Freddie Mac (his latest excuse is that he got only $35,000 of that money and the rest went to "overhead" -- there's a great fiscal manager); he cut a global warming commercial with Nancy Pelosi; and because he cheated on, not one, but two wives.

Ron Paul is not electable as president for several reasons, including that he is only a congressman, is bad on illegal immigration, favors drug legalization and is off the charts on foreign policy.

Rick Perry is not electable as president for three reasons: First, he seems too much like Bush; second, he gave illegal immigrants in-state tuition; and, third, uh, oops ... I can't remember the third reason.

As a two-time senator from a light-blue state, Rick Santorum is not as obviously unelectable as the rest. But don't leap too fast, Republicans. Remember how Rick Perry broke your heart


Read more: http://nation.foxnews.com/2012-presidential-race/2012/01/04/coulter-op-ed-iowa-shows-republicans-determined-beat-obama#ixzz1iZmJdsJu

Entry #225

Online Casinos Run by New York, Other States Will Target Gambling Addicts

Online Gambling

A new ruling that allows states to operate Internet gambling sites for profit will result in a system whose speed is stacked against compulsive gamblers, says former professional blackjack player Josh Axelrad.

Casinos taught me that gambling can be dangerous. A shift manager at the Hard Rock in Las Vegas threatened me one night that the next time I walked into his casino, I wouldn't be walking out. The problem was that I was a card counter: a professional blackjack player. When I was at the table, the casino was expected to lose. So they panicked, threatened, and at times practically assaulted me—all for playing lawfully.

Casinos hate playing without an edge. When you don't have an edge you risk losing control. I learned this when I tried to retire from blackjack. After supporting myself in casinos for five years, I discovered online poker in my home in Brooklyn. I was bad at this new game, but confident: a poor combination.

When I finally quit, I was broke. Fifty thousand dollars of mine had been beamed electronically to Gibraltar and the Isle of Man, where the websites I'd been compulsively using were based. It struck me that something was wrong.

It would have been weirder if I'd delivered that money not to private corporations, but to the state of New York. Such weirdness is now possible with a late-December announcement from the Department of Justice that threatens to transform not just what a lottery is, but what a state is and what it does. The decision could still be overruled, but as it stands, states can operate gambling sites thanks to petitioning by Illinois and New York.

The announcement reverses years of precedent that said all forms of Internet gambling violate the 1961 Federal Wire Act. The act was invoked in 2005 to prevent Illinois from obtaining an Internet lottery. In 2007, U.S. Attorney Catherine Hanaway told the House Committee on the Judiciary that the government viewed "all forms of Internet gambling" as "illegal under federal law."

But the state of the state has changed since then. Tax revenues languish below pre-recession levels, unemployment is high, and tax hikes are political poison. New income streams are a good idea. So Illinois asked the Justice Department to reconsider, this time with the help of New York, and together they hit the jackpot. The Wire Act now only restricts sports betting, not online lotteries, poker, or gambling in any other online forms. California, Michigan, Delaware, Virginia, and Maryland are among the states exploring this potential revenue source.

A likely model is Washington, D.C.’s “iGaming” program, the nation's first and most evolved state-sponsored Internet gambling initiative, which has been rolling along somewhat brazenly, gambling that the proper permission would come. Now that it has, the D.C. Lottery would include full-blown casino-style gambling, accessible round-the-clock at home. These games are considerably faster and more dangerous for players than the harmless-seeming, dollar-a-week scratch-card habit. I know from my poker experience that speed plus accessibility can turn a hobby into an addiction. Not to mention players’ lottery accounts are wired directly to their bank accounts.

“Addiction is very much about the speed,” said MIT associate professor Natasha Dow Schüll, author of the forthcoming book, Addiction by Design: Machine Gambling in Las Vegas, in an interview. "Faster play accelerates the addictive process."

Illinois Lottery Superintendent Michael Jones said Internet gambling actually may be safer, less likely to result in pathological or addictive play, because the state-run websites can limit the losses of players betting too much money. "Right now I can't control someone walking in and spending $1,000 on tickets in retail stores, but online I can prevent that," he said.

Just because he can doesn't mean he will. State lotteries have not impeded problem gambling, according to Keith Whyte, executive director of the National Council on Problem Gambling. "To claim otherwise ignores history," he said. "There's nothing to indicate lotteries have been more or less responsible than private companies."

Illinois has no current plan to limit individuals’ spending while gambling online. The D.C. Lottery will cap losses at $250 a week, or $13,000 a year, which is not a number particularly inconsistent with degenerate, compulsive play. But that's really no surprise. If the states want to emulate casinos, degenerate, compulsive play is where the money is.

Just look at Oregon: the bulk of that state's lottery revenue comes from slotlike "Video Lottery Terminals" available in places like bars, according to Oregon Lottery interim public affairs manager Chuck Baumann. The Oregoniannewspaper reported in 2009 that the majority of video gambling revenue in that state was attributable to a minority of players: a small 10 percent whose monthly losses averaged $500 each, month in and month out. These are the people powering the lottery.

It's the degenerates, not the dollar-a-week hobbyists, who will really fill the states' online coffers. One Josh Axelrad prepared to drop 50 G's in a year is worth a thousand of the dollar-a-week types. Gambling stimulates many but thrives on the few. It thrives on people like Long Khong, who was sentenced last week for embezzling more than $800,000 from a Denver employer to fuel his gambling addiction. Ralph Edward Staelgraeve turned himself in the same week on charges of embezzling $700,000 in Michigan, some of which he spent in a casino. Kevin McAuliffe, a 58-year-old Nevada clergyman, faces sentencing next week for stealing $650,000 from his diocese. These are just the latest examples of hardcore gambling gone wrong.

The ultimate responsibility with this tricky game lies not with the state or the casino, but with the individual. Finally embracing this concept helped me get up from that chair — as did Gamblers Anonymous and the fact that I was broke. I can't in good conscience complain about the vile designers of gambling websites who maximize game speed and encourage addictive play. That's their job and it behooves them to be good at it. Ugly work—but someone always does it.

That someone should not be the government though, fiscal problems notwithstanding. A broke state is preferable to a state dependent on breaking its own citizens to put cash in the bank.

Source:  http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2012/01/04/online-casinos-run-by-new-york-other-states-will-target-gambling-addicts.html

Entry #224

The 19 Smartest People The World Has Ever Seen

The end of the year invites reflection, a look back to the mistakes we've made and the successes we've achieved.  There is no question that a high IQ brings plenty of both. 

The following list has more than its share of tortured geniuses along with some ordinary folk doing their best to get along in the world.

Measuring IQ is an inexact science, and the following list is sometimes based on rumors and hearsay, but that's the only way to measure the smartest people in the world.

Paul Allen is alleged to have an IQ of 160

Paul Allen is alleged to have an IQ of 160

Alleged to have nabbed a perfect 1600 on the pre-1995 SAT, Allen beat out his Microsoft partner Bill Gates by 10 points, and

according to the Megafoundation is reputed to have an IQ of 160.

Allen must be smart to have convinced IBM, in 1980, that five year old Microsoft had a Disk Operating System

which would work on Intel chips when it didn't.

It was the pivotal move leading to the IBM contract, which has defined personal computing ever since.

Age:  58

Nationality: American

Job:  Chairman, Vulcan Inc.

Stephen W. Hawking is alleged to have an IQ of 160

 Stephen W. Hawking is alleged to have an IQ of 160

In an interview with MSNBC Hawking said: "People who boast about their IQ are losers."

However, his IQ is widely rumored to be 160. 

By his own account Hawking didn't learn to read until he was eight and went to University College, Oxford,

where his two lackluster final exam scores required a third, oral exam.

After being diagnosed with ALS, he declined taking a doctorate as he didn't expect to live long enough to make it worthwhile.

Though his life expectancy exceeded his expectations, concerns that the disease would diminish his genius prompted

Hawking to take the Mensa test to confirm his intellect remained unaffected.

Age:  69

Nationality: English

Job: Theoretical physicist and cosmologist

Robert Byrne is alleged to have an IQ of 170

Robert Byrne is alleged to have an IQ of 170

Byrne first showed his genius on the chess board in New York City and was one of the "Collins Kids,"

along with Bobby Fisher, taught by 20th century chess great John W. Collins.

According to Career and Test Byrne is reported to have an IQ of 170.

He was the chess columnist for the New York Times from 1972 until his retirement in 2006, at 78.

Age:  83

Nationality:  American

Job:  Professor, writer Chess Grandmaster

Judit Polgar is alleged to have an IQ of 170

Judit Polgar is alleged to have an IQ of 170

The strongest female chess player in history, Polgar beat Bobby Fisher to become the youngest

Grandmaster ever at 15 years, 5 months -- chess.com asserts she has an IQ of 170.

Polgar's father educated his three daughters at home with chess as the central subject. Judit

is an International Master and her two sisters are Grandmasters.

The experiment belied the assumption that women were naturally weaker players, and strengthened

the nurture over nature argument.

Age:  35

Nationality:  Hungarian

Job:  Chess Grandmaster, mother

Sir Andrew Wiles is alleged to have an IQ of 170

Sir Andrew Wiles is alleged to have an IQ of 170

In 1995, Wiles proved a 358 year old mathematical theory called Fermat's Last Theorem,

which until then was listed in the Guinness Book of World Records as the "most difficult math problem"

in the world -- according to Browse Biography he has an IQ of 170.

Proving the theorem also granted Wiles a small measure of popular celebrity.

He was mentioned in an episode of Star Trek and in the second and third books of Stieg Larsson's popular trilogy.

He was knighted in 2000.

Age:  58

Nationality:  English

Job:  Mathematics professor: Princeton

Jacob Barnett has a verified IQ of 170

Jacob Barnett has a verified IQ of 170

Image: YouTube

Jake didn't talk until he was almost three years old, when he started reciting the alphabet forward and backward.

According to the Indianapolis Star he has an IQ of 170*.

At three, his parents took him to a planetarium where he responded correctly to a question about the gravitational

pull of Mar's upon its moons, stunning the audience.

He is currently a student at Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis.

His YouTube video, talking about Einstein's Theory of Relativity is worth watching. 

Calculus on the window in the bedroom isn't bad either.

Age:  12

Nationality:  American

Job:  Student

*Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children

Benjamin Netanyahu is alleged to have an IQ of 180

Benjamin Netanyahu is alleged to have an IQ of 180

Benjamin Netanyahu was listed as number 11 on The World's 50 Most Influential Figures  2010,

by The New Statesman and according to townhall.com, has an IQ of 180.

Netanyahu left MIT in 1973 to fight in the Yom Kippur War, when hostilities concluded he returned and

earned a B.S.in Architecture.

Age:  62

Nationality:  Israeli

Job:  Politician

Bobby Fischer was alleged to have an IQ of 180

Bobby Fischer was alleged to have an IQ of 180

Fischer is credited with having an incredible memory and took the Stanford-Binet IQ test at his high school,

in Brooklyn where, according to chess.com, he scored 180.

Fischer was absolutely a troubled genius with renowned mental health problems, and he may also have

been the world's most intelligent outlaw.

Against a U.S.Department of State 1992 order, Fischer played a rematch against Boris Spassky in

Yugoslavia, then under economic sanctions, and remained a wanted man the rest of his life.

Born:  March 9, 1943 -- Died January 17, 2008 at 64.

Nationality:  American

Job:  Chess Grandmaster, writer

John H. Sununu is alleged to have an IQ of 180

John H. Sununu is alleged to have an IQ of 180

Sununu is a member of the Mega Society -- whose membership is composed of those with IQ's in the 99.9999th percentile -- one in a million, and is rumored by NNDB to have an IQ of 180.

Sununu became famous for his abuses of government travel while George H.W. Bush's Chief of Staff from 1989-1991, and was mentioned as recently as 2009 in the Family Guy episode: A Picture is Worth a 1,000 Bucks.

Age:  72

Nationality:  Cuban

Job:  Mechanical engineer, politician

James Woods is alleged to have an IQ of 180

James Woods is alleged to have an IQ of 180

Woods was a brilliant student who achieved a perfect 800 on the verbal and 779 on the math portions of the pre-1995 SAT. He attended MIT on scholarship and was described by IMDb as having an IQ of 180. 

Woods enrolled in a linear algebra course at UCLA while still in high school before accepting the full scholarship to MIT.

Age:  64

Nationality:  American

Job:  Actor

Marilyn vos Savant has a verified IQ of 186

Marilyn vos Savant has a verified IQ of 186

In 1985, The Guinness Book of World Records accepted vos Savant's IQ score of 190, and according to marilynvossavant.com, crowned her the woman with the highest IQ for five consecutive years -- she has tested as high as 228 on various IQ tests.

vos Savant was an outspoken critic of fellow genius, Andrew Wiles' Fermat Theorem, and wrote a book in 1993 asserting his methodology in the proof was flawed.

In 1995, following accusations that she did not fully understand various mathematical theories, she retracted her assertions and allowed for Wiles' methods.

Age:  64

Nationality:  American

Job:  Author

Garry Kasparov is alleged to have an IQ of 190

Garry Kasparov is alleged to have an IQ of 190

In 2003 Kasparov played to a draw against a chess computer that could calculate three million positions per second.

According to chess.nuvvo.com a German study found Kasparov to have an IQ of 135, other sources put the number as high as 190. 

Kasparov contends that IBM cheated during the computerized match where he was defeated by Deep Blue in 1997. He said he saw, "deep intelligence and creativity" in the computers moves that could only have come from human assistance.

IBM denied the allegation, refused to provide Kasparov with log files from the game, and retired the machine -- proof to Kasparov of "evidence tampering."

Age:  47

Nationality:  Azerbaijanian

Job:  Chess Grandmaster, writer, political activist

Philip Emeagwali is alleged to have an IQ of 190

Philip Emeagwali is alleged to have an IQ of 190

Emeagwali left school in 1967, at 13, to fight in the Nigerian-Biafran war, completed a self-study high school equivalency, got a B.S. in Math from Oregon State and three Master's Degrees in Math, Environmental and Marine Engineering from various schools.

He was reported by Sahara Reporters as having an IQ of 190.

Emeagwali sat for his Ph.D at the University of Michigan from 1987-1991, but when he was denied the degree he sued UM school for racial discrimination.

The case made it to the Michigan Court of Appeals where it was finally dismissed.

Age:  56

Nationality: Nigerian

Job:  Writer, speaker

Christopher Michael Langan has a verified IQ of 195

Christopher Michael Langan has a verified IQ of 195

Langan achieved a perfect score on the SAT, but dropped out of Montana State University after concluding his professors weren't qualified to teach him anything -- ABC's 20/20 measured his IQ between 195 and 210. 

Langan began talking at six months, and taught himself to read when he was three.

He says he lived a double life for years, manual labor during the day and complex equations in his head at night.

Age:  59

Nationality:  American

Job:  Construction worker, cowboy, forest service firefighter, farmhand, bouncer and writer

Kim Ung-Yong has a verified IQ of 210

Kim Ung-Yong has a verified IQ of 210

Yong could speak fluently at six months old and was a guest student in physics at Hanyang University by the time he was three.

He was described by Oddee as having the Guinness Book of World Records set his IQ at 210.

After leaving NASA at 16, he was offered enrollment at Korea's most prestigious universities, instead Yong chose a provincial college to earn his PhD in Civil Engineering.

As of 2007 he also serves on the adjunct faculty at Chungbuk National University.

Age:  49

Nationality:  Korean

Job:  Civil engineer

Christopher Hirata has a verified IQ of 225

Christopher Hirata has a verified IQ of 225

Image: Cal Tech

Hirata skipped middle school and at 16 was working with NASA on project exploring the possibility of colonizing Mars.

The Daily Princetonian, Princeton's student paper, where Hirata began attending for his PhD in Astrophysics at 18, reported that his IQ is around 225.

Age:  29

Nationality:  American

Job:  Assistant Professor, Astrophysics, Cal Tech

Terrence Tao has a verified IQ of 230

Terrence Tao has a verified IQ of 230

Image: wikipedia commons

At eight years old, Tao achieved a score of 760 on the pre-1995 SAT, received a Ph.D from Princeton at 20 and at 24 became the youngest ever full professor at UCLA.

His IQ is pegged at between 220 and 230 by the Davidson Institute

Tao says he learned to read by watching Sesame Street in Western Australia.

Age:  35

Nationality:  Australian

William James Sidis is alleged to have had an IQ of 275

William James Sidis is alleged to have had an IQ of 275

Image: wikipedia commons

With an IQ between 250 and 300, Sidis has one of the highest intelligence quotients ever recorded.

Entering Harvard at the ago of 11, he was fluent in more than 40 languages by the time he graduated and worked his way into adulthood.

Embittered over a 1918 arrest under the Sedition Act, Sidis spent the years from 1921 till his death at 46 in 1944 running adding machines and doing only menial tasks.

Nationality: Ukrainian American

Job:  Psychiatrist

BONUS: Sharon Stone is alleged to have an IQ of 154

BONUS: Sharon Stone is alleged to have an IQ of 154

Stone is widely reputed to have an IQ of 154. She also said she was a Mensa member, but retracted this claim in 2002.

At the age of 15 she accepted a scholarship to Edinboro University of Pennsylvania, where she studied creative writing and fine arts. She described herself as "a nerdy, ugly duckling," according to her online biography at Penn State University Library.

Age:  53

Nationality: American

Job:  Actress, model

The average American has an IQ of 100

Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/smartest-person-in-the-world-2011-12#william-james-sidis-is-alleged-to-have-had-an-iq-of-275-18#ixzz1hvhecrhL


Entry #222

Robert Reich: Get Ready For A Obama-Clinton Presidential Ticket

obama clinton

My political prediction for 2012 (based on absolutely no inside information): Hillary Clinton and Joe Biden swap places. Biden becomes Secretary of State — a position he’s apparently coveted for years. And Hillary Clinton, Vice President. 

So the Democratic ticket for 2012 is Obama-Clinton.

Why do I say this? Because Obama needs to stir the passions and enthusiasms of a Democratic base that’s been disillusioned with his cave-ins to regressive Republicans. Hillary Clinton on the ticket can do that.

Moreover, the economy won’t be in superb shape in the months leading up to Election Day. Indeed, if the European debt crisis grows worse and if China’s economy continues to slow, there’s a better than even chance we’ll be back in a recession. Clinton would help deflect attention from the bad economy and put it on foreign policy, where she and Obama have shined. 

The deal would also make Clinton the obvious Democratic presidential candidate in 2016 — offering the Democrats a shot at twelve (or more) years in the White House, something the Republicans had with Ronald Reagan and the first George Bush but which the Democrats haven’t had since FDR. Twelve years gives the party in power a chance to reshape the Supreme Court as well as put an indelible stamp on America. 

According to the latest Gallup poll, the duo are this year’s most admired man and woman. This marks the fourth consecutive win for  Obama while Clinton has been the most admired woman in each of the last 10 years. She’a topped the list 16 times since 1993, exceeding the record held by former First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt, who topped the list 13 times.

Obama-Clinton in 2012. It’s a natural. 


Read more: http://robertreich.org/post/14932718385#ixzz1hvcQoiDg

Entry #221

Nancy Pelosi's Daughter: 'My Mom Wants To Leave Congress'

Alexandra Pelosi, daughter of House Minority Leader and former Speaker Nancy Pelosi, told Big Government this week that her mother wants to leave Congress–and that she remains in Washington only at the behest of her campaign donors.

During a telephone interview, Ms. Pelosi–speaking from a friend’s home in New York City–described her mother’s predicament:

She would retire right now, if the donors she has didn’t want her to stay so badly. They know she wants to leave, though. They think she’s destined for the wilderness. She has very few days left. She’s 71, she wants to have a life, she’s done. It’s obligation, that’s all I’m saying.

Pelosi’s revelation is significant, given that her mother  pushed to serve as Minority Leader after the Democrats’ historic losses in the 2010 midterm elections, and that many Democrats–including President Barack Obama–are campaigning on the expectation that she will be restored as Speaker if they can retake the House in 2012.

Alexandra Pelosi, 41, is a television producer and documentarian who won multiple Emmy awards for her work on Journeys with George (2002), an HBO documentary on George W. Bush’s 2000 presidential campaign. The film was widely hailed as fair in its depiction of a president not used to sympathetic media portrayals.

In speaking to Big Government, Pelosi – who was polite and friendly throughout – also criticized CNN anchor Anderson Cooper:

Look, you guys are journalists, so you do what you have to do. I could give you chapter and verse on what’s going on in the media–and I’m not talking about Andrew Breitbart, I’m talking about Anderson Cooper–so as long as you guys tell the truth, just write whatever you want, and feel free to call me anytime.

In a follow-up exchange text message, Pelosi elaborated on her remarks about Cooper:

I make television - I know about editing! I worked at NBC for 10 years – I edit for a living. I just I know for a fact that 60 minutes and CNN have edited NP [Nancy Pelosi] out of context!

Minority Leader Pelosi’s departure would make room for her deputy and former rival, Rep. Steny Hoyer (D-MD), who currently serves as Minority Whip.

Hoyer is widely seen as more moderate than Pelosi. She opposed his election to the party leadership in 2006, choosing instead to back the late Rep. Jack Murtha (D-PA), despite his ethical challenges.

 Source:  http://biggovernment.com/jsshapiro/2011/12/29/exclusive-nancy-pelosis-daughter-my-mom-wants-to-leave-congress/

Entry #220

Afterburner With Bill Whittle: Three Years Under Obama

In his last Afterburner of 2011, Bill Whittle takes a look at the state of this country three years into Obama's rule and has amassed a list of breathtaking failures bound to stun and/or depress champions of smaller government. Solyndra, Fast & Furious, the Keystone Pipeline and the deficit are just a handful of the scandals that make Bill's blood boil. 

Entry #219

The Year Of The Lie - 11 Biggest Lies of 2011

Yes, Rick Perry may have made “oops” the word of the moment, but at least he wasn’t lying, he just plain forgot.  Nobody’s perfect.  We forgive a simple mistake; it’s deceit that becomes a lie we can’t forgive. So many big whoppers were revealed this year that 2011 might be called “The Year of the Lie.” 

Here are the 11 biggest lies of 2011:

#11.  Pakistan: “We don’t know where Usama Bin Laden is!”  Oops, the fact Usama was found 100 yards from a Pakistani military academy in a fortified compound has proved embarrassing both for the Pakistani military and for its civilian government, calling into question whether they knew about his presence in Abbottabad—or how they could have failed to know.

#10. John Edwards: “I did not break the law.”  Former presidential hopeful John Edwards first said he wasn’t the father of his former campaign aide’s child and then, when proof surfaced, he was.  This year he pleaded not guilty to federal charges that he solicited and secretly spent more than $925,000 in campaign contributions to hide his mistress and their baby from the public at the height of his presidential campaign. Edwards' lawyers argued that the secret spending was designed to hide the affair from his wife, Elizabeth, not to aid the campaign.  Oops, so much for his 2007 Father of the Year Award. 

#9. Michelle Bachmann: The HPV vaccine “can cause mental retardation.” After criticizing Texas Gov. Rick Perry for mandating a vaccine for school girls, Rep. Michele Bachmann claimed to have met a woman whose daughter suffered mental retardation from the vaccine, that it has "very dangerous consequences" and that it puts "little children's lives at risk." Oops, the American Academy of Pediatrics, which includes 60,000 primary care pediatricians, issued a formal response addressing her “false statements.” 

#8. Casey Anthony. She’s the Florida mother acquitted of killing her two-year-old daughter, Caylee, left an Orlando county jail as a free woman. Inexplicable was Casey’s carefree conduct for the 31 days following Caylee’s disappearance, as she stayed with her boyfriend, went to nightclubs, took shopping excursions, and got a tattoo that proclaimed "Bella Vita," beautiful life in Italian. All the while, she was telling her mother and her friends that Caylee was being cared for by a nanny. The problem: the nanny didn’t exist. Oops, she lied, but after 11 hours of deliberations, the jury found her not guilty of any involvement in Caylee’s death.

#7. Solyndra: Less than three months before declaring bankruptcy, the federally-backed solar power company Solyndra sent a memo to Congress describing the company as "ramping" up its production, that it was "competitive" with foreign rivals and "on track" to hit its financial targets for the year. Oops, taxpayers are now on the hook for nearly $530 million.

#6. Penn State And Its Administration. We are “Penn State proud!” Former defensive coordinator Jerry Sandusky has been charged with 40 counts of molesting eight boys over 15 years, but several men had the opportunity to end a horrific tale of child rape. For reasons only they can understand, they did not. These men who acted as role models for so many, could not find the courage, given the chance, to “do the right thing” and stop a colleague from hurting children.  Oops, they have to forever live with their consciences.

#5. Conrad Murray. Michael Jackson took the propofol himself! After Jackson’s personal physician was convicted of involuntary manslaughter, the judge blasted his arrogance, "lies and deceits," and violation of trust. Oops, Murray waited 30 minutes to call 911, told a security guard to hide the propofol, and lied to the hospital doctors about what medication he had given Jackson. 

#4. Herman Cain. “There is not an ounce of truth to all these allegations." After being confronted with sexual harassment charges, Herman Cain said the reason his story continued to change was that he was able to "gradually recall" the details of what happened. He accused five women of being liars, and oops, his candidacy has derailed.

#3. Mariah Yeater.  “Justin Bieber is, in fact, the father of my baby.” The teen idol’s legal team called the allegations made in a paternity suit "malicious, defamatory and demonstrably false.”  Oops, seems they were right, the suit was quickly dropped and Yeater’s 15 minutes are up.

#2. The Kardashians: “This was not an easy decision,” Kim said as she announced her divorce from Kris Humphries. Not an easy decision? It only took you 72 days to make! Worse, one day after she filed for divorce, her mother claimed they “didn’t make a dime” from the wedding.  Oops, reports are she earned $18 million for the event.

#1. Reality TV.  Can we all just agree that “reality” TV is not real?

Let’s make a New Year’s resolution to each other that in 2012, we’ll do better. 

Lis Wiehl is the legal analyst and contributor on the Fox News Channel and the author of the new book "THE TRUTH ADVANTAGE: The 7 Keys to a Happy and Fulfilling Life."

Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/opinion/2011/12/28/11-biggest-lies-2011/#ixzz1hvKPfUbM

Entry #218

New Book Claims General David Petraeus Almost Quit Over Afghan Drawdown

Petraeus CIA Afghanis_Kade.jpg

WASHINGTON –  Four-star general-turned-CIA director David Petraeus almost resigned as Afghanistan war commander over President Barack Obama's decision to quickly draw down surge forces, according to a new insider's look at Petraeus' 37-year Army career.

Petraeus decided that resigning would be a "selfish, grandstanding move with huge political ramifications" and that now was "time to salute and carry on," according to a forthcoming biography.

Author and Petraeus confidante Paula Broadwell had extensive access to the general in Afghanistan and Washington for "All In: The Education of General David Petraeus," due from Penguin Press in January. The Associated Press was given an advance copy. 

The book traces Petraeus' career from West Point cadet to his command of two wars deemed unwinnable: Iraq and Afghanistan. Co-authored with The Washington Post's Vernon Loeb, the nearly 400-page book is part history lesson through Petraeus' eyes, part hagiography and part defense of the counterinsurgency strategy he applied in both wars. 

Critics of counterinsurgency argue the strategy has not yet proved a success, with violence spiking in Iraq after the departure of U.S. troops, and Afghan local forces deemed ill-prepared to take over by the 2014 deadline. 

The book unapologetically casts Petraeus in the hero's role, as in this description of the Afghanistan campaign: "There was a new strategic force released on Kabul: Petraeus' will." 

Broadwell does acknowledge that Petraeus rubs some people the wrong way. 

"His critics fault him for ambition and self-promotion," she writes. But she adds that "his energy, optimism and will to win stand out more for me."

The book also is peppered with Petraeus quotes that sound like olive branches meant to soothe Obama aides who feared Petraeus would challenge their boss for the White House.

"Petraeus tried to make clear that he and Obama were in synch," Broadwell writes of Petraeus' Senate testimony on the Afghan war. 

The book describes Petraeus' frustration at still being labeled an outsider from the Obama administration, even as he retired from the military at Obama's request before taking the job last summer as the CIA's 20th director. 

The book depicts Petraeus' rise at an unrelenting, near-superhuman pace. He starts his career as a fiercely competitive West Point cadet known as "Peaches," where he famously wooed the school superintendent's daughter, Holly Knowlton. He went on to command the 101st Airborne Division as part of the invasion of Iraq, then masterminded the rewrite of the Army and Marine Corps' counterinsurgency training manual before returning to command the surge in Baghdad. He was then appointed to head Central Command, overseeing the campaigns in Iraq and Afghanistan as well as military affairs across much of the Gulf and the Mideast. 

He accepted a cut in authority and pay to lead the Afghanistan war campaign when Gen. Stanley McChrystal was forced to resign after a Rolling Stone article that "scorched the general (McChrystal) and his aides, caricaturing them as testosterone-addled frat boys as they insulted Obama" and other officials, Broadwell writes. 

She describes how Petraeus' first act was to lift McChrystal's restrictions on the use of force -- especially on airstrikes -- if civilians were nearby.

"There is no question about our commitment to reducing civilian loss of life," Petraeus told his staff. There was, however, "a clear moral imperative to make sure we are fully supporting our troops in combat."

Broadwell adds that the problem, according to Petraeus, was less McChrystal's order than how it was even more strictly re-interpreted by lower commanders. 

In her account, Petraeus also faults McChrystal for overpromising and underdelivering in places like Taliban-riddled Marjah in the south, producing months of embarrassing headlines that hurt the war effort back in Washington.

But the book also includes Petraeus' own Rolling Stone-esque moment, when he was quoted badmouthing the White House in Bob Woodward's latest book, "Obama's Wars." A frustrated Petraeus is described as telling his inner circle, on a flight after a glass of wine, that "the administration was (expletive) with the wrong guy."

"Petraeus later expressed his displeasure to all of them for betraying his confidence," Broadwell wrote. "But he knew he was ultimately responsible for making the intemperate remark," a candid admission, through Broadwell, of his lapse in judgment. 

He also concedes the Afghan war is not yet won.

"He had wanted to hand (Marine Corps Gen. John) Allen ... a war that had taken a decisive turn," Broadwell writes of what had been Petraeus' goal for his successor. "He knew that, despite the hard-fought progress, that wasn't yet the case." 

Yet that admission also presents a get-out clause when combined with the book's account that he considered resigning over the rapid drawdown of troops, neatly removing Petraeus from responsibility if the war goes wrong. 

And the account does nothing to puncture the mythology his troops built up around him, something an early mentor, retired Gen. Jack Galvin, told Petraeus to embrace. 

"They want you to be bigger than you are, so they magnify you," Galvin said in an interview with Broadwell. "Live up to it all with the highest standards of integrity. You become part of a legend." 

"All In" fits neatly into that.


Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/us/2011/12/29/new-book-says-petraeus-almost-quit-over-afghan-drawdown/?intcmp=trending#ixzz1hvIO1mVV

Entry #217

Tallahassee Florida Man Claims $50 Million Lotto Jackpot

 

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (WTXL) - A Tallahassee man is $50 million dollars richer after claiming his winning lottery ticket.  Richard McMullen, 54, of Tallahassee, claimed the $50 million Florida LOTTO™ jackpot prize from the drawing held on December 24, 2011. 

Saturday night’s Florida LOTTO™ winner is not the only one celebrating! Saturday’s LOTTO drawing produced the 1,000th jackpot-winning ticket since the game’s inception in April 1988, resulting in a bonus commission of $150,000 for the retailer that sold the winning ticket. 

“We are very excited to be celebrating our 1,000th jackpot winning ticket. This is not only a win for the lucky FLORIDA LOTTO player, but also for the retailer that sold the winning ticket.” said Florida Lottery Secretary Cynthia O’Connell. 

The winning numbers were 2-11-15-19-24-26 and the XTRA® multiplier was 5. The winning ticket was purchased at Circle K, located at 1848 Capital Circle N.E. in Tallahassee. 

According to McMullen, he has been playing the same six LOTTO numbers for more than 10 years. It has always been understood that any jackpot winnings would be shared among the family. “This is definitely our most memorable Christmas ever,” said McMullen. 

The Florida Lottery is reporting that the single winning ticket for Christmas Eve's $50 million Florida Lotto jackpot was sold at a Circle K store in Tallahassee. 

The winning numbers are: 2-11-15-19-24-26 Multipler X5. 

The next Florida Lotto jackpot is $2 million and will be drawn on December 28. 

Entry #216