6 lotto winners who lost it all

Jun 9, 2010, 6:19 am (53 comments)

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The story of the 26-year-old garbage man who frittered away $15 million in lottery winnings — and other tales of luck gone terribly wrong

Want to know how to fritter away a multi-million lottery fortune?

Ask Michael Carroll: The unemployed 26-year-old Brit has blown a £9.7 million jackpot he won in 2002 (approximately $15 million at the time) and is currently hoping to get his old job back as a garbageman. At first, Carroll lavished gifts on friends and family, but soon started spending on less admirable causes: Cocaine, parties, cars, and, at one point, up to four prostitutes a day. "The party has ended," he recently told the UK Daily Mail, "and it's back to reality. That's the way I like it. I find it easier to live off £42 dole than a million." Though Carroll's laid-back attitude might be unusual, it's not that rare for lotto winners to lose their cash. Here, five more average Joes who won it big, for a while:

Money can buy haplessness: After winning $16.2 million in the Pennsylvania lottery in 1988, William 'Bud' Post should have had it made, but that was hardly the case for the shotgun-toting rough rider of Erie, PA. "His problems," reported The Washington Post, "included a brother who tried to hire a contract murderer to kill him and his sixth wife; a landlady who forced him to give her one-third of the jackpot; and a conviction on an assault charge, after Mr. Post fired a shotgun at a man trying to collect a debt at his deteriorating dream house in northwestern Pennsylvania." In 1996, the cash-strapped former millionaire auctioned off the rights to his remaining lotto payments. After repaying his lenders, he was again in the clear — that is, until he bought two homes, a truck, a luxury camper, computers, and a $260,000 sailboat. "I was much happier when I was broke," he said. He died in 2006, on a $450-per-month disability check.

The guy who couldn't catch a break: Vietnam veteran Wayne Schenk thought the $1 million New York lotto he won would pay for his costly lung cancer treatments, but the 51-year-old was wrong. New York lottery officials rejected his request to receive the amount in a lump sum. He only received one $50,000 payment — well short of the $125,000 initial outlay required for the specialized care — before he passed away in 2007.

Fool me once, shame on you: In a bizarre twist of luck, New Jersey resident Evelyn Adams won the state's lottery twice — and managed to squander her $5.4 million total winnings. Adams, a compulsive gambler, spent the bulk of her payout at Atlantic City casinos. She now lives in a trailer. "Winning the lottery isn't always what it's cracked up to be," she later told reporters.

Curse of the Powerball: It was called the gift of a lifetime: West Virginian Jack Whittaker won a $315 million Powerball jackpot on Christmas Day 2002. But when strangers descended on him demanding a piece of the fortune, he turned to alcohol and strip clubs. He also lavished cars, diamonds and cash on his granddaughter, 17-year-old Brandi Bragg. Bragg's life as a normal teenager spiraled out of control; she spent tens of thousands on shopping sprees, diamond stud earrings for boyfriends, chartered planes to Vegas — and lots of crack cocaine. Meanwhile, Whittaker's marriage disintegrated as he became notorious for his philandering ways, once offering a local woman $10,000 to strip and dance around in her panties (she declined). In 2004, two years after Whittaker won his fortune, his granddaughter was found dead of an apparent overdose. With the bulk of Whittaker's jackpot merely a memory, Whittaker told reporters his dream Powerball win had turned into a life's nightmare. "I wish we had torn the [lottery] ticket up," he said.

Philanthropic pauper: Janite Lee, a wigmaker who immigrated from North Korea to St. Louis, won an $18 million lotto jackpot in 1993. She used the winnings to better her community, sinking millions into the construction of a nondenominational church and a reading room at Washington University. She also donated so much to the Democrat National Committee that she was ranked 31st on a list of "soft money" donors — right beneath Boeing. Several of Lee's investments turned sour; she spent hundreds of thousands on gambling. Lee filed for bankruptcy in 1997.

The Week Magazine

Comments

beaudad's avatarbeaudad

In regards to the Michael Carroll Story........"don't quit your day job"     beaudad

rdgrnr's avatarrdgrnr

I think the Democratic National Committee should give Janite Lee all her money back.

That would be the "fair" thing to do.

They didn't come through on the hopey changey thingy.

I'm sure they'll do the right thing now though and come to her aid the way she came to their aid. It's nice to know they will be returning her money and she can come out of bankruptcy with her head held high and say: "See, I told you so! The Democrat Big Shots will never let you down or turn their back on you!"

I can't wait to hear the news when they hand her that check! I bet even Michelle will be proud to be an American for the 2nd time in her life! 

Yes We Can!

RJOh's avatarRJOh

Sounds like these players need to win a lottery real bad too.

https://www.lotterypost.com/thread/215491

stargazr

rdgrnr,

Amen, Brother

TnTicketlosers's avatarTnTicketlosers

We've done made plans just in case we win the big one.....You leave town,act poor,disappear into the unknown....

luckyshoes's avatarluckyshoes

Do you know how many people would suddenly be calling that you swore couldnt possibly have

gotten your phone number ????

billyloco

       I would settle for being a "poor" Lottery reciepient for just a measley million $$$...

I guarantee there would be a certain Catholic church in Lawrenceville GA benefit from 1/2 my payoff.....

and 1/2 of what i have left to buy the 4 acres that adjoins my cabin in the N. GA mtns....

the rest I would put into more gold. Party

Velocity's avatarVelocity

It's amazing how when some people win the lottery and then lose it all, they sit and complain like it's the lotteries fault. Really? Are you serious? Some of these people need told, "um, it's your fault you played all your money at the casinos, or on drugs, or whatever and lost it. The money was supposed to be a tool to help you live a better life. Instead you wasted it all, so that's YOUR fault." People will just be ghetto no matter if they have $1 or $1,000,000 dollars. If you look at very wealthy people, who have had their money for a long period of time, you really don't see them buying a whole bunch of crap, or spending millions at the casino. And the ones that do, they either overdose on drugs and die, or go bankrupt, look at MC Hammer. People still need to know how to manage their finances, and live on a reasonable budget. The problem with our society- we always live beyond our means.

pattyk's avatarpattyk

It would be great to win a HUGE jackpot, I would be happy with enough to pay off bills & get a fresh start!!!!!!--If, God willing I ever do win something HUGE, I pray that I'll do the right things, and not waste it all within a few years.

dpoly1's avatardpoly1

You don't have to end up like these people !

A big dose of moderation in life will keep you from going broke, and find a nice place where you can live without publicity ! No pictures or interviews when you claim the money !

There are people who win and you never hear much of anything about them again ..... don't look for trouble !

 

Here's looking for the first Mega Millions Jackpot winning ticket in PA !

No pics or interviews for me !  Dance  Woo Hoooooooooooooooooooooooo !

sully16's avatarsully16

sounds like these people were out of control ,probably had other issues in life to begin with.

diamondpalace's avatardiamondpalace

They were lucky enough to had a sweet taste and said it was sour.

Dr Lottery's avatarDr Lottery

Quote: Originally posted by rdgrnr on Jun 9, 2010

I think the Democratic National Committee should give Janite Lee all her money back.

That would be the "fair" thing to do.

They didn't come through on the hopey changey thingy.

I'm sure they'll do the right thing now though and come to her aid the way she came to their aid. It's nice to know they will be returning her money and she can come out of bankruptcy with her head held high and say: "See, I told you so! The Democrat Big Shots will never let you down or turn their back on you!"

I can't wait to hear the news when they hand her that check! I bet even Michelle will be proud to be an American for the 2nd time in her life! 

Yes We Can!

??? we need to keep our political views to ourself

joker831's avatarjoker831

Just plain stupid.  I know two people who have won lottery jackpots and yes they quit their jobs.  They have bought their dream houses, have nice cars, invested the bulk of their winnings, and now they both just travel and do what ever they want to do because they were smart about it.  One won a 27 million lottery and the other won 23 million.  I still keep in contact with both of them.  They and their families are doing just fine.

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