N.C. man wins two $25,000 a year for life prizes after accidentally playing same numbers twice

Dec 1, 2021, 11:43 am (27 comments)

Lucky for Life

RALEIGH, N.C. — The accidental purchase of two identical Lucky for Life tickets in Saturday's drawing produced not one but two $25,000 a year for life prizes for a very lucky North Carolina man.

"I was just laying in bed watching a basketball game on TV and I couldn't remember if I filled it out or not," said Scotty Thomas, a 49-year-old dump truck operator from Fayetteville. "I went ahead and filled it out again and the next morning my son asked why there were two different amounts listed. I realized, 'I think I filled it out twice.'"

Thomas received two emails because he bought the $2 tickets using the lottery's Online Play program on his smartphone. Winners get an email notification when they win.

"When I realized I won, I had to lay down on the floor because I really just couldn't believe it," Thomas said. "It's just a blessing."

When Thomas arrived at lottery headquarters Monday to collect his winnings, he faced a big decision. At age 49, he could take both prizes as annuities, receiving a total of $50,000 every year for the rest of his life. He could take one prize as an annuity — $25,000 a year for life — and the second as a lump sum of $390,000. Or, he could take both as lump-sum prizes of $390,000 each.

Thomas said he decided to take both prizes as lump-sum payments, $780,000 total, because he wants to invest in his business, pay off some bills, help out his family and possibly buy a house. After required federal and state tax withholdings, he took home $551,851.

Lucky for Life has a top prize of $1,000 a day for life. The second-biggest prize, $25,000 a year for life, is the prize that Thomas took home. Drawings are now held daily.

Lucky for Life is one of four lottery games in North Carolina where players have the option of buying their tickets through Online Play either through the lottery's website or with the NC Lottery Official Mobile App.

Ticket sales from games such as Lucky for Life make it possible for the lottery to raise more than $900 million a year for education.

Press Release

Comments

noise-gate

* Scotty is a lucky name.

Lynn-Lynn's avatarLynn-Lynn

Congratulations, on both of your wins

rdgrnr's avatarrdgrnr

He cleared $551,851.

He wants to pay off his bills, invest in his business, help out his family and buy a house.

That sounds a little ambitious to me depending on how much his bills are, how much help his family needs, how much he wants to put into his business and generally the inflated cost of real estate nowadays. Very ambitious.

He should have taken one in a lump sum and one in an annuity in my humble opinion. 

Bleudog101

Quote: Originally posted by rdgrnr on Dec 1, 2021

He cleared $551,851.

He wants to pay off his bills, invest in his business, help out his family and buy a house.

That sounds a little ambitious to me depending on how much his bills are, how much help his family needs, how much he wants to put into his business and generally the inflated cost of real estate nowadays. Very ambitious.

He should have taken one in a lump sum and one in an annuity in my humble opinion. 

I Agree!Like minds must think alike...thought the same thing.   Maybe he didn't want the annual tax burden?   Who knows.

Amazed that states with 'newer' membership if you will for lotteries are offering on-line purchasing of lottery ticket and many of the 'older' ones don't care enough about their consumers to even offer it.  No doubt that their hands can be tied as in the case of the Massachusetts lottery...but @ least tickets can be scanned @ home...so slowly getting there.   Only the 21st Century.

grwurston's avatargrwurston

If he takes the annuity on both prizes he'll end up with $35,375 a year after taxes. 24% Fed and 5.25% state. If he lives 25 years to age 74, he'll end up with $884,375 take home. That's way more than the $551,850 he got after taxes right now. If he does all the things he wants now, there might not be much left. 

If he splits it, one annuity, one lump sum, at age 74 he has $718,112 clear. And 558,925 at 65.

If he took the annuity on both and retires 16 years from now at 65, he'd have $566,000 after taxes.

If he blows the lump sum completely, the one annuity leaves him 159,188 at 65. And 442,188 at 74.

MADDOG10's avatarMADDOG10

I think I wouldhave taken (1) in lump sum, the other in annuity. 

Would always have something to fall back on.

MsBee18

Always take the lump sum. He made the right choice. 

kao1632

Quote: Originally posted by grwurston on Dec 1, 2021

If he takes the annuity on both prizes he'll end up with $35,375 a year after taxes. 24% Fed and 5.25% state. If he lives 25 years to age 74, he'll end up with $884,375 take home. That's way more than the $551,850 he got after taxes right now. If he does all the things he wants now, there might not be much left. 

If he splits it, one annuity, one lump sum, at age 74 he has $718,112 clear. And 558,925 at 65.

If he took the annuity on both and retires 16 years from now at 65, he'd have $566,000 after taxes.

If he blows the lump sum completely, the one annuity leaves him 159,188 at 65. And 442,188 at 74.

You didn't include the opportunity cost of getting the $884,375 over 25 years...

so you have to discount the value of the payments (by teh rate of inflation).. Meanwhile.. paying off debt and investing in a business can give a better return

 

Frankly.. Just buying a house now (IF US housing prices are anything like New Zealand).. $500k into a house today would be worth a heck of a lot more than $887k in 25 years (Typically houses double every decade or so... so.. near $2m...

JAMORA's avatarJAMORA

Quote: Originally posted by MADDOG10 on Dec 1, 2021

I think I wouldhave taken (1) in lump sum, the other in annuity. 

Would always have something to fall back on.

ditto....

sully16's avatarsully16

Congrats to the lucky guy, enjoy !  Party

Darren$27k

Really. Arguing over how he took his $2 dollar investment. Regardless anything over $2 is good. Why worry about the taxes. Look what he won. His money his decision.

noise-gate

Quote: Originally posted by noise-gate on Dec 1, 2021

* Scotty is a lucky name.

*So you knocking folk like : Scotty Pippen,Scotty Kilmer, how about Scotty from Startrek   Really? Yawn

rdgrnr's avatarrdgrnr

Quote: Originally posted by noise-gate on Dec 2, 2021

*So you knocking folk like : Scotty Pippen,Scotty Kilmer, how about Scotty from Startrek   Really? Yawn

You know you just responded to your own post and asked yourself a question, right?

I can't wait to see the answer.

noise-gate

Quote: Originally posted by rdgrnr on Dec 2, 2021

You know you just responded to your own post and asked yourself a question, right?

I can't wait to see the answer.

* Yes l did, because someone felt it necessary to downvote the mention of the name Scotty. Perhaps a past lover that cleaned out their bank account or left them with 3 young kids & took up with an 18 year old.  Asked & answered.

rdgrnr's avatarrdgrnr

Quote: Originally posted by noise-gate on Dec 2, 2021

* Yes l did, because someone felt it necessary to downvote the mention of the name Scotty. Perhaps a past lover that cleaned out their bank account or left them with 3 young kids & took up with an 18 year old.  Asked & answered.

** So now you know who did it? **

noise-gate

Quote: Originally posted by rdgrnr on Dec 2, 2021

** So now you know who did it? **

* l hope you liked your lunch!

rdgrnr's avatarrdgrnr

Quote: Originally posted by noise-gate on Dec 2, 2021

* l hope you liked your lunch!

** In the Blogs you usually tell me "I just handed you your lunch."  **

** Is that what you're trying to imply? **

**  That you handed me my lunch? **

CDanaT's avatarCDanaT

Someone gave you a lunch ?  Hope  you got some pumpkin pie for desert with a good cup of coffee.

rdgrnr's avatarrdgrnr

Quote: Originally posted by CDanaT on Dec 3, 2021

Someone gave you a lunch ?  Hope  you got some pumpkin pie for desert with a good cup of coffee.

Hey CDanaT,

You know I try to keep it simple with that guy cuz as you can see he doesn't have both oars in the water and his clutch is slippin'. It reminds me of a quote attributed to Bill Murray. He said: "It's hard to win an argument with a smart person but winning an argument with a stupid person is dam near impossible."

And I have found that to be true.

sully16's avatarsully16

Quote: Originally posted by rdgrnr on Dec 2, 2021

** In the Blogs you usually tell me "I just handed you your lunch."  **

** Is that what you're trying to imply? **

**  That you handed me my lunch? **

*** I think maybe Scotty ( nice name) ate the Lunch ***

Artist77's avatarArtist77

Quote: Originally posted by rdgrnr on Dec 2, 2021

You know you just responded to your own post and asked yourself a question, right?

I can't wait to see the answer.

He does this all the time. I have even seen him argue with himself. I think it is a sign of  schizophrenia.

And I would have also taken the cash for one win and the life payout for the other win.

rdgrnr's avatarrdgrnr

Quote: Originally posted by sully16 on Dec 3, 2021

*** I think maybe Scotty ( nice name) ate the Lunch ***

Oh, it's gone beyond that now. He's rambling incoherently about some ex-lover cleaning out his bank account and leaving him with 3 kids and running off with some 18 year old or something. 

The poor soul, he's just too high strung.

rdgrnr's avatarrdgrnr

Quote: Originally posted by Artist77 on Dec 3, 2021

He does this all the time. I have even seen him argue with himself. I think it is a sign of  schizophrenia.

And I would have also taken the cash for one win and the life payout for the other win.

Yep, he's definitely a half bubble off plumb.

CDanaT's avatarCDanaT

Quote: Originally posted by MADDOG10 on Dec 1, 2021

I think I wouldhave taken (1) in lump sum, the other in annuity. 

Would always have something to fall back on.

Great idea Maddog..... but considering you are almost 90, would you be willing to add me as the sole beneficiary to the annuity ??? Big Grin

Unluckyone's avatarUnluckyone

Quote: Originally posted by rdgrnr on Dec 2, 2021

You know you just responded to your own post and asked yourself a question, right?

I can't wait to see the answer.

LOLLurking

scentcrazy

Quote: Originally posted by rdgrnr on Dec 1, 2021

He cleared $551,851.

He wants to pay off his bills, invest in his business, help out his family and buy a house.

That sounds a little ambitious to me depending on how much his bills are, how much help his family needs, how much he wants to put into his business and generally the inflated cost of real estate nowadays. Very ambitious.

He should have taken one in a lump sum and one in an annuity in my humble opinion. 

I would have done the same thing one as a lump sum and one as an annuity.

msmillionaire's avatarmsmillionaire

Congratulations  on your 2 Big WINNINGS 💪💪👌👌👌

End of comments
Subscribe to this news story