BATON ROUGE, La.(AP)
A construction company owner who lost two homes in Hurricane
Katrina claimed a $97 million Powerball prize, a jackpot won off a
ticket he bought at a convenience store where he stopped to buy his
wife a gallon of milk.
When he turned in the winning ticket, Carl Hunter became the
largest Powerball winner in Louisiana's history. He won the
jackpot in January, but the 73-year-old small businessman waited
nearly four months to claim the prize.
An avid lottery player, Hunter said he already had bought a
Powerball ticket on Jan. 16 at the gas station less than two blocks
from his home in the New Orleans suburb of Metairie. But he stopped
at the station again that day to buy milk _ at the request of his
wife, Dianne _ and got a second "quick pick" ticket.
"I had some change, and one dollar was used to buy this
ticket," Hunter said Thursday at the Louisiana Lottery Corp.
headquarters in Baton Rouge, where he claimed his prize.
"It's all about milk," his wife said, smiling.
The couple, surrounded by cameras, was decidedly low-key about
the multimillion dollar win, saying they didn't have specific
plans for the money _ besides retirement and the rebuilding of a
camp lost to Katrina.
"I'm retiring, you know, naturally," Carl Hunter
said.
Hunter took a lump sum payment that will give him $33.9 million
after taxes, according to lottery officials. Asked why he waited so
long to turn in the winning ticket, Hunter said he wanted to wrap
up some of his construction work and finish his outstanding
contracts. In fact, Hunter's wife Dianne said he was still at
work this week.
"I don't think about buying elaborate cars or
homes," Carl Hunter said.
Hunter said he owned two homes that were destroyed in 2005 by
Katrina, and he and his wife moved into a Metairie home she owned
after the storm, the home that was near the gas station where he
bought his winning ticket.
The multimillion dollar win wasn't Hunter's first
winning lottery ticket. He said he won $5,000 off a ticket a few
years ago.
West Metairie Shell, the gas station where Hunter bought his
ticket, will get $25,000 for selling the winning ticket. The
station, tucked among brick ranch homes and raised wooden houses in
a middle-class neighborhood, lost its roof during Katrina, and the
store was looted.
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