16 N.J. county workers have Powerball winning ticket
LITTLE EGG HARBOR, N.J. Sixteen workers from a county garage in New Jersey have one of the three winning tickets in the $448 million Powerball jackpot, officials in Ocean County said Thursday.
Ocean County Vehicle Maintenance Department Director Jim Pine and Freeholder Jack Kelly said the employees have the ticket sold at an Acme Markets store in Little Egg Harbor.
CBS New York station WCBS-TV confirmed the story, which was originally reported by the Press of Atlantic City.
A Minnesota man has claimed his third of Wednesday's jackpot.
The holder of the third ticket, also from New Jersey, has not come forward yet. WCBS-TV reports speculation is running rampant in South Brunswick, where that third winner was sold, about who bought it.
Ocean County's Pine said the Vehicle Maintenance Department employees showed up for work Thursday, which "ought to tell you something."
"I couldn't be more happy for them," he told the newspaper. "They're a group of wonderful, hardworking people."
Pine declined to disclose any details about the winners, saying he assured them he would respect their privacy.
Paul White, 45, a project engineer from Ham Lake, Minn., wasted no time before revealing his good fortune to the world Thursday and saying he had "been waiting for this day my entire life."
White said his family often gave him a hard time for frequently playing the lottery, and he had a tough time convincing many of them that he had finally won.
"The only person who didn't feel I was BSing them was my mother," a beaming White said at a news conference where he was joined by his girlfriend, brother and two colleagues.
White said he'll take a lump sum, which will amount to $58.3 million after taxes. Despite the minuscule odds of a jackpot win, White said he often daydreamed about how he'd spend his winnings if he won.
"I've totally been waiting for this day my entire life," he said, lamenting that he has to wait two weeks for his money. "Start the clock right now," he said, eliciting laughs.
White said his girlfriend called him Thursday morning to say a winning ticket had been sold in Minnesota, and he quickly checked the 10 he had bought the night before.
Mega-jackpot winners often wait days or weeks before claiming their prizes, giving them time to prepare and make legal arrangements. White said he had an attorney and financial adviser in mind, and wasn't afraid of the publicity.
White said he is divorced and has a 16-year-old son and 14-year-old daughter. He said his days working for a Minneapolis electrical contractor "are over," although he said he planned to help his boss, Ron Bowen, finish some projects before quitting.
The New Jersey ticket sold to the county workers came from an Acme Markets store in a Little Egg Harbor, a coastal community hit hard by Superstorm Sandy last year.
Phil Weber, the supermarket's director, said Thursday that the store would donate $10,000 in gift cards to local charities. Weber said some of the store's employees are still out of their homes more than nine months after the storm. The store itself has been making donations since Sandy, Weber said.
The third ticket was sold in a Super Stop & Shop store.
The winning numbers drawn Wednesday night were 5, 25, 30, 58, 59 and Powerball 32. Each winning ticket was worth $86 million before taxes, or $58.3 million after taxes, if taken in a lump sum. They are worth $149.4 million over 30 years if the winners choose the annuity option.