Edwin Castro became biggest lottery winner ever, winning a $2.04 billion Powerball prize. Here's how the California fires impacted his homes.
A historic Powerball winner has reportedly lost at least one of his multimillion-dollar homes in the wildfires burning in Southern California.
More than 560,000 other Powerball tickets sold in the United States also won prizes ranging from $4 to $150,000, the lottery said. The Powerball jackpot has not been hit since Dec. 7, when a New York player won the $256 million grand prize, lottery officials said.
If no one wins $331 million Powerball lottery jackpot for Saturday, Jan. 18, 2025, the next chance to win is Monday, Jan. 20, which is MLK Day holiday
Edwin Castro, the sole winner of the $2.04 billion Powerball lottery, lost one of his multimillion-dollar home to the California wildfires. After his record-setting win in November 2022 ...
A Maryland woman used numbers from a fortune cookie to win a $50,000 Powerball prize — with an assist from her daily horoscope, lottery officials reported.
The winning numbers in Saturday evening’s drawing of the "Powerball" game were: (fourteen, thirty-one, thirty-five, sixty-four, sixty-nine, Powerball: twenty-three, Power Play: two)
The jackpot for the Mega Millions lottery drawing on Friday, Jan. 17 hit $113 million after rolling over just five times. Here are the winning numbers.
The Mega Millions lottery jackpot was an estimated $113 million with a cash option of $50.4 million for Friday night's drawing, according to the Mega Millions website. The jackpot was last won on on Dec. 27 when a lottery player in California won $1.269 billion - the fifth largest Mega Millions ever.
The lottery jackpot was an estimated $303 million with a cash option of $132.8 million for Wednesday night's drawing, according to the Powerball website. The jackpot was last won on Dec. 7 when a New York lottery player won a $256 million Powerball jackpot.
When he won a record-breaking $2 billion Powerball jackpot in 2023, Edwin Castro began spending that money wildly, buying (among other things) a number of homes in California. Now, at least one of those is ashes, one of many victims of the wildfires burning in Los Angeles.