-
‘I lost me’: How frontotemporal dementia changed a mind and a marriage - 6 mins ago
-
‘If I Live to 25, I’ve Lived a Good Life’ - 28 mins ago
-
4 Subtle Signs Reveal If You’re ‘Doing Well,’ According to Finance Experts - 33 mins ago
-
Who Won $1.8-Billion Powerball Jackpot? See Saturday’s Winning Numbers - about 1 hour ago
-
Homeless and Hungry, Gazans Fear a Repeat of 1948 History - about 1 hour ago
-
Exclusive—Melania Trump’s Immigration Lawyer Condemns White House Visa Move - 2 hours ago
-
South Korea Negotiates Release of Korean Workers Detained in Georgia Raid - 2 hours ago
-
BetMGM Bonus Code NW150: Get Upgraded $150 Bonus For Any NFL Week 1 Game - 2 hours ago
-
Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba of Japan Will Step Down, Reports Say - 3 hours ago
-
Ukraine’s Main Government Building Hit for First Time in Russian Attack - 3 hours ago
Powerball jackpot climbs to $1.1 billion, with next drawing on Monday
The Powerball jackpot continued its climb over the holiday weekend, reaching an estimated $1.1 billion, the game’s fifth-largest prize, organizers said.
No one drew all six winning numbers on Saturday. The winning numbers were white balls 3, 18, 22, 27 and 33 and red Powerball 17, according to a Powerball news release.
Nine tickets across the U.S. matched all five white balls, four of which were sold in California. Those locations included two in Southern California — a 7-Eleven in Duarte and Ontario Liquor in Ontario — as well as a 7-Eleven in Milpitas and a Mobil station in Pleasant Hill.
Each of those winners will receive $1,165,399, the lottery says. In California, prize payouts are “pari-mutuel,” with the amount changing depending on how many tickets are sold for that draw and how many winners are at the same level.
If a player wins Monday’s jackpot, they would have a choice between periodic payments totaling an estimated $1.1 billion or a lump sum payment estimated at $498.4 million, the Powerball bulletin said.
A winner who selects the annuity option would receive one immediate payment followed by 29 annual payments that increase 5% each year.
Both prize options are calculated before taxes.
No one has won the jackpot since May 31, when a single ticket sold in California took the $204.5 million prize.
The odds of winning the jackpot are 1 in 292.2 million, according to organizers.
Source link