Donald Lawson intends to do the typical lottery-winner stuff: Retire, take care of his family, travel, get a new place to live.
But the 44-year-old
Michigan man insists his $337 million Powerball prize -- the
third-largest in Powerball history, and seventh-largest jackpot in U.S.
history -- won't change him.
"I'm a millionaire now,
but I'll still go to McDonald's," Lawson told reporters Friday at the
Michigan Lottery headquarters in Lansing, where he came forward to
collect on the August 15 drawing. "I don't like filet mignon or lobster.
I like the simple life, and that's what I want to continue to do."
Lawson, of Lapeer, was
the sole winner of the August 15 prize. He chose the lump-sum cash
option, which gives him $224.6 million, before tax, at once.
He said he quit his
railroad engineer job after learning he won. He said he chose the
winning numbers -- 6, 27, 46, 51, 56 with a powerball of 21 -- himself
at a Sunoco gas station in Lapeer.
"I walked into the ...
station, and usually there ain't nobody up there, but there was a long
line. But something from above -- I do have to credit that -- told me to
go over there and pick my own numbers. I didn't pick them -- my hand
just went," Lawson said.
Lawson said his two
children will now be set for college, and he told his close relatives to
retire, "and they had no problem with that."
He said he plans to travel a lot, but for now, he's going to "go somewhere safe and think about (what to do) and go from there."
"This money won't last
forever unless I use it right and budget it right. It's not a lot, $337
million," he joked, drawing laughter, before addressing the issue of
taxes. "You all think it's tremendous amount, but I'm kind of pissed at
Uncle Sam ... you know?"
Eight other tickets won
the $1 million Match 5 prize on August 15. Two of those tickets were
bought in Indiana, and the others in Kansas, Kentucky, New Jersey, New
Mexico, Pennsylvania and Virginia, lottery officials said.
The game's largest prize
to date was $365 million, which was awarded in 2006 to a group of eight
co-workers at a Nebraska meat-packing plant.
That record drawing
happened when the cost for a Powerball ticket was $1. In January, the
price increased to $2, with officials saying it would lead to an
increased number of large jackpots. At the same time, the odds improved
somewhat because officials reduced the number of red balls, the
powerballs, from 39 to 35.
At $337 million, the
Powerball pot still has ways to go to catch MegaMillions at the top of
the list of U.S. grand prizes. In March, three tickets were sold for a
drawing with the top prize of $656 million
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