Dear valued AOL News reader:
Sphere.com is now the place for top news from the AOL News team, with original reporting, analysis
and commentary from our ever-growing cast of top-notch journalists. Get Sphere News Now
News Video
Find, view and share videos about news and entertainment from around the Web.
See Videos »

Lottery Winner Can't Stop Losing

AOL News
posted: 167 DAYS 19 HOURS AGO
comments: 0
Text SizeAAA
(July 9) -- For all his multimillion-dollar lottery winnings, Jack Whittaker can't seem to do anything but lose.
The man who landed a $315 million jackpot on Christmas Day seven years ago has since lost his wife to divorce, his granddaughter to drugs and now his daughter, found dead in her West Virginia home on July 5, according to the Charleston Daily Mail.
Skip over this content
Whittaker has also been arrested on charges of driving drunk, lost more than $500,000 in cash to thieves and settled with the parents of a teenage friend of his granddaughter's who died at his house from a drug overdose.
A surprising number of other lottery winners share his pain.
According to a health study reported this week in London's Daily Mail, winners smoked and drank far more two years after winning then they did before, countering the notion that more money means better health. The paper cites the tragedy of Phil Kitchen, a jobless carpenter who won big in 1999, turned to binge drinking and died three years later, at age 58, of self-neglect.
Perhaps he can serve as a lesson to the latest massive jackpot winner, someone who hasn't yet come forward to claim the $133 million Mega Millions prize with a ticket that was sold in New York City's Queens borough, as reported in the New York Daily News.
The Raleigh County, W.Va., Sheriff's Office said Thursday that investigators don't know Ginger Whittaker Bragg's cause of death, and autopsy results are expected to take at least a few weeks. They don't suspect foul play.
Bragg, 42, had battled Hodgkin's lymphoma, The Associated Press reported in 2007.
Her daughter, Brandi Bragg, died just before Christmas, 2004. She was 17.
Less than six months after Brandi's death, Whittaker's wife, Jewell, started divorce proceedings.
Even before the recent blow of his daughter's death, Whittaker told ABC News in 2007, "Since I won the lottery, I think there is no control for greed.
"I think if you have something, there's always someone else that wants it," he said.
"I wish I'd torn that ticket up."
Skip over this content

2009 AOL LLC. All Rights Reserved.
2009-07-09 13:18:54

Related Articles

  1. See More Related Articles and Blog Posts
COMMENTS ( 0 )
GOT SOMETHING TO SAY?
YOU'LL BE ASKED TO REGISTER OR SIGN IN BEFORE POSTING A COMMENT.
Make a Comment
Comment
 
     

All Good News, All The Time

GNN

The Savings Experiment

cleaning products

 

Politics Daily

Sports

Money

Technology

Health

Entertainment

For all his million-dollar lottery winnings, Jack Whittaker can\'t seem to do anything but lose.