Mark Carlson
Lotto means biggest bet is 40 miles south of Vegas
PRIMM, Nev. (AP) — In some states, buying a chance to win the record $640 million Mega Millions jackpot meant a road trip.
More than 1,200 people were lined up by 9 a.m. Friday to buy their lottery tickets at the Primm Valley Casino Resorts Lotto Store, which sits right across the California border from lottery-less Nevada.
The small store 40 miles from the Las Vegas Strip was the closest option for those in Sin City who wanted a shot at the jackpot, and some waited in line at least three hours to buy their tickets.
“I didn’t even want to come but everybody’s so hyped up,” said Kathy DellaSala-Shepherd, 55, who owns a pool cleaning business in Las Vegas.
The numbers drawn Friday night in Atlanta were 2-4-23-38-46, Mega Ball 23. Lottery officials expected to release details about possible winners a couple of hours after the 11 p.m. Eastern drawing.
DellaSala-Shepherd’s trek for tickets took her past people trying to make a more certain profit by hawking water and soda to the people in line, or scalping tickets for $20 to people who didn’t want to wait.
DellaSala-Shepherd said she doesn’t normally play the lottery because she prefers the odds of Keno. She said she once won a $25,000 Keno jackpot by matching nine numbers.
“Now, I feel a little lucky,” she said.
Sam Roark, director of operations for Primm Valley Resorts, said the store, across the street from an outlet mall, expected to sell more than 200,000 tickets Friday after selling 184,000 on Thursday.
One person, a Las Vegas boxer whom he would not name, bought $20,000 worth Thursday, Roark said.
If the store did sell a jackpot-winning ticket, it would be a winner, too. It would get $1 million, California lottery officials said.
At the Beaver Dam Service Station in Beaver Dam, Ariz., store clerk Lisa Lorton said people were driving in from Nevada and Utah, which is also without a state lottery. It’s been crazy, she said, with lines out the door, and it’s been that way for three days.
“We have lottery at the bar and lottery here, and both places are out to the parking lot,” Lorton said Friday. “Some people are buying a dollar’s worth. Other people are buying $300 worth.”
One man said he drove 30 miles from St. George, Utah, to purchase a Mega Millions ticket Friday.
Winning “would make my day,” Curt Colbert said. “It would make a lot of people’s days, because I’m a pretty generous guy.”
Lines were also out the door at Rosie’s Den cafe in the rural northwestern Arizona community of White Hills, 72 miles southeast of Las Vegas.
Rosie’s worker Christine Millim said it’s been nonstop for the past four days with people who aren’t afraid to plunk down big money for the jackpot. One person spent $2,600 on tickets, she said.
Dennis Martinez, a 30-year-old maintenance supervisor in Las Vegas who spent $80 on tickets in Primm, said he didn’t mind the 1-in-176-million odds of winning the jackpot because they’re better than zero.
“You can’t win if you don’t try — it’s just the lottery,” he said.
When asked what he would do with the money, Martinez said: “10 percent goes to God, then the rest is for fun — anything and everything I can do.”
“I don’t think I’ll start up a business because I won’t have to,” he said. “Put some in the bank and sit on it. You can’t go broke — interest.”
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Carlson reported from Phoenix. Associated Press writer Judy Lin in Sacramento, Calif., also contributed to this report.
Store covers up pregnant Simpson on magazine cover
TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) — A pregnant Jessica Simpson on the cover of Elle magazine was apparently too much for some customers of a Tucson Safeway store, where a worker covered it with cardboard.
The April edition features the photo of the singer/actress/fashion designer with one hand over her breast and another wrapped around her nude belly.
The Arizona Daily Star (http://bit.ly/GTmMgt) reported the manager of the store received multiple complaints, prompting a worker to cover the image with cardboard.
Continue Reading CloseMarshals release new photo of Jared Lee Loughner
The U.S. Marshals Service revealed a new mugshot of Gabrielle Giffords' alleged shooter
The U.S. Marshals Service released a new image Tuesday of the man suspected of shooting U.S. Rep. Gabrielle Giffords, killing six people and wounding a dozen others near Tucson last month.
The photo shows Jared Loughner in front of a block cinder wall, wearing a mustard colored jail uniform with a white T-shirt underneath. His hair is slightly grown out and he has a cut on his right forehead.
Last week, U.S. District Judge Larry A. Burns said he was leaving it up to the marshals to decide whether to release the mug shot of the 22-year-old Loughner taken in Phoenix while Loughner was in the agency’s custody.
Continue Reading CloseAmericans line up nationwide for Mega Millions
Thousands secure tickets in 41 states and D.C. for a chance at the $355 million jackpot, the second largest ever
Thousands of people lined up in 41 states and in Washington, D.C., ahead of the Mega Millions drawing on Tuesday in hopes of buying the winning ticket for the lottery game’s $355 million jackpot.
The prize is second largest in Mega Millions history, said Arizona Lottery spokeswoman Cindy Esquer. The lottery’s largest prize of $390 million in March 2007 was the richest in U.S. history.
“We got a pretty good, steady flow of traffic as far as buying the tickets goes,” said Bill Evans, owner of Beaver Dam Service Station in northwest Arizona. “As the day progresses we’ll have a line out the door, I’m sure.”
Continue Reading CloseGroups try to delay Arizona immigrant law
Organizations opposing the new immigration legislation need 76,000 signatures to postpone it for two years
A referendum launched Wednesday could put Arizona’s tough new law targeting illegal immigration on hold until 2012 if organizers can gather the more than 76,000 signatures needed to get the measure on the ballot.
Opponents of the law have until late July or early August to file the signatures — the same time the law is set to go into effect. If they get enough signatures, the law would be put on hold.
But the deadline to put a question on the November ballot is July 1, said Assistant Secretary of State Jim Drake, so it would likely be 2012 before the law was put to a vote.
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