$1.34B lottery winner still unknown — and customers at lucky Des Plaines gas station suggest it should stay that way

“I’ve read reports that people who came forward previously who’ve won, people starting stalking them, and in some cases it hasn’t gone well for them,” said one man.

SHARE $1.34B lottery winner still unknown — and customers at lucky Des Plaines gas station suggest it should stay that way
Drivers line up Sunday at the Speedway gas station at 885 E. Touhy Ave. in Des Plaines, which sold a $1.34 billion lottery ticket on Friday.

Drivers line up Sunday at the Speedway gas station at 885 E. Touhy Ave. in Des Plaines, which sold a $1.34 billion lottery ticket on Friday.

Tyler Pasciak LaRiviere/Sun-Time

Customers at the Des Plaines gas station that sold a $1.34 billion lottery ticket were still left wondering Sunday who the lucky winner is — and whether they’d bumped into that person before.

But they had some advice for the mystery moneymaker: stay anonymous, or else invite negative influences into their life from greedy hangers-on.

“I’ve read reports that people who came forward previously who’ve won, people starting stalking them, and in some cases it hasn’t gone well for them,” said Mohammad Shafi.

La Voz Sidebar

Lea este artículo en español en La Voz Chicago, la sección bilingüe del Sun-Times.
la-voz-cover-photo-2.png

He called it “crazy” that the Speedway where he regularly gases up at 885 E. Touhy Ave. is the one that printed out the winning Mega Millions ticket for Friday’s record-breaking drawing.

The winning numbers for the biggest prize in state history — and second biggest ever in the U.S. — were 13-36-45-57-67, with a Mega Ball of 14. Officials confirmed that the Illinois winner, who will take the entire prize, had yet to come forward as of Sunday evening.

Workers at the station declined to offer their thoughts on the massive payday doled out at their station. The corporate gas station chain will receive a half-million dollar bonus for selling the winning ticket, Illinois Lottery officials said.

Another customer at the station, who asked to be called Z, echoed Shafi’s thoughts, warning the winner to expect calls from long lost relatives.

“Everybody’s gonna come looking for you. You’ll have cousins you never seen before, you’ll have family members you’ve never seen before,” Z said. “Everybody’s attracted to money.”

Z doesn’t play the lottery often, he said, but he came to the Speedway Sunday to buy a ticket after hearing it had sold the jackpot. “I said, let me grab at least a Powerball and see if I can get lucky.”

If he had won, Z said he would spread the wealth in the community.

“Help those who are homeless, pay for somebody’s scholarship, college tuition. And just let that money keep reciprocating,” he said.

Shafi, a student at the Illinois Institute of Technology, echoed the idea. His dream would be to start a shelter to help those with housing insecurity, and teach them skills they can use in the workplace.

“Start some kind of program where they can learn some kind of technology and better their life,” Shafi said. “I hope he does some good with the money.”

Garry Adams, who is from Dundee but said he stops at the Speedway all the time, said he would be afraid to come into so much money at once because “it might change the person who I am.”

Adams said he would probably donate most of the jackpot, and start a business with the rest. He also had some advice for the winner.

“I hope he stays honest and doesn’t change himself and doesn’t let people get in his head. Just remember the people that called him and always talked to him everyday,” Adams said. “Don’t be passing the money out. Nobody needs to know.”

The Latest
Reader still hopes to make the relationship work as she watches her man fall for someone else under her own roof.
Wind and solar are supposed to replace coal plants that are closing, but that didn’t happen in 2023. Another fossil fuel, natural gas, filled the void.
Hours after Williams said he asked the Bears for reasons why the team had a well-worn history of quarterback struggles, GM Ryan Poles said that “we’ve got to stop going back all the time.”
The men, 18 and 20, were in the 1800 block of West Monroe Street about 9:20 p.m. when two people got out of a light-colored sedan and fired shots. They were hospitalized in fair condition.