NYS Gaming Commission
January 11, 2016

19 NYC Lottery Players Win Big on Saturday’s Powerball Drawing

Highest winning ticket: $1M sold in Ridgewood, Queens

New York State Gaming Commission, Division of the Lottery

Communications

518-388-3415

nylottery.ny.gov

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For Immediate Release – January 11, 2016

 


While the jackpot continues to grow, Lottery players in New York City won millions of dollars on Saturday’s record-breaking Powerball with 19 winning tickets ranging from $50,000 to $1 million.

 

The largest winning ticket was a $1 million Powerball second prize sold at Chef Hong at 56-31 Metropolitan Avenue in Ridgewood Queens. In addition, a $150,000 ticket was sold at Giovanni Wine & Liquors, 732 E 152nd Street in the Bronx. Other winning tickets worth $50,000 each were sold at:

 

  • Pelham Gourmet Deli Inc, 798 Lydig Ave., Bronx            
  • Cachet Deli Food Corp, 1425 Macombs Rd., Bronx            
  • Yafai Grocery Store Inc, 1769 Pitman Ave., Bronx            
  • Pijuans Conv Disc & Groc Store,506 Wilson Ave., Brooklyn        
  • Krupa Enterprise Llc, 516 Neptune Ave., Brooklyn        
  • New Rainbow World Inc , 4814 8th Ave., Brooklyn        
  • Lee's Deli Usa Inc, 1506 Ave H, Brooklyn        
  • Midtown News & Grocery Inc, 2578 Broadway, New York        
  • J & J News Inc, 1 Liberty Plaza, New York        
  • Quick Shop, 25 Park Pl., New York        
  • Kirind Enterprises Inc, 183 Clinton St., New York        
  • Parikh Enterprises Inc, 814 W 187th St., New York        
  • Kirind Enterprises Inc, 183 Clinton St., New York        
  • Empire State Deli, 42-16 30th Ave., Astoria          
  • Side Step Convenience Inc., 61-02b Roosevelt Ave., Woodside        
  • 8765 Parsons Candy Corp, 8765 Parsons Blvd., Jamaica          
  • Soham Enterprise Llc, 1774 Forest Avenue, Staten Island 

“While no one hit the jackpot prize, dozens of New Yorkers are vastly richer thanks to Powerball,” said Gardner Gurney, Director of the Division of the Lottery. “New Yorkers are cashing-in big time on history.”

The Lottery encourages everyone who buys a New York Lottery draw game ticket to check their tickets again, as they could be holding a winner. Tickets expire one year after the game’s drawing. 

The winners may claim the tickets at any one of the Lottery’s Customer Service Centers statewide, including the Manhattan office at 15 Beaver Street, New York, NY 10004 or at Resorts World Casino New York City, 110-00 Rockaway Blvd., Jamaica, NY 11420. To learn more about how to redeem a prize, click here.

 

This history-making Powerball jackpot has skyrocketed sales statewide to $155.8 million for drawings leading up to and including Saturday’s record jackpot drawing. Since this Powerball jackpot began on November 7, New Yorkers buying Powerball tickets have contributed more than $54.5 million in aid to education.

 

The next drawing is Wednesday, January 13 with the jackpot now set at $1.4 billion. It is the biggest Powerball jackpot ever, largest jackpot prize of any lottery game in U.S. history, and the biggest lottery prize ever offered in the world that can be won with a single ticket.

 

If no one matches all five numbers plus the Powerball for Wednesday’s drawing, the jackpot will continue to grow. Tickets cost $2 per game and can be purchased until 10:00 p.m. EST.

 

Powerball is played in 44 states, Washington, D.C., Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands. Prior to this jackpot, the largest Powerball jackpot was $590.5 million won in Florida in May 2013.

 

About the New York Lottery

The New York Lottery continues to be North America’s largest and most profitable Lottery, contributing $3.11 billion in fiscal year 2014-2015 to help support education in New York State.  The Lottery’s contribution represents 14 percent of total state education aid to local school districts. 

 

New York Lottery revenue is distributed to local school districts by the same statutory formula used to distribute other state aid to education.  It takes into account both a school district’s size and its income level; larger, lower-income school districts receive proportionately larger shares of Lottery school funding.







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