63°F
weather icon Clear

$1.3B Powerball jackpot, 4th fourth-largest ever, won in Oregon

Updated April 7, 2024 - 9:50 pm

The fourth-largest Powerball jackpot in history— $1.3 billion — has finally been won.

The Associated Press reported Sunday that a player in Oregon won the jackpot, which has a cash value of $621 million if they decide to take a lump sum.

The winning numbers drawn early Sunday morning were: 22, 27, 44, 52, 69 and the red Powerball 9.

One participating lottery needed additional time to complete required pre-draw procedures on Saturday, which are to protect the security and integrity of the Powerball game, said a statement on powerball.com.

“Powerball game rules require that every single ticket sold nationwide be checked and verified against two different computer systems before the winning numbers are drawn,” a statement posted to powerball.com. stated. “This is done to ensure that every ticket sold for the Powerball drawing has been accounted for and has an equal chance to win. Tonight, we have one jurisdiction that needs extra time to complete that pre-draw process.

Nobody had won the jackpot since Jan. 1 when a single ticket purchased at a Michigan grocery store won $824 million ($425.2 million cash) jackpot.

The largest Powerball jackpot – and the largest U.S. lottery prize ever won — was $2.04 billion by a ticket purchased in California in November 2022, according to the lottery.

A Mega Millions jackpot of $1.13 billion ($537.5 million all cash) was won by a ticket buyer in New Jersey on March 26.

Contact Marvin Clemons at mclemons@reviewjournal.com.

Don't miss the big stories. Like us on Facebook.
THE LATEST
Police break up pro-Palestinian camp on Michigan campus

The campus encampment was set up on April 22, near the end of the school year and just before families began arriving for spring commencement.

Frontier Airlines breaks away from ultra low cost ticket model

Frontier Airlines, famous for deeply discounted ticket prices and bare-bones service, is adding new fare categories that include carry-on bags, seat selection and no cancellation fees as it seeks to appeal to U.S. travelers who want more upscale options when they fly.

Netanyahu seen as secure, even if his war cabinet isn’t

After a member of his war cabinet threatened to resign over his handling of the war with Hamas, experts say Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu remains secure.