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CJ-009 Illinois Lottery · Missouri 1993

Janite Lee — Gave Away $18 Million and Filed for Bankruptcy

Win
$18M won (annuity)
After tax
$1M pledged to a law school
Time to ruin
<$700 at 2001 bankruptcy
End-state
Bankrupt

Summary

In 1993, Janite Lee — a South Korean immigrant who ran a wig shop in the St. Louis area of Missouri — won an $18 million jackpot in the Illinois Lottery. Unusually among lottery 'curse' stories, her downfall was not driven mainly by reckless luxury or vice. She was, by most accounts, extraordinarily generous, giving heavily to political causes, to education, and to community and charitable organisations.

The prize was paid as an annuity, delivering roughly $620,000 a year before tax over about twenty years — a structure that should have provided a comfortable income for life. Instead, Lee committed to giving and spending at a pace her annual payments could not sustain, and financed the gap with debt: buying her home on payments rather than outright, leasing luxury cars, borrowing millions from banks, and running up credit-card balances. She also gambled, reportedly losing close to $347,000 at St. Louis-area casinos in a single year.

In 2001, about eight years after her win and at the age of sixty, Lee filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy. Court records showed less than $700 to her name against roughly $2.5 million in debt. A fortune that had funded a named reading room at a major law school had collapsed into near-total insolvency, even after she sold the rights to future lottery payments for a lump sum in a failed attempt to stay afloat.

Lee's case is widely cited in financial-education literature as a paradoxical cautionary tale: proof that even open-handed generosity, pursued without limits and financed by debt and gambling, can be as ruinous as extravagance. The figures below reflect what was reported in the press and in her bankruptcy filing. Her story is unusual precisely because so much of the money went to others — and because that did not save her from losing everything.

Timeline

1993
The win
Janite Lee, a South Korean immigrant running a wig shop in the St. Louis area of Missouri, wins an $18 million jackpot in the Illinois Lottery.
1993
Paid as an annuity
The prize is structured as an annuity of roughly $620,000 per year before tax over about twenty years rather than as a single lump sum.
Mid-1990s
Large-scale giving begins
Lee becomes known for generosity, donating to political causes and candidates and dining with figures including President Bill Clinton and Vice President Al Gore.
Mid-1990s
$1 million to a law school
Lee commits $1 million to Washington University in St. Louis; the law library's reading room is named in her honour.
Mid-to-late 1990s
Debt and gambling mount
She buys a home on payments, leases luxury cars, borrows millions from banks, runs up credit-card debt, and reportedly loses close to $347,000 at casinos in a single year.
Late 1990s–2000
Sells future payments
In a bid to fix her finances, Lee sells the rights to her future lottery annuity payments for a discounted lump sum — which does not prevent her collapse.
2000–2001
Insolvency approaches
Debts reaching roughly $2.5 million, owed to creditors said to include casinos, banks and credit-card lenders, exceed what she can pay.
2001
Chapter 7 bankruptcy
About eight years after winning and at the age of sixty, Lee files for Chapter 7 bankruptcy, reporting less than $700 to her name against about $2.5 million in debt.
After 2001
A cited cautionary tale
Lee's case becomes a standard example in financial-education materials, illustrating that even open-handed generosity, financed by debt and gambling, can end in total insolvency.

The Win

Janite Lee had built a modest, hard-working life in the United States before her win. A South Korean immigrant living in the St. Louis metropolitan area of Missouri, she ran a wig shop and was, by the accounts that survive, an energetic and community-minded figure. In 1993 she held a winning ticket in the Illinois Lottery and claimed an $18 million jackpot — a sum that placed her instantly among the wealthiest people she knew.

The prize was structured as an annuity, paid in roughly twenty annual instalments of about $620,000 before tax rather than as a single lump sum. On paper this was an enviable position: a large, dependable income for two decades, far beyond what her wig business could ever have generated. Managed conservatively, the annuity could have funded both a comfortable life and considerable giving.

From the outset, though, Lee's instinct was to give rather than to accumulate. She became known for her generosity almost as soon as she won, directing money toward causes she believed in and people she wanted to help, and she moved in circles that brought her into contact with senior politicians. The qualities that made her admired — openness, loyalty, a desire to do good with her good fortune — were the same qualities that, ungoverned and financed by debt, would eventually undo her finances. The win did not change her character; it gave her the means to act on it without restraint.

The Spending

Lee's spending was dominated by donations rather than indulgence. She gave generously to political causes and candidates, becoming a notable Democratic donor whose giving brought invitations to dine with figures including President Bill Clinton and Vice President Al Gore. She gave to education most visibly through a $1 million commitment to Washington University in St. Louis, where the law library's reading room came to bear her name. She supported community and charitable organisations as well.

The trouble was scale, pace, and how the giving was financed. Annual annuity payments of roughly $620,000 before tax cannot indefinitely support multi-million-dollar generosity, and rather than live within that income Lee borrowed against her future. Reports of her finances describe a million-dollar home bought on payments rather than with winnings, leased luxury cars, millions borrowed from banks, and substantial credit-card debt. Each year the annuity arrived; each year, the obligations she had created consumed it and more.

Compounding the problem, Lee gambled heavily, reportedly losing close to $347,000 at casinos in the St. Louis area in a single year. The interaction of three forces — outsized charitable and personal giving, mounting debt to finance it, and gambling losses — created a structural deficit. In a late attempt to right herself she sold the rights to her future lottery payments for a discounted lump sum, a move that converts a long, secure income into a smaller one-time amount and that did not prevent the collapse. Generosity financed by borrowing is still borrowing, and the principal and interest did not care how worthy the causes were.

The Unraveling

As the debts mounted, the arithmetic became inescapable. Even an $18 million annuity could not service borrowing of that magnitude while also covering living costs, continued giving, and gambling losses. By 2001 the gap between what she owed and what she could pay had become unbridgeable, with creditors reportedly including casinos, banks, and credit-card lenders.

In 2001, about eight years after her win and at the age of sixty, Lee filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy. The filing laid bare how complete the collapse was: less than $700 to her name against debts of roughly $2.5 million. Her earlier decision to sell off the rights to future annuity payments for a lump sum had removed the one asset that might have provided ongoing income, and it had not been enough. The contrast with the woman who had pledged a million dollars to a law school just years earlier was almost total.

What makes the unravelling notable is the absence of a villain. There was no single catastrophic purchase, no scandal of waste — instead, a steady, well-intentioned over-commitment of a finite income, financed increasingly by debt and worsened by gambling, until insolvency was the only outcome left. The annuity, often praised for protecting winners from blowing a lump sum, offered no protection here: Lee borrowed against it, sold it, and spent beyond it.

What Went Wrong

01
Generosity without limits or a budget
Lee gave heavily to political, educational and charitable causes, including a reported $1 million pledge to a university law school. The giving was genuine and admirable, but it was pursued at a scale her annual income could not sustain. Generosity without a fixed budget or endowment structure becomes a recurring liability rather than a one-time gift.
02
Borrowing to finance the spending
Rather than live within her annuity, Lee bought a home on payments, leased luxury cars, borrowed millions from banks, and ran up credit-card debt. Borrowing converted her finite annual income into a structural deficit, because principal and interest had to be repaid regardless of the worthiness of the causes. The debt compounded relentlessly.
03
Heavy gambling losses
Lee gambled, reportedly losing close to $347,000 at St. Louis-area casinos in a single year. Gambling added a second, volatile drain on top of her giving and debt obligations. Combined with the rest, it left no margin to absorb shocks or to pay down what she owed.
04
Selling future payments for a lump sum
In an attempt to fix her finances, Lee sold the rights to her future annuity payments for a discounted lump sum. This trades a long, secure income for a smaller one-time amount, removing the very stream that could have carried her for years. It did not prevent the bankruptcy and likely hastened it.
05
The annuity offered no real protection here
An annuity is often praised for stopping winners from squandering a lump sum, but it does nothing if the recipient borrows against it, sells it, and spends beyond the annual payments. Lee's roughly $620,000-a-year income was reliably spoken for, and then exceeded, every year. The structure protected the principal in name only.

After

Janite Lee's bankruptcy became a fixture in the literature on lottery winners and sudden wealth, frequently invoked by financial educators precisely because her story confounds the usual moral. She was not a cautionary tale of greed or vice in the conventional sense; she was generous, often to causes that outlived her solvency. The reading room bearing her name at Washington University in St. Louis stood as a monument to a gift she made when the money was flowing — a permanent marker of wealth that, for her personally, did not last.

The lesson most often drawn from her case is that the manner of spending matters less than its discipline. Whether money leaves through casinos, mansions or charitable pledges, an outflow that exceeds a finite income — and is topped up with debt — ends the same way. Lee's experience is held up alongside more lurid 'curse' stories specifically to make the point that good intentions are not a financial plan.

Details of Lee's life after the 2001 filing are sparse in the public record, and this account does not speculate beyond what was reported in the press and her bankruptcy proceedings. What is documented is striking enough: an immigrant who won $18 million, gave a great deal of it away, and was left, within about eight years, with less than $700 to her name and roughly $2.5 million in debt.

Lessons

  1. Generous giving still has to fit inside a budget; commitments larger than your income end the same way as extravagance.
  2. Borrowing to finance generosity is still borrowing, and the debt does not forgive itself because the cause was worthy.
  3. Selling future annuity payments for a discounted lump sum trades long-term security for a short-term fix that rarely solves the underlying problem.
  4. Gambling layered on top of overcommitted finances removes the last margin for error.
  5. Structured giving — a foundation or endowment with capped outflows — preserves both the gift and the giver far better than open-ended generosity.

References