Jack Whittaker — the $315 Million Winner Who Wished He’d Torn Up the Ticket
Summary
On Christmas morning 2002, Andrew Jackson 'Jack' Whittaker — a West Virginia construction-company owner who was already a self-made millionaire — won a Powerball jackpot of $314.9 million, at the time the largest single-ticket jackpot in American history. He took the lump sum of about $114 million after taxes. Within a few years he had been robbed, sued, arrested, and bereaved, and he later said he wished he had torn the ticket up.
Whittaker was not the stereotypical hard-luck winner. He ran a successful water-and-sewer pipe business, employed more than a hundred people, and was worth several million dollars before the win. That made his unraveling all the more striking: it was not naivety or poverty that undid him, but the sheer scale of the money and the way it warped everyone and everything around him.
The money made him a target. He was robbed of hundreds of thousands of dollars left in his car outside a strip club; he was hit with lawsuits and accusations; and the people closest to him suffered most. His granddaughter Brandi, on whom he lavished cars and cash, died of a drug overdose at seventeen in 2004, her body found wrapped in a tarp; her boyfriend had died in Whittaker's home months earlier. Whittaker's daughter, Brandi's mother, later died as well.
By the end of the decade Whittaker said the money was gone and the lawsuits had consumed what the thieves and the spending had not. 'I wish I'd torn that ticket up,' he told reporters. He died in 2020, his fortune and most of his family gone — the most famous American example of the 'lottery curse,' and a case where the curse was less supernatural than the predictable result of a vast, sudden, public fortune landing on an ordinary life.
Timeline
The Win
Jack Whittaker bought the winning Powerball ticket at a convenience store in Hurricane, West Virginia, and discovered on Christmas morning 2002 that he held the entire $314.9 million jackpot — then the biggest single-ticket win in U.S. history. Offered the choice between a long annuity and a discounted lump sum, he took the cash option: roughly $114 million after federal and state taxes.
What made Whittaker unusual was that he was already rich. The 55-year-old ran Diversified Enterprises Construction, a successful pipe-laying business in the Charleston area, employed over a hundred people, and was by his own account worth around $17 million before the win. He was a churchgoer who initially made headlines for the right reasons — pledging a tithe to churches, starting a charitable foundation, and giving money to the clerk and the store that sold the ticket. For a few weeks he was the feel-good face of the lottery.
The Spending
The spending and the giving were enormous and very public, and that visibility was the beginning of the problem. Whittaker handed out cash freely — to strangers, to his church, to anyone with a hard-luck story — and he indulged his teenage granddaughter Brandi lavishly, reportedly giving her several cars and large sums of cash and an allowance that made her, in turn, a magnet for hangers-on.
The money also drew him into a faster, looser life. He became a fixture at a strip club and at casinos, and his behavior grew erratic. In August 2003, thieves broke into his car outside the Pink Pony strip club and stole a briefcase containing $545,000 in cash — money he had simply been carrying around. It was the first vivid sign that the fortune had made him a walking target, and that the discipline that had built his construction business had not survived contact with $114 million.
The Unraveling
From there the losses compounded in every direction at once. Whittaker faced a wave of lawsuits — by one count, hundreds of legal actions — including suits from the strip club and from a casino over bounced checks, as well as criminal charges related to drunk driving and an alleged assault. The legal fees and settlements bled the fortune steadily.
The human toll was worse than the financial one. Brandi's 18-year-old boyfriend was found dead of a drug overdose in Whittaker's home in 2004; months later, in December 2004, Brandi herself — then 17 — disappeared and was found dead, her body wrapped in a tarp behind a junked van, also from a drug overdose. Whittaker blamed the money and the entourage it had attracted for her death. His daughter (Brandi's mother) Ginger died in 2009. By then Whittaker said the winnings were gone, drained by theft, lawsuits, spending, and grief.
What Went Wrong
After
By the 2010s Jack Whittaker was open about his regret. 'I wish I'd torn that ticket up,' he told reporters more than once, and 'I wish we had been more annoyed when the media was around so they would have gone away.' The man who had won the largest jackpot in the country had buried his granddaughter and his daughter and watched the fortune evaporate into theft, lawsuits, and grief.
Whittaker died on June 27, 2020, at the age of 72. In the obituaries his win was inseparable from his ruin — the textbook American illustration of the 'lottery curse.'
His case is the centerpiece of Cursed Jackpot not because it was supernatural but because it was legible: every mechanism that destroys sudden-fortune winners — target status, predatory relations and strangers, lawsuits, loss of discipline, and public all-at-once liquidity — operated on Whittaker at once, and at the largest scale yet seen. He is the cautionary opposite of the earned, gradual fortunes on our sister site, Up From Nothing.
Lessons
- A sudden public fortune turns the winner into a target for thieves, con artists, and lawsuits.
- Being rich and disciplined beforehand is no protection against a windfall an order of magnitude larger.
- Money poured onto vulnerable family members can endanger rather than help them.
- Public identity plus a lump sum is the most dangerous way to receive a jackpot.
- The 'lottery curse' is usually not supernatural — it is the predictable sum of target status, predation, and lost discipline.
References
- Jack Whittaker (lottery winner) Wikipedia
- The Tragic Story of the Largest Single-Ticket Lottery Winner The Washington Post
- Powerball Wikipedia