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2009-01-05 08:41:27
Sun Jan 4, 4:11 pm ET
DANBURY, Conn. On the day that Donald Peters died, he unknowingly provided
financial security for his wife of 59 years and their family.
Peters bought two Connecticut Lottery tickets at a local 7-Eleven store on Nov.
1 as part of a 20-year tradition he shared with his wife Charlotte. Later that
day, the 79-year-old retired hat factory worker suffered a fatal heart attack
while working in his yard in Danbury.
On Friday, his widow cashed in one of the tickets: a $10 million winner which,
in her grief over her husband's death, she had put aside and almost discarded
before recently checking the numbers.
"I'm numb," Charlotte Peters, 78, said at Connecticut Lottery headquarters in
Rocky Hill.
Donald Peters usually bought the tickets for 10 weeks at a stretch, so the
winning ticket he bought Nov. 1 for the Dec. 2 drawing was among several that
Charlotte Peters put aside as she, their three children and two grandchildren
coped with his sudden death.
"I was in the grocery store and I had it checked and they told me I was a
winner," she said. "I had no idea how much it was."
She said she thought she had won $6 million but was surprised to learn from
lottery officials she'd won $10 million.
Charlotte Peters has 60 days to decide whether to take a $6 million pre-tax
lump sum payment or stretch the winnings into 21 yearly payments of almost
$477,300 each.
She does not yet know what she will do with the money.
"I've always wanted a Corvette, but I don't think I'll buy one. I'll stick to a
small car. I might go to Mohegan Sun," she said, referring to the casino in
Connecticut. "I'm going to go home and sit and think."
The Peters children think their father would have appreciated the irony.
"He'd be very mad, he just passed away and she won a lot of money," said Brian
Peters, one of the couple's three children. "He'd say, 'Figures!'"