SD lottery winner 'will not squander' $232M prize

By CHET BROKAW, Associated Press Writer Chet Brokaw, Associated Press Writer

44 mins ago

PIERRE, S.D. It has the makings of a Hollywood script: A young rancher

struggling to eke out a living in one of the poorest corners of the nation

claims one of the biggest undivided jackpots in U.S. lottery history $232

million after buying the ticket in a town called Winner.

As he sported a black cowboy hat and a huge grin, 23-year-old Neal Wanless

accepted his giant-sized Powerball check at a ceremony Friday.

Wanless, who is single and lives with his mother and father on the family's

320-acre ranch near Mission, said he's going to buy himself a bigger spread,

repay the kindness other townspeople have shown his family and spend his

newfound fortune wisely.

"I want to thank the Lord for giving me this opportunity and blessing me with

this great fortune. I will not squander it," he said.

Wanless bought $15 worth of tickets to the May 27 30-state drawing at a

convenience store in Winner during a trip to buy livestock feed. He will take

home a lump sum of $88.5 million after taxes are deducted an astonishing

fortune, even more so in rural Todd County, the nation's seventh-poorest county

in 2007, according to the Census Bureau.

Arlen Wanless, the winner's father, has been buying and selling scrap metal to

make a living in recent years, but his fortunes dropped with the price of iron,

said Dan Clark, an auctioneer from Winner and a friend of more than two

decades.

Dave Assman, who owns farmland next to the Wanless ranch, said he is happy they

won't have to worry about money any more. "They've been real short on finances

for a long time," Assman said. "They are from real meager means, I guess you'd

say."

"I hope they enjoy their money," said county assessor Cathy Vrbka, a family

friend. "They work hard, backbreaking hard work."

Neal Wanless' winnings are certainly enough to set him and his family up for

life, but past lottery winners have burned through vast fortunes in spectacular

fashion or found that they were better off before they struck it rich.

Evelyn Marie Adams won the New Jersey lottery twice in the mid-1980s but still

managed to lose the entire $5.4 million.

And there's West Virginia's Jack Whittaker, who won $315 million on Christmas

day, 2002, and five years later was blaming the money for causing his

granddaughter's fatal drug overdose, his divorce, his inability to trust and

hundreds of lawsuits filed against him.

"I don't have any friends," he told The Associated Press in 2007. "Every friend

that I've had, practically, has wanted to borrow money or something and of

course, once they borrow money from you, you can't be friends anymore."

Susan Bradley, whose company in Palm Beach, Fla., the Sudden Money Institute,

provides financial planning to the abruptly wealthy, said it's a good sign that

Wanless took his time to come forward.

"No opportunity to buy or invest in all that is going to go away, she said.

"They have plenty of time."

But she said Wanless will likely experience the same sense of isolation that

many other large jackpot winners do.

"They've lost their peers. They are substantially different from everyone that

they know," she said.

Bradley said lottery winners should make sure they have enough money to live a

modest lifestyle and take a year or two before deciding to buy real estate or

make risky purchases. It's important that the winners communicate that strategy

to others hoping to direct their financial planning, she said.

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Associated Press writers Carson Walker in Pierre and Dirk Lammers in Sioux

Falls contributed to this story.