Premium Members | Lottery News and Stories Powerball Winner: Thieves Cleaned Me Out
Tuesday, January 16, 2007 posted 11:26 AM EST
CHARLESTON, W.Va. A man beset by problems since winning a record lottery jackpot says he can't pay a settlement to a casino
worker because thieves cleaned out his bank accounts.
Powerball winner Jack Whittaker gave that explanation in a note last fall to a lawyer for Kitti French, who accused him of
assaulting her at the Tri-State Racetrack and Gaming Center, a slots-only casino near Charleston, according to a motion French's
lawyer filed this week demanding payment of the confidential settlement.
Whittaker won a nearly $315 million on Christmas 2002, then the largest undivided lottery prize in U.S. history. He took
his winnings in a lump sum of $113 million after taxes.
Since then, he has faced his granddaughter's death by drug overdose; he has been sued for bouncing checks at Atlantic City,
N.J., casinos; he has been ordered to undergo rehab after being arrested on drunken driving charges; his vehicles and business
have been burglarized; and he has been sued by the father of an 18-year-old boy, a friend of his granddaughter's, who was
found dead in Whittaker's house.
In the latest lawsuit, Whittaker told French's lawyer, John Barrett, that "a team of crooks" cashed checks in September at
12 City National Bank branches and "got all my money," according to the motion Barrett filed Wednesday in state court.
"I intend to pay but can't without any money," Whittaker wrote, according to the motion.
An official with City National Bank said Friday the bank is investigating "small discrepancies" in Whittaker's accounts.
Calls to Whittaker and his lawyers Friday were not immediately returned.
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