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Winning the lottery sounds like a dream come true. For most people, getting that kind of money could change their life.
It certainly changed Tonda Dickerson’s life, but not for the better. After winning $10 million in the Florida lottery in 1999, Dickerson faced a saga of lawsuits, battled the IRS, and was briefly kidnapped by her ex-husband.
The ironic misfortune of Dickerson’s life post-lottery win isn’t an isolated incident. There are numerous examples of lottery winners falling on hard times, ruining their personal relationships, or even being killed.
While Dickerson’s circumstances weren’t quite as extreme as other past lottery winners, her story shows that even those who want to use their winnings responsibly can still end up in hot water after getting their prize.
Bill Starling/Mobile Register/X (Formerly Twitter)Tonda Dickerson, pictured in April 1999, shortly after her lottery win.
In March 1999, Tonda Dickerson was working as a waitress at the Waffle House in Grand Bay, Alabama. One of the restaurant’s regulars, a man named Edward Seward, came in to eat breakfast on March 7th.
Seward tipped his waitress, Dickerson, with a Florida lottery ticket, something the man did regularly whenever he came in. Dickerson picked up the ticket and went on with her shift as usual.
Dickerson was in for the surprise of her life when that following Saturday, she found out that her ticket was the winner in the draw.
She had just won $10 million from the Florida lottery.
She was thrilled, assuming she would never have to work again. Rather than taking the entirety of the winnings all at once, Dickerson opted to receive smaller amounts of the prize money over the course of 30 years.
Dickerson wasn’t anticipating the lawsuits.
Bo Nash/FlickrAn Alabama Waffle House (not the same one where Tonda Dickerson was employed).
As it turned out, Tonda Dickerson’s claim to the money wasn’t as straightforward as she thought. Edward Seward, who had gifted Dickerson the winning lottery ticket, would commonly tip servers with lottery tickets.
He did this so often, Dickerson’s coworkers alleged, that the colleagues had agreed to split any winnings amongst themselves if any of them got a prize. But Dickerson denied this, and so her coworkers took her to court.
In April 1999, her colleagues testified at the Mobile Circuit Court that they had all agreed, including Dickerson, to split any winnings from lottery tickets received as tips. There was even a couple who regularly ate at the same Waffle House who testified to hearing about this same agreement.
Though a jury decided against Dickerson, she wasn’t ready to give up yet. She turned down a settlement that would’ve allowed her to walk away with $3 million of the jackpot and put the court case behind her.
Instead, she opted to appeal to the Alabama Supreme Court.
This ended up being the right move for Dickerson, as the Alabama Supreme Court ruled to reverse the decision on Feb. 18, 2000. The court found that an agreement like the one allegedly made by the Waffle House employees couldn’t be enforceable under state law because it concerned gambling.
But that wouldn’t be the last time someone tried to sue Dickerson for her winnings. In 2002, about three years after Dickerson had won the $10 million lottery, the very man who gave her the winning ticket tried to sue her.
Seward claimed that Dickerson had not fulfilled her supposed promise that she would buy him a truck if she won the lottery. A Mobile County Circuit Judge threw out the case in February — but chillingly, that same week, Dickerson realized that an attempted lawsuit was the least of her worries.
Bill Starling/Mobile Register/InstagramTonda Dickerson, pictured during an interview about her winnings and court battles in 1999.
Back in 1997, just two years before she won the lottery, Tonda Dickerson had divorced her former husband Stacy Martin. Later on, the same exact week that Edward Seward’s case against Dickerson was thrown out in 2002, Martin made a reappearance in Dickerson’s life in an extremely violent way.
Martin attacked Dickerson while she was driving in Mississippi, and then forced her to drive toward an isolated area at Bayou Heron. During the drive, Martin threatened to kill Dickerson, especially when her phone rang.
He had apparently been tracking Dickerson, as he had just been released from jail after being linked to a December 2001 break-in at Dickerson’s home.
Once they arrived at Bayou Heron, Dickerson’s phone rang yet again.
“She asked him to let her answer it, saying that if she didn’t answer it, they would start looking for her,” a local sheriff reported at the time.
So, Martin let Dickerson pick up her phone. But instead of reaching for the phone, Dickerson cleverly reached for her handgun instead.
After Martin lunged toward her, Dickerson shot him in the chest, wounding him. Despite his injuries, Martin took the gun away from Dickerson, once again threatening to kill her. He also threatened to kill himself.
Somehow, Dickerson was able to convince Martin to go to the hospital instead, where he received treatment for his wound. The cops were called, and Dickerson was finally free after the terrifying abduction.
St. Petersburg Coastal and Marine Science CenterBayou Heron, the place where Tonda Dickerson narrowly avoided being murdered by her ex.
From there, the story gets murky. It doesn’t seem that Martin was ever charged with kidnapping, even though he was expected to be. However, he may have appeared in court in connection to the crime.
Meanwhile, Tonda Dickerson was also grappling with what would be a years-long battle with the IRS, regarding how much she owed them.
The IRS insisted that she needed to pay about $1 million in gift tax after she gave most of her winnings away to her family members via a business she set up. Dickerson’s fight against the IRS lasted at least until 2012.
The story once again gets murky, with some sources reporting that she lost in tax court and had to pay up, and others claiming her lawyers were able to successfully argue that the IRS was wrong to demand $1 million in gift tax.
Either way, Dickerson was able to walk away relatively unscathed, especially compared to some other unfortunate lottery winners like Urooj Khan, who was poisoned shortly after he learned about his prize, and Amanda Clayton, who died of a drug overdose less than a year after she collected her jackpot.
Little is known about Dickerson’s life today, but it’s believed that she currently works as a poker dealer at a casino in Biloxi, Mississippi.
Next, go inside the story of Stefan Mandel, the man who hacked the lottery and won 14 times. Then, learn about the tragic case of Jeffrey Dampier, who was murdered by his sister-in-law after winning the lottery.
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The Mega Millions jackpot is at a staggering $843 million ahead of the drawing on Friday night.
With an estimated cash value of $391.7 million, this is the eighth-largest jackpot in the history of the game.
It’s also the longest anyone has ever gone without winning the jackpot prize.
Friday’s drawing will be the 38th drawing since the jackpot was last won in June, beating the previous longest streak of 37 drawings without a jackpot winner.
That record was set after it took 37 drawings for a lottery player in Michigan to win a $1.05 billion jackpot on Jan. 22, 2021.
“Jackpot wins are always unpredictable random events,” a statement from Mega Millions officials said. “Jackpots can be won in consecutive drawings or roll for weeks or months on end.”
The drawing for the $843 million prize will be held at 11 p.m. on Nov. 7. Players can buy tickets at Massachusetts State Lottery retailers across the state until 10:45 p.m. on Friday.
Mega Millions tickets cost $5 each and players must choose five numbers between 1-70, and one Mega Ball number between 1-24. Drawings are held at 11 p.m. every Tuesday and Friday.
The top 10 largest Mega Millions jackpots in history are as follows:
Irene Rotondo is a public safety reporter for MassLive. She has previously covered breaking news, biotechnology and business trends for the outlet, and also specializes in reporting on the Massachusetts State…
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CONCORD, NH — To the buyer of a Mega Millions ticket at the Franconia Market & Deli on Main Street in Franconia on Tuesday: Your $40,000 is waiting for you.
New Hampshire Lottery Executive Director Charlie McIntyre congratulated the winner, who picked four of the five matching balls and the Mega Ball, for $10,000, and then added the four-time Multiplier Prize.
“It may not have been the jackpot,” he said, “but it shows we’ve got some luck brewing in the Granite State.”
McIntyre said Friday’s jackpot was expected to be $843 million with a one-time cash payout of around $392 million before taxes. If anyone wins on Friday, it will be the eighth-largest jackpot.
“I love handing out prizes, and hopefully the next one is the big jackpot,” he said. “Set yourself up for a fun Friday night by purchasing your tickets at your local retailer or online at NH iLottery — just remember, it only takes one to win.”
Mega Millions drawings are Tuesdays and Fridays. Players have until around 9:45 p.m. to purchase tickets.
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Udele Burno of Brandywine was one of five $10,000 winners from the Hall-o-WIN second-chance promotion.
Udele Burno of Brandywine was excited when she found out she was one of the five $10,000 winners from the Hall-o-WIN second-chance promotion.
The mother of three walked into Lottery headquarters on Nov. 5 with an enthusiastic smile.
“I was so excited. I have never won that much money,” Udele said.
The delivery driver said she plans to use the money to purchase a new car.
Hall-o-WIN was a promotion that allowed players to purchase and enter Pick 3, Pick 4 and Pick 5 tickets into their My Lottery Rewards accounts for the chance to win $10,000 or $5,000.
Hall-o-WIN and Halloween are both over, but it is now time to turn to another promotion: ThanksWINNING. Play any draw game through Nov. 30 for a chance to win $2 or $5 Instant Win coupons, or a FREE $1 FAST PLAY Reindeer Riches ticket.
$843 MILLION
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Next Drawing: 11/07
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Bitcoin extended its retreat on Thursday, falling 1.27% to $102,157.25, marking a 20% correction from its October peak of $126,200 and confirming entry into a technical bear phase. The correction is not isolated—it reflects a perfect storm of liquidity compression, ETF rotation, and macro tightening that has erased nearly $500 billion from total crypto capitalization in just weeks.
The 37-day-old U.S. government shutdown has become the primary liquidity drag on digital assets. Over $700 billion has been withdrawn from markets through the Treasury General Account (TGA), while the Standing Repo Facility (SRF) usage hit all-time highs. These events have frozen interbank liquidity and diverted capital away from speculative instruments such as Bitcoin (BTC-USD) and Ethereum (ETH-USD).
Simultaneously, a record-high layoff wave in October—153,074 job cuts, the worst since 2003—has heightened fears of an oncoming slowdown, curbing speculative flows into crypto. Combined with the Federal Reserve’s uncertainty over another December rate cut, institutional desks are de-risking, compressing funding rates across exchanges and causing derivatives spreads to flatten to near-neutral levels.
Data from CME and Binance futures show that the open interest ratio of Bitcoin perpetuals to market capitalization has reverted to its historical average after October’s wipe-out event, where nearly $20 billion in leveraged positions were liquidated in a single session.
JPMorgan analysts, led by Nikolaos Panigirtzoglou, estimate that deleveraging in perpetuals is “largely behind us,” suggesting stabilization is imminent. They argue that Bitcoin’s volatility ratio versus gold has dropped below 2.0, indicating that BTC now consumes 1.8× more risk capital than gold—its lowest since 2020. Based on this model, the bank’s volatility-adjusted fair value points to a theoretical Bitcoin price near $170,000, implying 67% upside over the next 6–12 months.
The BTC/USD 4-hour chart reveals a descending wedge pattern—a formation that typically precedes upside reversals. Price action has printed a sequence of lower highs and higher lows, signaling seller exhaustion. The RSI near 31 suggests oversold conditions, while a mild bullish divergence emerges across short-term oscillators.
Immediate resistance stands at $103,500 (50-EMA) and $105,200 (200-EMA). A decisive break above $103,600 could trigger momentum toward $106,300, then $111,200. Conversely, failure to defend $100,400 exposes downside targets at $97,600 and $94,800, where prior liquidity clusters sit.
Trading volume surged 42.88% in 24 hours to $114.5 billion, dominated by forced liquidations rather than new long inflows. Such volume spikes, typically driven by panic rather than confidence, often precede short-term volatility traps before new accumulation phases emerge.
Institutional flows remain split. Strategy Inc. initiated a $45 million BTC purchase this month, adding 397 BTC to its holdings, while ETF inflows have plateaued following record activity in October. The ETF share of total Bitcoin holdings now exceeds 11%, up from 8.3% pre-halving, signaling that much of the institutional allocation has already occurred.
Meanwhile, MicroStrategy’s Michael Saylor reiterated his bullish stance, forecasting $150,000 by year-end and $1 million by 2029, citing tightening supply dynamics—19.94 million BTC in circulation leaves less than 1.06 million coins to be mined over the next century.
Tom Lee of Fundstrat sees Bitcoin finishing 2025 between $150,000 – $200,000, arguing that post-liquidation consolidation and renewed ETF inflows will fuel a rally. Conversely, CryptoQuant analysts warn that if BTC fails to hold the $100,000 support, it could revisit $72,000 before year-end.
Cathie Wood’s ARK Invest, meanwhile, revised its long-term bull case downward by $300,000, citing stablecoins’ rising dominance reducing Bitcoin’s transactional use case.
Still, JPMorgan maintains that gold’s renewed volatility—combined with Bitcoin’s improving relative stability—could accelerate institutional rebalancing into digital stores of value. The current BTC-to-gold market-cap ratio of 0.34:1 remains well below parity, leaving substantial room for appreciation if capital rotation resumes.
Capital searching for yield has started flowing toward Bitcoin-anchored Layer-2 ecosystems such as Bitcoin Hyper ($HYPER), whose presale has raised $26 million at $0.01323 per token. Built atop the Solana Virtual Machine (SVM), HYPER integrates Bitcoin security with DeFi scalability—an alternative for traders escaping BTC’s volatility yet seeking exposure to its underlying network effects.
The migration toward BTC-based infrastructure mirrors 2021’s move from Ethereum to Solana and Base, underscoring a structural maturation of the Bitcoin economy even amid price stagnation.
The correction extended across major altcoins:
Ethereum (ETH-USD) slid 2.64% to $3,309.07, failing to sustain $3,400 support.
Solana (SOL-USD) dropped 2.3% to $156.14, pressured by ETF profit-taking.
Cardano (ADA-USD) lost 4.17% to $0.5247, while XRP (XRP-USD) fell 1.61% to $2.24 despite optimism over an upcoming XRP ETF listing.
Dogecoin (DOGE-USD) led declines, down 4.94% to $0.1593, confirming risk aversion across retail-heavy assets.
Total crypto market capitalization now stands near $3.9 trillion, off nearly 12% month-to-date, but still 40% higher year-to-date—a testament to structural resilience even as traders reassess valuations.
Market sentiment gauges show capitulation nearing extremes. Fear & Greed Index plunged to 34 (Fear), matching levels last seen during the June 2024 correction. Historically, similar readings preceded strong multi-month rebounds.
Institutional inflows into Bitcoin ETFs slowed, but long-term holders—addresses dormant for over a year—now control 69% of supply, the highest share on record. This structural illiquidity suggests that even sharp corrections may be limited by a thin circulating float.
The broader consensus across professional desks: Bitcoin remains fundamentally healthy, but trapped in a macro liquidity squeeze that will ease only when fiscal gridlock ends and the Fed resumes a clearer easing path.
At $102,000–$103,000, Bitcoin sits on a decisive pivot zone. Short-term risk remains bearish toward $97,000, yet medium-term structural metrics—supply scarcity, futures normalization, and improving volatility ratios—point to an eventual recovery toward $150,000–$170,000 in 2026.
The near-term stance: HOLD for long-term investors, BUY on dips near $98,000, and avoid excessive leverage until the macro liquidity backdrop stabilizes.
That’s TradingNEWS
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The Kansas Lottery offers several draw games for those aiming to win big. Here’s a look at Nov. 5, 2025, results for each game:
09-17-29-61-66, Powerball: 26, Power Play: 5
Check Powerball payouts and previous drawings here.
Midday: 5-9-6
Evening: 8-9-8
Check Pick 3 payouts and previous drawings here.
Red Balls: 05-10, White Balls: 01-03
Check 2 By 2 payouts and previous drawings here.
09-12-29-38-43, Lucky Ball: 15
Check Lucky For Life payouts and previous drawings here.
01-26-35-50-51, Star Ball: 05, ASB: 03
Check Lotto America payouts and previous drawings here.
07-10-17-20-31, Cash Ball: 10
Check Super Kansas Cash payouts and previous drawings here.
Feeling lucky? Explore the latest lottery news & results
All Kansas Lottery retailers will redeem prizes up to $599. For prizes over $599, winners can submit winning tickets through the mail or in person at select Kansas Lottery offices.
By mail, send a winner claim form and your signed lottery ticket to:
Kansas Lottery Headquarters
128 N Kansas Avenue
Topeka, KS 66603-3638
(785) 296-5700
To submit in person, sign the back of your ticket, fill out a claim form, and deliver the form along with your signed lottery ticket to Kansas Lottery headquarters. 128 N Kansas Avenue, Topeka, KS 66603-3638, (785) 296-5700. Hours: 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday through Friday. This office can cash prizes of any amount.
Check previous winning numbers and payouts at Kansas Lottery.
This results page was generated automatically using information from TinBu and a template written and reviewed by a Kansas editor. You can send feedback using this form.