Powerball

Winner of $1.3 billion Powerball jackpot is an immigrant from Laos who has cancer

Cheng โ€œCharlieโ€ Saephan, 46, also said he and his wife would split the prize with a friend who had chipped in to buy a $100 batch of tickets that led to the jackpot win.

Cheng "Charlie" Saephan
AP Photo/Jenny Kane

One of the winners of a $1.3 billion Powerball jackpot last month is an immigrant from Laos who has had cancer for eight years and had his latest chemotherapy treatment last week.

Cheng โ€œCharlieโ€ Saephan, 46, of Portland, told a news conference held by the Oregon Lottery on Monday that he and his 37-year-old wife, Duanpen, would split the prize evenly with a friend. Laiza Chao, 55, of the Portland suburb of Milwaukie, had chipped in $100 to buy a batch of tickets with them. They are taking a lump sum payment, $422 million after taxes.

โ€œI will be able to provide for my family and my health,โ€ he said, adding that he'd โ€œfind a good doctor for myself.โ€

Saephan, who has two young children, said that as a cancer patient, he wondered, โ€œHow am I going to have time to spend all of this money? How long will I live?โ€

After they bought the shared tickets, Chao sent a photo of the tickets to Saephan and said, โ€œWeโ€™re billionaires.โ€ It was a joke before the actual drawing, he said, but the next day it came true.

Saephan said he was born in Laos and moved to Thailand in 1987, before immigrating to the U.S. in 1994. He wore a sash at the news conference identifying himself as Iu Mien, a southeast Asian ethnic group with roots in southern China. Many Iu Mein were subsistence farmers and assisted American forces during the Vietnam war; after the conflict, thousands of Iu Mien families fled to Thailand to avoid retribution and eventually settled in the U.S., especially along the West Coast.

Saephan graduated from high school in 1996 and has lived in Portland for 30 years. He worked as a machinist for an aerospace company.

In the weeks leading up to the drawing, he wrote out numbers for the game on a piece of paper and slept with it under his pillow, he said. He prayed that he would win, saying, โ€œI need some help โ€” I don't want to die yet unless I have done something for my family first.โ€

The winning Powerball ticket was sold in early April at a Plaid Pantry convenience store in Portland, ending a winless streak that had stretched more than three months. The Oregon Lottery said it had to go through a security and vetting process before announcing the identity of the person who came forward to claim the prize.

โ€œThe lesson didnโ€™t really go according to plan.โ€ Math professor Nicholas Kapoor bought a Powerball ticket to demonstrate how improbable it is to win the lottery โ€“ and then he won $100,000. Hereโ€™s what he wants you to know about playing the Powerball.

Under Oregon law, with few exceptions, lottery players cannot remain anonymous. Winners have a year to claim the top prize.

The jackpot had a cash value of $621 million before taxes if the winner chose to take a lump sum rather than an annuity paid over 30 years, with an immediate payout followed by 29 annual installments. The prize is subject to federal taxes and state taxes in Oregon.

The $1.3 billion prize is the fourth largest Powerball jackpot in history, and the eighth largest among U.S. jackpot games, according to the Oregon Lottery.

The biggest U.S. lottery jackpot won was $2.04 billion in California in 2022.

Copyright The Associated Press
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