Close X
Sunday, November 17, 2024
ADVT 
National

Alberta Man With $50Million Lottery Ticket Says He Knew He Was Going To Win Someday

The Canadian Press, 07 Feb, 2015 12:21 AM
    ST. ALBERT, Alta. — Randall Rush says it sounds hokey, but he was sure he was going to win it big someday.
     
    The Alberta man says he started playing the lottery six years ago, after a vision of digits popped in his head. He wrote them down and a friend persuaded him to play.
     
    So he did, every week, without fail.
     
    And then it happened. He won $50 million dollars.
     
    "I didn't think I was going to win. I knew I was going to win," the grinning 48-year-old told reporters Friday at the Western Canada Lottery Corp.'s office in St. Albert.
     
    Rush says he was at home last weekend in the town of Lamont, northeast of Edmonton, when he noticed he was out of cat food. And his famished feline, named Conway Kitty, wasn't too pleased.
     
    He went to a grocery store to stock up and decided, while there, to check his growing pile of lottery tickets. It was the last one scanned that turned out to be the winner of the Jan. 16 Lotto Max jackpot.
     
    Rush said he was expecting a win worth maybe a few million — not one so enormous.
     
    He screamed and the store clerk screamed too. He thought he was going to hyperventilate. And he felt like he was a bit drunk.
     
    It took about "a nanosecond" for him to decide to quit his job at a heavy equipment rental business.
     
     
    Then he started meeting with bankers to set up a trust fund that will help hungry and homeless children around the world.
     
    "When I was 26 years old, I was ... close to being homeless. I never forgot the experience," Rush said.
     
    "This is a tremendous amount of money and I'm looking at this like a gift from God and it's a responsibility."
     
    But he also plans to have fun too.
     
    He describes himself as a "car nut" and will splurge on his dream car, a 1965 Corvette, and likely a Porsche.
     
    He doesn't have any real family, so will help out his close circle of friends, including one who took him in when his house burned down 12 years ago.
     
    And then, there's his kitty.
     
    Rush joked about putting the cat on a gourmet diet of pate. He said the animal isn't as excited by the win and just wants to nap.
     
    "He's taking it in stride."
     
    Rush is the second $50 million lottery winner in Alberta. An Edmonton couple won the same prize in a Lotto Max draw in December 2013.
     
    The largest single Canadian lottery win also came from the province. A group of oilfield workers won $54.3 million in a Lotto 6-49 draw in October 2005.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Ortio Makes 36 Saves For First NHL Shutout As Calgary Flames Down Vancouver Canucks

    Ortio Makes 36 Saves For First NHL Shutout As Calgary Flames Down Vancouver Canucks
    VANCOUVER — Joni Ortio had to overcome a lot more than the Vancouver Canucks to record the first shutout of his NHL career.

    Ortio Makes 36 Saves For First NHL Shutout As Calgary Flames Down Vancouver Canucks

    Will Low Oil Prices Force Ottawa To Open Contingency Reserve To Balance Books?

    Will Low Oil Prices Force Ottawa To Open Contingency Reserve To Balance Books?
    OTTAWA — Experts weighing the threat of low oil prices to the federal government's bottom line are asking themselves a follow-up question: what's to become of Ottawa's contingency reserve?

    Will Low Oil Prices Force Ottawa To Open Contingency Reserve To Balance Books?

    Dalhousie Professors' Complaint Against Dentistry Students Rejected

    Dalhousie Professors' Complaint Against Dentistry Students Rejected
    HALIFAX — Four Dalhousie University professors say they have "mixed feelings" after a complaint they launched against a group of 13 male dentistry students who were allegedly members of a Facebook page where sexually violent content was posted was rejected by the school.

    Dalhousie Professors' Complaint Against Dentistry Students Rejected

    Outlook Grows Gloomier For Oilpatch With No End To Crude Doldrums In Sight

    Outlook Grows Gloomier For Oilpatch With No End To Crude Doldrums In Sight
    CALGARY — When it comes to figuring out how much pain tumbling crude prices are going to inflict on the oilpatch, one investment strategist says it's not so much a question of how low oil will go, but of how low for how long.  

    Outlook Grows Gloomier For Oilpatch With No End To Crude Doldrums In Sight

    Man, 61 Charged With Attempting To Abduct Infant At Vancouver Grocery Store

    Man, 61 Charged With Attempting To Abduct Infant At Vancouver Grocery Store
    VANCOUVER — A 61-year-old man is in custody after Vancouver police allege he attempted to abduct an infant.

    Man, 61 Charged With Attempting To Abduct Infant At Vancouver Grocery Store

    Burnaby's Marine Pub Destroyed In Suspicious Fire

    Burnaby's Marine Pub Destroyed In Suspicious Fire
    BURNABY, B.C. — A neighbourhood pub in Burnaby was destroyed in a massive three-alarm fire early Saturday. The cause of the blaze at the Marine Pub is still under investigation but the Burnaby Fire Department says it is suspicious.

    Burnaby's Marine Pub Destroyed In Suspicious Fire