Background
Post was born in Erie, Pennsylvania. His mother died when he was 8 years old and his father sent him to an orphanage soon after.
Post was born in Erie, Pennsylvania. His mother died when he was 8 years old and his father sent him to an orphanage soon after.
Post survived, and was successfully sued by an ex-wife for a share of the winnings. By the end of his life, Post was $1 million in debt. Post worked in various temporary jobs such as in cooking, truck driving for traveling carnivals and circuses, and painting before winning the lottery.
He even served 28 days in jail for issuing invalid checks.
Post bought one of the winning tickets of the Pennsylvania Lottery in 1988, worth $16.2 million. The total jackpot was more than $32 million, the second highest total in state history.
The other half went to a group of 16 employees of the Westinghouse Electric Bettis Atomic Power Laboratory in Pittsburgh. In the two weeks after Post collected the first of his 26 annual payments of $497,953.47, he spent more than $300,000 on gifts and investments such as a liquor license, a lease for a restaurant in Florida, a used-car lot, a twin-engine airplane (despite lacking a pilot"s license).
In just three months" time, his debts totaled $500,000.
The next year, he bought a mansion in Oil City, Pennsylvania for $395,000. Karpik later sued Post for one-third of the lottery winnings. The attempt did not succeed, and Post"s brother was arrested.
In 1989, Karpik sued Post for a portion of his lottery winnings.
She claimed that they had agreed to split any winnings. After three years, a judge ruled that Post owed her one-third of all the proceeds, despite Post’s vehement denial of any agreement and his inability to pay, as he was by then deeply in debt.
He refused to turn over his 1992 annual payment to comply with the judgment, as a result of which the judge ordered all of his lottery payments to be frozen until the dispute was resolved. In 1998, Post was arrested on a $260,000 sailboat for refusing to serve a 6 to 24-month prison sentence on a six-year-old assault conviction.
Post had fired his shotgun at a man who was coming to his mansion to collect a debt.
Post eventually incurred over $1 million in debt. He also survived partially on food stamps and a $450/month stipend. He allegedly remarked that "I was much happier when I was broke.”
Post died of respiratory failure on January 15, 2006 at age 66.