$12.8 million jackpot in limbo after Arizona store worker buys winning ticket – Court to decide who gets prize


$12.8 million jackpot in limbo after Arizona store worker buys winning ticket – Court to decide who gets prize

A worker at a convenience store in Arizona is in legal trouble after buying a lottery ticket worth $12.8 million from the store where he worked. A judge will now decide who should get the prize, as both the store and the worker claim it.A court complaint says the incident started on the evening of November 24, 2025, at a Circle K in Scottsdale. A customer asked for a replay of numbers for that night’s “The Pick” draw, 12News reported. The employee on duty, Robert Gawlitza, printed $85 worth of tickets, but the customer only paid $60, leaving 25 tickets on the counter.The complaint says the unsold tickets were left in the store overnight and were discovered the next morning intact. After learning that his store had sold the jackpot winner, Gawlitza reportedly checked the abandoned tickets and found the winning one. The winning numbers were 3, 13, 14, 15, 19, and 26.Gawlitza then finished his shift, took off his Circle K uniform and bought the tickets, including the winning one, from another employee for $10, according to the complaint.Store management was alerted and the ticket was taken to Circle K’s corporate office, where it is being held pending a court ruling on ownership.Circle K does not itself claim the ticket but has asked the court to determine whether it or Gawlitza is the rightful owner. In its filing, the company cited an Arizona Administrative Code provision that says retailers have rights to lottery tickets that customers leave unpaid and which remain unsold.A spokesperson for the Arizona Lottery said it was unaware of any previous dispute of this kind involving the state’s lottery.The $12.8 million jackpot is the fourth biggest “The Pick” prize ever sold in Arizona and the largest since 2019. The customer who originally bought the ticket has until May 23, which is 180 days after the draw, to come forward and claim the prize. Arizona retailers receive a 6.5 per cent commission on lottery sales and an additional $10,000 incentive for selling top prizes over $1 million.

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