Maine newspapers may request identity of $1.35B lottery winner, judge rules
By Marie Weidmayer,
2024-03-27
A Maine news nonprofit can request the identity of a Mainer who won a $1.35 billion Mega Millions jackpot and then sued the mother of his child for allegedly violating a non-disclosure agreement, a judge ruled.
The lawsuit was filed anonymously, with the man named “John Doe” and the woman named “Sara Smith.” His identity was kept secret when he used LaKoma Island Investments LLC to collect his lump sum winnings of $723 million after taxes. The winning ticket was purchased at Hometown Gas and Grill in Lebanon.
The Maine Trust for Local News, which owns the Portland Press Herald and 22 other news organizations, asked federal judge John Woodcock to unseal the court records, including the lottery winner’s request for anonymity, Woodcock’s decision to allow anonymous filings, the complaint and the amended complaint. The organization may request the man’s identity in the future, but has not yet done so.
Woodcock allowed the nonprofit’s request on Friday, and now the lottery winner and the woman have 21 days to file an objection. The nonprofit will then have 14 days to respond.
Judges will typically allow confidentiality in cases involving medical information and sexual abuse, but winning the lottery does not have an argument for privacy that outweighs the “strong presumption in favor of public access to judicial records,” the Maine Trust for Local News’ filing said.
The man filed the lawsuit anonymously because of a specific threat of physical and emotional harm to himself and his daughter. He said at least one person sent him “threatening communications” after discovering his identity. However, that communication is filed under seal so the Maine Trust for Local News hasn’t been able to review the document to see if the threats are substantiated, the nonprofit said in the filing.
Correction: An earlier version of this report had an inaccurate headline. The judge has not ruled that the Maine Trust for Local News may know the identity of the lottery winner. Federal judge John Woodcock has ruled it may request it.
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