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Fridley Powerball player just misses $1B prize, wins $1 million

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While the jackpot in the multistate Powerball lottery has surged past the $1 billion mark, there was no foolin’ around in Fridley on April Fool’s Day this year, when a player snared a cool $1 million prize.

A Powerball ticket purchased at Casey’s General Store along University Ave. matched the first five numbers drawn Monday night to snag the $1 million windfall — before taxes.

The numbers drawn were 19-24-40-42-56, and the Powerball was 23.

The $1 million prize must be claimed in person at Minnesota Lottery headquarters in Roseville. Minnesota Lottery officials recommended that winners call ahead to make an appointment.

Lottery winners above $10,000 reserve the right to keep their identity and city of residence private.

Now, back to our regularly scheduled programming on the Daydream Network. The Powerball jackpot stands at $1.09 billion as of Tuesday afternoon. Wednesday night’s drawing will amount to the ninth-largest jackpot in U.S. lottery history.

The $1.09 billion prize is for Only a sole winner who makes the rare decision to be paid by annuity over 30 years would be able to claim the full $1.09 billion prize. Nearly all big winners opt for the cash payout option, which for Wednesday night would be roughly $527.3 million.

No one has won the Powerball jackpot since New Year’s Day, a stretch of 39 drawings without anyone picking the the game’s six numbers. If no one wins the 40th jackpot on Wednesday night, it rolls to Saturday, which would match the all-time record of 41 consecutive drawings without a jackpot.

The reason for the jackpot drought is simple: The odds of winning the top prize are 1 in 292.2 million. Those kinds of odds create the large jackpots that in turn attract attention and drive up sales.

Powerball is played in 45 states plus Washington, D.C., Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.



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Connexus Energy worker dies after falling from boom truck in central MN

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A 59-year-old utility worker died Tuesday after falling from the bucket of a boom truck at a job site north of Big Lake, according to Sherburne County Sheriff’s Office Cmdr. Ben Zawacki.

Thomas L. Stewart of Dayton fell about six to eight feet and suffered significant head injuries while working in the ditch on the north side of 241st Avenue NW, just west of 185th Street in Orrock Township.

First responders performed life-saving efforts at the scene before Stewart was transported to St. Cloud Hospital, where he was pronounced dead late Tuesday.

Stewart worked for the Minnesota-based utility company Connexus Energy. In a response to a Facebook post about the incident, a representative from Connexus thanked people for their thoughts and prayers, and clarified the utility worker was not electrocuted in the incident.

“We’re heartbroken over the passing of our friend and colleague but we are waiting for family and friends to be notified so we cannot share additional information,” Stacy Downs, communications specialist at Connexus, said Wednesday.



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Mail service shows little evidence of improvement in Minnesota as holidays approach

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“I doubt if they’re going to get there by Christmas, even though I’m mailing them priority,” said Hager, a trust officer for the Department of the Interior and retired army colonel. “It’s just the way life is. Sometimes the vegetables don’t arrive on the island, so you gotta wait another week.”

In 2023, many residents across northern Minnesota and into the south metro complained their mail often didn’t arrive for days at a time. Hager said he felt USPS’s performance is “not as nearly as bad as last year” but still noticed mail arriving in the evenings when it used to arrive in the late morning.

Craig, who has been vocal about mail problems in her district, said it seemed as if USPS had “stabilized” in Minnesota relative to other parts of the country. But quarterly service reports show on-time mail delivery in the Minnesota-North Dakota district still slowed in 2024.

In the latest report, which covers July through September 2024, 84% of first-class, two-day mail, and 75% of three-to-five-day mail was delivered on time. That’s down from scores of 88% and 79% in the same period of 2023. All those scores are below national averages, which also fell during the same time period.

Bemidji Mayor Jorge Prince said he knows from talking to four carriers in town that they are overworked and understaffed.

“I still get the impression that they believe that they’re still short-staffed relative to the workload,” he said. “They’re cautious in what they say, but I think they’re feeling stretched.”



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Gilbert woman charged with murder after man ODs; she then wrote about it in a private Facebook message

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A Gilbert, Minn., woman has been charged with third-degree murder after she allegedly gave drugs to a 25-year-old Mountain Iron man who died later from the effects of fentanyl and ethanol last summer.

Ashley Rose Cook, 20, whom investigators had been unable to find, was arrested earlier this week and arraigned in St. Louis County court in Hibbing on Tuesday. Her bail has been set at $500,000 and her next court appearance is Thursday. She is in the St. Louis County jail.

According to the criminal complaint, Cook wrote about her role in the man’s death in a private Facebook message sent on July 31.

“I gave [the victim a] perc 30 and he died,” she said. “Perc” is another name for oxycodone, according to DEA.gov.

Investigators also found a Facebook exchange between Cook and the victim indicating that she was looking for people who wanted to buy opioids.

A witness said that she and the victim met with Cook at a gas station in Gilbert. He got out of the car to talk to Cook, while the witness went to the bathroom to look for a phone she had left there earlier. The witness, her brother and the victim went home, where they planned to have a bonfire. The latter went to the bathroom but didn’t return. He was found dead alongside a piece of aluminum foil with burnt residue. An autopsy determined that he had died from the toxic effects of fentanyl and ethanol.

According to the St. Louis County Sheriff’s Department, Cook’s arrest is the result of a nearly nine-month investigation by the Lake Superior Violent Offenders Task Force to “hold those accountable who profit off the deadly sale of controlled substances, particularly fentanyl.”



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