Balbir Atwal owner of the 7-Eleven store that sold one of the winning Powerball tickets, holds the check he received for $1 million dollars at his store in Chino Hills, California on Thursday. (AP photo)
Washington:
An Indian-origin convenience store owner in the US has become a celebrity overnight after he sold one of the three Powerball winning lotteries with a record jackpot of $1.6 billion.
Lottery officials confirmed one jackpot-winning ticket was sold at Balbir Atwal's store located at Chino Hills in California. Two others were sold in Tennessee and Florida.
Mr Atwal received a $1 million cheque as retailer bonus for selling the winning ticket.
Mr Atwal said he was surprised to learn his store was one of the lucky ones, calling the group of revellers "a big family." "I didn't believe it and then I looked at it carefully again," Mr Atwal said.
City officials described Mr Atwal as a cornerstone in the community, after he was among the first business owners to set up shop in the city after its incorporation.
Mr Atwal said he planned to give a part of his winnings to charity and share the rest with his employees and family. "This is a land of opportunity," said Atwal.
"Anybody who comes, you will achieve your dreams." Mr Atwal came to the US from Punjab, India in the early 80s, and opened four 7-Eleven stores, including the Chino Hills location about 24 years ago.
"I 100 per cent believe he deserves this," Sonia Atwal, one of his three daughters, was quoted by NBC News as saying.
"He pretty much set his foot here and helped our family make it- the American dream." Shortly after the announcement on Wednesday, a huge crowd packed the 7-Eleven chanting "Chino Hills" to celebrate the historic win in the usually-quiet suburb city of about 75,000 residents.
Although the large group did not win big, they said it was exciting to know the winner was from their community. "We're all just very excited that one of us could be the winners, and it's just very exciting for everyone," Delaney Gurol said.
More than 30 media trucks were parked outside the Chino Hills store to cover the event.
It was not immediately known who the winning ticket was sold to, and lottery officials said he or she had one year from Wednesday to come forward.
In addition to the winning jackpot tickets, lottery officials said eight tickets that won $2 million were sold in seven states, and 73 that netted $1 million were sold in 23 states.
The jackpot on Wednesday was not just the largest in Powerball history, New York State lottery officials said, but also the largest of any lottery game in the United States. The jackpot started at $40 million on November 7 and rolled over 19 times, with no one matching all six numbers.