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What would you do if you won the lottery?

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WASHINGTON — With the combined Mega Millions and Powerball jackpots totaling over $1 billion, we asked the question on our Facebook page: What would you do if you won the lottery?

Our readers and listeners daydreamed of the possibilities and shared their answers with us. The replies ranged anywhere from heartwarming to hilarious, so we’ve decided to highlight a few of our favorites.

On our Facebook page, several people said they’d get take their winnings and get off the grid.

Karen Francella said she would “Disappear with no forwarding address.”

Adriana Toth says she’ll “keep my mouth shut.” It’s hard for second and third cousins to come out of the woodwork looking for loans if they don’t know you struck it rich, right?

But we have to give this disclaimer: Keep it legal.

“My husband says he’d immediately and intentionally wrap his car around a pole so he could buy his dream car,” said Deborah Ramirez Mannino. But insurance companies frown upon that sort of thing, so she balanced it out by keeping her own intentions pure.

“I am committed to buying absolutely nothing for one year while we accumulate plenty of interest to live on. Maybe just maybe, one of us will get the chance to stick to our plan,” she said.

The answers were a tad more tender on our Talkback line.

Marv Reid said, “I’d set up a family trust, travel to Vanuatu and New Zealand. Upon returning, I would dedicate the rest of my life to ending childhood hunger and cancer, donating time and money.”

Shirley in Friendship Heights was also as charitable: “I will give a large chunk to the (National) Multiple Sclerosis Society to help people in Maryland, Virginia and D.C. with their rent, food and someone to help take care of them.”

Former Brazilian au pair testifies her ex-lover plotted to kill his wife, though lacks some details

FAIRFAX, Va. (AP) — A former Brazilian au pair testified on Wednesday that she turned against her former lover in a sprawling double homicide scheme involving his wife because she “wanted the truth to come out.” For more than a year, Juliana Peres Magalhães did not speak with officials about the 2023 killings of Christine Banfield and Joseph Ryan, or about Brendan Banfield’s alleged involvement. But attorneys say that days before her own criminal trial, the former au pair changed her mind and began to talk. Now, Brendan Banfield is facing a trial in the aggravated murder of his wife and Ryan, and Magalhães’ testimony has become a key component of prosecutors’ case. Banfield, who has pleaded not guilty, could face life in prison if convicted. The way officials tell it, Banfield and Magalhães lured Ryan to their house. The two then shot him, staging the scene to look as if Ryan had been a predator stabbing Christine Banfield.
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