stock when the company went public, you have now lost more than half of your investment. facebook hitting a new low today closing at $18 a share. that s a long way from its initial public offering of $38 in may. the latest slide coming as brokerages are cutting price targets. analysts say the company s value should dive even further because more than a billion newly available shares are set to flood the market in coming months. a railroad engineer is now a former railroad engineer. that s because he just claimed this month s 337-million-dollar power ball jackpot. would whoo hooh after realizing he won he hid the ticket in a bible then under a couch and finally on top of the fridge. he says he quit his job pretty quickly and also called his mom and had a little fun with her. i called her up i said i have got a surprise for you. i won $200,000 in the power ball. she goes oh my god. i said are you ready?
mom? the truth is i won 337 million and $4 in the power ball. ha ha. [ laughter ] she said no, you didn t. no, you didn t. i said mother, yes i did. everybody just started coming to the house and that s what they did. harris: coming to the house. can you imagine? he will will walk away with $158 million after taxes and after he selected the lump sum option. he says the first thing he bought after the winning ticket, what do you think it was? a pack of bubble gum. my grandma always said life is best lived simply. she is 100,000. she is 100 now. she is right. surveying the damage from the sky. investigators trying to figure out how a fan fell to his death at a preseason football game. you are watching the most powerful name in news. fox news channel. shriners hospitals have everything to do with that.
right? not all profits. he said a majority of the profit, but even that money could potentially be seized by the government. any payments made to this s.e.a.l. could be seize pdp but one military official laughed and said, look, lawyers and accountants can find many ways to hide the money. thank you, sir. you bet. mitt romney introduces himself to voters in the most high profile speech of his political career. but was this the real romney? the author of the book with the same name joins me to talk about that and ron reagan will be here, too. plus our eyes on a news conference in lansing, michigan. in just a few minutes we get to find out who the newest multimillionaire is. the only winner from that $337 million powerball jack pot. are you related to him?
thank you, tom. a deadly shooting at a supermarket in new jersey. three people dead after police say the gunman shot two fellow employees before killing himself. the shooting happened overnight. the store was not opened at the time. police are looking into a motive. harvard university is investigating dozens of students for possibly cheating on the final exam. university officials say undergraduates are being investigated for plagiarism or sharing answers on a take-home test. if found guilty, students could face a one-year suspension. and michigan lottery officials have revealed the identity of the person who won the state s $337 million powerball jackpot. he is 44-year-old railroad worker don lawson. here s what he said he did with the winning ticket when he found out he won. the ticket was in my bible. and then it was put under my coach. it was put in my refrigerator.
years. the regulator will determine whether those state laws violate federal law preventing the sale of gift cards that expire in less than five years. and it seems the yet-unknown winner of a $337 million powerball jackpot purchased in lucky ticket in michigan. a state lottery spokesperson says it s not unusual for winners to wait weeks before claiming the prize. you know, they ve got to unplug the phone, get anonymous numbers jenna: wouldn t it be hard to do? you ve got to lock that ticket up. well, on to this story now. the former head of the national border patrol union is due in court on monday, and here s why. a federal grand jury is indicting terence vonner, retired president, on 12 counts. those 12 counts range from wire fraud to using hundreds of thousands of dollars in union money for personal use. william la jeunesse is live in our l.a. bureau with more. william? reporter: books, luggage, meals, airplane tickets, according to the indictment,