Connecticut
CT Lottery Lucky For Life, Cash 5 winning numbers for Oct. 12, 2025
Powerball, Mega Millions jackpots: What to know in case you win
Here’s what to know in case you win the Powerball or Mega Millions jackpot.
Just the FAQs, USA TODAY
The Connecticut Lottery offers several draw games for those willing to make a bet to win big.
Those who want to play in Connecticut can enter the CT Lotto, Lucky for Life and Cash 5 games as well as play the national Powerball and Mega Millions games. There are also two drawings a day for the Play 3 with Wild Ball and Play 4 with Wild Ball games.
Drawings are held at regular days and times, check the end of this story to see the schedule. Here’s a look at Sunday, Oct. 12, 2025 results for each game:
Winning Lucky For Life numbers from Oct. 12 drawing
05-11-15-22-45, Lucky Ball: 14
Check Lucky For Life payouts and previous drawings here.
Winning Cash 5 numbers from Oct. 12 drawing
01-21-25-32-35
Check Cash 5 payouts and previous drawings here.
Winning Play3 numbers from Oct. 12 drawing
Day: 1-2-4, WB: 8
Night: 5-5-2, WB: 3
Check Play3 payouts and previous drawings here.
Winning Play4 numbers from Oct. 12 drawing
Day: 5-1-7-2, WB: 5
Night: 6-4-6-2, WB: 5
Check Play4 payouts and previous drawings here.
Feeling lucky? Explore the latest lottery news & results
Are you a winner? Here’s how to claim your lottery prize
Connecticut Lottery prizes up to $599 can be easily claimed at any authorized CT Lottery Retailer without additional forms or documentation or by mail. For prizes between $600 and $5,000, winners have the option to claim by mail or in person at any CT Lottery High-Tier Claim Center or CT Lottery Headquarters. For prizes between $5,001 and $49,999, winnings must be claimed in person at the Connecticut Lottery headquarters or by mail. All prizes over $50,000 must be claimed in person at CT Lottery Headquarters. Winners are required to bring a government-issued photo ID and their Social Security card.
CT Lottery Claims Dept.
15 Sterling Drive
Wallingford, CT 06492
For additional details, including locations of High-Tier Claim Centers, visit the Connecticut Lottery’s claim information page.
When are the Connecticut Lottery drawings held?
- Powerball: 10:59 p.m. on Monday, Wednesday, and Saturday.
- Mega Millions: 11 p.m. on Tuesday and Friday.
- Lucky for Life: 10:30 p.m. daily.
- Lotto: 10:38 p.m. on Tuesday and Friday.
- Cash 5: 10:29 p.m. daily.
- Play3 Day: 1:57 p.m. daily.
- Play3 Night: 10:29 p.m. daily.
- Play4 Day: 1:57 p.m. daily.
- Play4 Night: 10:29 p.m. daily.
This results page was generated automatically using information from TinBu and a template written and reviewed by a Connecticut editor. You can send feedback using this form.
Connecticut
Researcher restores forgotten Black military family to Connecticut history
SIMSBURY, Conn. (WFSB) – As America marks its 250th year, researchers are uncovering stories of people whose names didn’t make history books but whose sacrifices shaped the nation.
In Simsbury, one such story centers on Esther Wallace Jackson, a woman born free to formerly enslaved parents who became the anchor of a multigenerational military family whose service spans nearly every major American conflict.
Jackson’s story was almost lost, scattered across probate records and fading documents.
Connecticut researcher John Mills spent years piecing it together, uncovering a formerly enslaved family whose military contributions include service from the Revolutionary War through the Civil War.
Mills, a genealogist and founder of the nonprofit Alex Breanne Corporation, discovered the family while tracing the family tree of a Civil War soldier from Bloomfield.
“It turns out he was a grandson of Peter and Esther Jackson. And so, I started chasing down that story and discovered that Peter Jackson had been enslaved in Simsbury,” Mills said.
The family’s military legacy runs deep. Jackson’s father, London Wallace, served in the French and Indian War.
Her three brothers fought in the Revolutionary War.
Generations later, seven of Peter and Esther’s grandsons served in the Civil War, and six never returned home.
“With every major conflict, this family is deeply involved,” Mills said.
For men who were enslaved or newly freed, military service carried deeper meaning.
“You’re fighting for the country while you also don’t have the same freedom as others,” Mills said.
Mills partnered with the Simsbury Historical Society and the Department of Veterans Affairs to install a burial marker honoring the family’s military legacy.
The marker was placed next to the headstones of Peter and Esther Jackson.
In June, descendants gathered to see their family’s untold story commemorated.
“The intent was to have every person that we knew of who fought in one of these U.S. conflicts that were a part of their family on this monument,” Mills said.
Jackson’s obituary described her as a respected community member who walked two miles to her church on Hopmeadow Street well into her nineties.
Her legacy now lives in the Simsbury Public Library, where a hand-painted portrait depicts her likeness using features of her descendants.
“We unveiled it on June 19, 2025. Now, we have something visual so that the family and the community have to align with the story of Esther Jackson,” Mills said.
Mills said the research serves a broader purpose beyond memorializing individuals.
“The information we find, the research we do, is not only for them to be memorialized. It’s to create something that the public and the community, that specific town, has something that gives them the history,” Mills said.
The Wallace-Jackson descendants say they plan to return to Simsbury this Memorial Day to place flags at the monument bearing their family’s name.
Click here for more information about the Alex Breanne Corporation.
Copyright 2025 WFSB. All rights reserved.
Connecticut
Ned Lamont’s solid approval rating holding up, new poll shows
Independent polling conducted after Gov. Ned Lamont’s reelection kickoff found Connecticut voters give him a solid approval rating, but a significant minority are “indifferent or neutral” about him serving a third term.
A Nutmeg State Poll released Monday by the University of New Hampshire Survey Center found voters approve of his performance by a margin of 55% to 38%, a net approval rating of +17, virtually unchanged since September.
Lamont’s challenger for the Democratic nomination, Rep. Josh Elliott of Hamden, barely made an impression among likely Democratic voters after four months of campaigning. Nearly 80% had no opinion of him, while 69% had a favorable opinion of the two-term governor.
If a Democratic primary were held today, the poll found Lamont outpolling Elliott, 55% to 7%, with 37% undecided and 2% saying they would write in someone else.
The data released Monday offered no matchups between Lamont and either of the two Republican candidates, Sen. Ryan Fazio of Greenwich or former Mayor Erin Stewart of New Britain.
Overall, 34% of voters were enthusiastic (11%) or satisfied (23%) about Lamont’s candidacy for a third term, while 31% were dissatisfied (21%) or angry (10%), 28% indifferent or neutral, and 6% unsure.
Among Democratic voters, the poll found little evidence of the dissatisfaction that liberal Democratic lawmakers have expressed about Lamont over his refusal to embrace a more progressive tax code or higher spending.
Eighty-seven percent of self-described liberals, 76% of progressives and 63% of moderates had favorable opinions of Lamont. Forty-eight percent of socialists had a favorable opinion, but only 15% of socialists were negative.
Asked to name the most important problems facing Connecticut, the cost of living was named by 22%, following by taxes (18%), housing (15%), jobs and the economy (10%) and immigration (5%). Four percent mentioned national issues or the federal government.
The poll was conducted from Nov. 12 to 17 and has a margin of error of plus or minus 3.5% percent on questions posed to all voters and 6.5% on questions posed only to likely Democratic voters.
The survey is based on “a probability-based web panel” recruited by phone, text-to-web, or mail-to-web surveys sent to randomly chosen individuals.
Connecticut
Quiet today with rain later tomorrow
A chilly start today, but it will be a quiet day ahead after the early clouds, sprinkles and flurries move out! Looking quiet for much of the day tomorrow before rain arrives late. The heavy rain moves out with just a few scattered showers possible for Wednesday’s busy travel. Turning wind & chilly for Thanksgiving and colder & windier for all of your shopping plans Friday.
Early this morning: Variable clouds with a flurry or shower clearing & chilly with lows in the 30s.
Today: Clouds moving out! Mostly sunny & a bit windy for the morning through noon with highs 45-51.
Tonight: Some increasing cloudiness & frosty with lows 27-35.
Tomorrow: Mostly cloudy with rain arriving 3-6pm. Highs in the lower to mid 50s.
Wednesday: Mostly cloudy and mild with a few isolated showers. Highs in the upper 50s to around 60!
Thanksgiving Day: Sun & clouds, becoming windy and colder. Highs near 50, then falling throughout the day. Wind chills in the 30s for the afternoon with wind gusts 30-35mph.
Friday: Sun and clouds, blustery and cold! A few flurries possible. Winds could occasionally gusting to 40mph. Highs in the 40s with wind chills in the 20s and teens.
Saturday: Sun and clouds and continued cold. Breezy with highs near 40.
Sunday: Becoming cloudy with evening rain developing. Highs in the mid to upper 40s.
Monday: Rain tapering. Highs in the mid 50s.
-
Business1 week ago
Fire survivors can use this new portal to rebuild faster and save money
-
World1 week agoFrance and Germany support simplification push for digital rules
-
News1 week agoCourt documents shed light on Indiana shooting that sparked stand-your-ground debate
-
Science3 days agoWashington state resident dies of new H5N5 form of bird flu
-
World1 week agoSinclair Snaps Up 8% Stake in Scripps in Advance of Potential Merger
-
World1 week agoCalls for answers grow over Canada’s interrogation of Israel critic
-
Politics1 week agoDuckworth fires staffer who claimed to be attorney for detained illegal immigrant with criminal history
-
Business1 week ago
Amazon’s Zoox offers free robotaxi rides in San Francisco
