Pubdate: Mon, 19 Mar 2007 Source: Charleston Daily Mail (WV) Copyright: 2007 Charleston Daily Mail Contact: http://www.dailymail.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/76 JACK WHITTAKER WRONGFUL DEATH TRIAL SET TO BEGIN TODAY A jury trial is scheduled for this week in a civil suit that contends Powerball winner Jack Whittaker was negligent in the drug overdose of an 18-year-old boy who died in his home. Jury selection was set to begin today in the wrongful death trial in Putnam Circuit Court. Whittaker is being sued over the death of 18-year-old Jesse Joe Tribble, who died after ingesting cocaine and prescription painkillers in September 2004 while in a Scott Depot house owned by Whittaker. The trial results from a suit filed in March 2005 by Tribble's father, James Tribble, who claims Whittaker was responsible for the teen's death. Jesse Tribble was a friend of Whittaker's late granddaughter, Brandi Bragg. The suit alleges that Bragg encouraged and aided Jesse Tribble in using drugs, blaming Whittaker for not supervising his house and his granddaughter, of whom he had legal custody. Bragg did drugs with Jesse Tribble the night he died and then left him alone after he passed out, according to the suit. It also says Whittaker, who was out of town when the death occurred, regularly gave his granddaughter thousands of dollars each week while knowing she had a drug problem. Bragg died of a drug overdose several months after Jesse Tribble's death. Whittaker has said that Jesse Tribble gave his granddaughter drugs and that Bragg left the house hours before Tribble overdosed. Putnam County Circuit Court Judge O.C. Spaulding will preside over the civil case, which is expected to last through March 28 or 29. Potential jurors will be individually interviewed today and opening statements are expected to start mid-morning Tuesday, said Tom Peyton, a lawyer for James Tribble. "Just because a juror has some knowledge of a party involved or some knowledge about the case does not automatically disqualify them," Peyton said. "The core issue here is whether they can be fair and impartial." Whittaker's lawyers had tried to have the case heard in a federal rather than state court, arguing that Whittaker lived in Virginia at the time of Jesse Tribble's death. They moved the case to federal court in May 2005, but a U.S. District Court judge later sent it back to the state court. The wrongful-death lawsuit is just one of Whittaker's legal woes. Since winning a record-breaking jackpot of $314 million on Christmas Day in 2002, he has been involved in a web of lawsuits, charged with drunken-driving and assault, and been the victim of multiple thieves. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman