it was a Scam All along .... GoFundMe scam: Homeless man, couple charged in New Jersey

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MOUNT HOLLY, New Jersey (WABC) -- A GoFundMe account that started after a homeless man's apparent good deed went viral was actually a criminal scheme, authorities said Thursday, a hoax that culminated with the arrests of the three people involved.


Prosecutor Scott Coffina, of the Burlington County Prosecutor's Office, said Mark D'Amico, Kate McClure and Johnny Bobbitt are all charged with theft by deception and conspiracy. In light of the charges, GoFundMe has promised a full refund to every donor who contributed to the $400,000 that was raised.


Coffina said the tale was "fictitious" and "formed the basis of a scam" that was "concocted to compel kind-hearted individuals to contribute to the cause."


"The entire campaign was predicated on a lie," Coffina said. "Less than an hour after the GoFundMe campaign went live McClure, in a text exchange with a friend, stated that the story about Bobbitt assisting her was fake."


McClure and D'Amico surrendered Wednesday and have been released pending a future court date. Bobbitt is in custody in Philadelphia and is awaiting extradition to Burlington County. If convicted, they each face 5 to 10 years in prison.


Coffina said the trio likely would have gotten away with the crime had Bobbitt not complained about not getting his fair share in a lawsuit filed over the summer.


Late last year, D'Amico and McClure started the GoFundMe account for Bobbitt, who they said spent his last $20 to buy gas for McClure after she was stranded along I-95 in Philadelphia. Claiming they wanted to "pay it forward," they launched the campaign with the goal of raising $10,000 to help Bobbitt get back on his feet. It quickly went viral and the money poured in, raising hundreds of thousands of dollars.


However, Coffina said investigators learned McClure texted a friend less than an hour after the campaign went live, saying the story was "completely made up." She did not run out of gas, Coffina said, and Bobbitt did not spend $20 to help her.


Instead, the couple met Bobbitt at a local casino, befriended him and came up with the scam, Coffina said. He added that the trio staged the photo at the gas station that accompanied the GoFundMe pitch.


The account, at first, led to appearances for Bobbitt and McClure on national TV programs, but it soon turned into a dispute over the money as Bobbitt publicly accused the couple of dipping into the funds, and a court battle ensued.


The Bordentown couple denied the allegations, claiming they were wary of giving Bobbitt large sums because they feared he would buy drugs. Bobbitt sued the couple over alleged mismanagement of the funds, claiming they had complete control over his money and had used thousands of it to go on lavish trips, shopping sprees and gambling.


The total amount available would have been just over $360,000 after GoFundMe fees. Bobbitt said he received approximately $75,000 in cash, goods and services, and he claimed the couple spent the rest.


The couple claimed through their attorney they gave Bobbitt $200,000, and D'Amico had said Bobbitt spent $25,000 in less than two weeks last year on drugs, as well as paying for overdue legal bills and sending money to family. Bobbitt's attorney had said Bobbitt was entering a residential program for drug treatment.


The couple also bought Bobbitt a camper with some of the cash and parked it on land McClure's family owns in New Jersey. But Bobbitt became homeless again after D'Amico told him in June he had to leave.


Sister station Action News in Philadelphia began following McClure and D'Amico's spending habits online beginning late last year, after receiving an anonymous tip they were allegedly spending the GoFundMe money. In just a few months, McClure posted pictures and videos of a New Year's Eve Bash in Las Vegas, helicopter rides, trips to New York with front row tickets to a Broadway show and shopping excursions.


Coffina said McClure and D'Amico squandered most of the $367,000 contributed and "hit the casinos hard." They also bought a BMW and high-end handbags, according to court records.


McClure is an administrative assistant with the state of New Jersey who makes $43,000 per year. D'Amico is a carpenter.


Coffina praised Bobbitt's military service in the United States Marine Corps but also said he was "fully complicit" in the scheme.


The prosecutor said the trio "hoodwinked a lot of people," but he encouraged the public to continue to give to those in need.
 

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hold on... so the homeless guy was in on it too??
 
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Those two deserve 20+ years if you ask me but you know they'll probably get like 6 months to a year. Fucking scumbags.
 
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hold on... so the homeless guy was in on it too??


Looks like he was in on it too, only to get scammed by the scammers. Throw him in prison for a couple years and maybe he can clean himself up. I'm hoping the other two get a very harsh sentence, but I doubt it.
 

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Looks like he was in on it too, only to get scammed by the scammers. Throw him in prison for a couple years and maybe he can clean himself up. I'm hoping the other two get a very harsh sentence, but I doubt it.

That's what I understood, he was involved but got scammed......this story is a mess.
 

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Wow. That was a great scheme. They were probably shocked when the story went national and raised 40x's what they originally expected.
 

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Can i make a donation to the girls vagina?? Just a few ounces,
And i dont want it back
 

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lol @ that being illegal...I feel like if that is illegal then probably like 20% of gofundme's are.

Guess we have to protect the gullible in society?
 

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That's what I understood, he was involved but got scammed......this story is a mess.

The three people conspired to create a scenario where she pretended to run out of gas. The scenario involved the homeless guy pretending to give up his last $20 to fill her tank. They then contacted the press and the story went viral where people donated 400K via GoFundMe. Their goal was to raise as much money as possible then split the money.

But...the man and woman got greedy and didn't give the homeless guy his cut so he reported them.

He basically reported his own crime.
 

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lol @ that being illegal...I feel like if that is illegal then probably like 20% of gofundme's are.

Guess we have to protect the gullible in society?

It's fraud. Why would it not be illegal? They created a scenario where people gave them money under false pretenses.
 

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It's fraud. Why would it not be illegal? They created a scenario where people gave them money under false pretenses.

A GoFundMe based on a good Samaritan story being a fake? How many people on the internet tell lies to be given money under false pretenses?

Seems pretty thin IMO.

Mog probably wanna get his lawyer on speed dial after he reads that story.




I just think it is 1 of those scenarios where everyone got caught with their pants down so now the people must pay because people don't wanna look in the mirror at how gullible they were. The media got caught for pushing this, the fish that donated 400k got caught so now we have to bring harsh punishment to these people. If they raised 4k instead of 400k and the media wasn't so gullible, no one would care.
 

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A GoFundMe based on a good Samaritan story being a fake? How many people on the internet tell lies to be given money under false pretenses?

Seems pretty thin IMO.

Mog probably wanna get his lawyer on speed dial after he reads that story.




I just think it is 1 of those scenarios where everyone got caught with their pants down so now the people must pay. The media got caught for pushing this, the fish that donated 400k got caught so now we have to bring harsh punishment to these people. If they raised 4k instead of 400k and the media wasn't so gullible, no one would care.

Anyone who creates a false scenario to con people out of money is committing fraud. There isn't any other way to look at this.

If they raised 4K instead of 400K there's still a victim.
 

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Ya, but you ain't going to jail over it. You're just a scumbag.

That's my point........Tons of GoFundMe's are obv BS, they just don't generate 400k. Those people are committing fraud, they aren't going to jail anytime soon.
 

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Ya, but you ain't going to jail over it. You're just a scumbag.

That's my point........Tons of GoFundMe's are obv BS, they just don't generate 400k. Those people are committing fraud, they aren't going to jail anytime soon.

Guess it depends on their record?
 

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"All of the money raised through the crowdfunding website will be refunded to those who donated, Coffina said."
 

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Read the story in full....The point of the GoFundMe is to raise 10k so this guy can get his life on track. The GoFundMe tells you how much money has been raised in real time. So people saw that 50k, 100k, 150k, 200k, 300k had been raised for this guy and they kept donating? How much money does he need to get on his feet? What's he need a Bentley to get on track?

Do they really gotta give the donators their money back? Feels like we could run a huge freeroll survivor pool with that rather than give them a mulligan on their stupidity.
 

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Read the story in full....The point of the GoFundMe is to raise 10k so this guy can get his life on track. The GoFundMe tells you how much money has been raised in real time. So people saw that 50k, 100k, 150k, 200k, 300k had been raised for this guy and they kept donating? How much money does he need to get on his feet? What's he need a Bentley to get on track?

Do they really gotta give the donators their money back? Feels like we could run a huge freeroll survivor pool with that rather than give them a mulligan on their stupidity.

Pats, none of what you said matters. It is fraud. It doesn't matter why people gave or how much they gave. It's still fraud.

Not sure it's stupid. I don't give to these things but I guess it's people giving when they can but to do it based on a false premise is fraud.
 

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