A New Jersey couple who raised hundreds of thousands of dollars on GoFundMe for a homeless man allegedly worked with the vagrant in an elaborate scam, according to reports.
The story claimed that Bobbitt, a former Marine and first responder, spent his last $20 to help McClure buy gas after her car broke down on the I-95 exit ramp near Philadelphia.
McClure posted the heart-warming rescue story on social media, directing people to a GoFundMe page set up to collect funds ostensibly to help Bobbitt get a leg-up in life.
“Let’s do something special,” McClure wrote, as news of the homeless man’s alleged selfless act quickly went viral.
“It has changed my entire outlook about people, my outlook about people has skyrocketed,” McClure said of the donations at the time.
McClure said on the GoFundMe page that the money would be used to buy Bobbitt a house and truck, and the rest would be placed in two trusts—one that would let him “collect a small ‘salary’ each year” and another for his retirement.
“This is a well thought out plan that Johnny his lawyer and financial advisor came up with in order to give Johnny the means to acclimate back into a ‘normal’ life and also to protect him and ensure he has a bright future,” McClure wrote.
But now it turns out that the entire story may have been a well-thought-out plan.
A source with access to a criminal complaint in the case reportedly told NBC 10 that all three are expected to face charges of conspiracy and theft by deception.
Investigators said the three deliberately prevented donors from gaining information “that would affect their judgment about solicited contribution to that fundraising effort,” according to the news station.
The feel-good tale suffered its first upset when Bobbitt claimed that the couple used the GoFundMe money as a “personal piggy bank,” and sued the couple in August for mismanaging his money.
“They went on shopping sprees,” Promislo told the paper. “[Bobbitt] tells me they had a Louis Vuitton bag and Chanel sunglasses, a new iPhone 10.”
The couple denied mismanaging the funds and claimed they withheld the money from Bobbitt so as not to fuel his drug habit.
D’Amico said in August that he was holding on to the funds on behalf of Bobbitt, and would hand over his money once he got a job and stopped using drugs.
A lawyer for the couple said in September that he expected his clients would both be indicted for their role in the scam. It was not until Wednesday, however, that it became clear Bobbitt was also a suspect.
The Burlington County Prosecutor’s office is expected to make an announcement in the case Thursday, according to multiple reports.