Prosecutors said a New Jersey couple and a homeless Philadelphia man devised an elaborate ruse to cheat GoFundMe donors out of more than $400,000.
“Ok, so wait. The gas part is completely made up. The guy isn’t,” McClure allegedly texted the friend after the campaign went live, according to the report. “So shush about the made up stuff,” she said, according to Coffina.
The three allegedly met more than a month before the launch of the campaign, authorities believe.
McClure, her boyfriend Mark D’Amico, and homeless veteran Johnny Bobbitt are facing criminal charges of conspiracy and theft by deception, in an alleged get-rich-quick ploy that Coffina said “hoodwinked an awful lot of people.”
“I had to make something up to make people feel bad,” McClure allegedly said in another text to a friend.
The couple turned themselves in to police Wednesday night and were later released.
Bobbitt was arrested Wednesday night in Philadelphia and remained in custody Thursday on a $50,000 bond.
McClure claims she had no knowledge of the scheme.
Speaking through attorney James Gerrow, she stated that she was unaware of the false story and claimed that boyfriend D'Amico and homeless vet Bobbit exploited her.
‘Let’s Do Something Special’
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 heartwarming 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.
Sweet Story Turned Sour
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 funds.“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.”
Now, all of the money raised through the crowdfunding website will be refunded to the donors, Coffina said.