Johnny Bobbitt Jr. had a new life ahead of him.
Last October,
the homeless man used his last $20 to buy gas for a woman, Kate McClure,
who was stranded on Interstate 95 in Philadelphia. McClure, in return,
created a GoFundMe campaign with her boyfriend Mark D'Amico to raise money for Bobbitt to thank him.
McClure
and Bobbitt's story quickly transformed into a viral "feel-good" story,
and the campaign, as of Friday night, raised a total of $402,706 within
nine months.
But what started as a good deed has now devolved
into an all-out feud. Bobbitt's lawyer says a large portion of money
never reached his client.
"From what I can see, the GoFundMe
account raised $402,000 and GoFundMe charged a fee of approximately
$30,000. Mark D'Amico and Kate McClure gave Johnny about $75,000. There
should be close to another $300,000 available to Johnny," Bobbitt's
lawyer Chris Fallon told CNN on Friday.
Fallon says he and another attorney, Jacqueline Promislo, are working
to get that money back. The goal, Fallon said, is to secure a guardian
to manage that money so the 14,000 people who contributed to the
GoFundMe campaign would know where their money is going.
A spokesperson for GoFundMe said the crowdfunding website "is looking into the claims of misuse regarding this campaign."
"When
there is a dispute, we work with all parties involved to ensure funds
go to the right place," GoFundMe's statement read. "We will work to
ensure that Johnny receives the help he deserves and that the donors'
intentions are honored."
Misuse, the company said, "is very rare
on our platform." Misused campaigns make up "less than one-tenth of 1%
of all campaigns."
The relationship between Bobbitt and McClure
began to deteriorate when she and her boyfriend bought Bobbitt a camper
-- they originally promised him a house -- and parked it in their
driveway in New Jersey, where Bobbitt lived until June, Promislo said.
"This
was not his choice and he didn't have any say in the matter," Promislo
said. "Johnny would have preferred to go back to North Carolina. That
would have been a much better environment."
Bobbitt, a North
Carolina native, "had no access to money or food" while living in the
camper, Promislo said. "He didn't have any ability to take care of
himself there."
Promislo said the camper was bought with the money
from GoFundMe. McClure and D'Amico also bought Bobbitt a truck, which
they drove. The truck ended up breaking down.
CNN has reached out to both McClure and D'Amico, but has not received a response.
Fallon said Bobbitt has an addiction problem, and that's possibly a reason McClure didn't want to give him any more money.
"It's not heroin or opioids but another drug problem," Fallon said.
In an interview with The Philadelphia Inquirer,
McClure said she and D'Amico did what they could to help Bobbitt. The
couple told the paper they gave Bobbitt more than half the money but are
withholding the rest until he gets a job and is drug-free.
D'Amico
told the Inquirer that he controls the money but thinks neither he nor
his girlfriend did anything wrong. He said giving such a large amount of
money to an addict is like giving someone a loaded gun.
The
Inquirer also said Bobbitt wondered how McClure paid for a new BMW and
went on vacations to California, Florida and Las Vegas. McClure said the
couple used their own money for the BMW and vacations. D'Amico told the
Inquirer he spent $500 of the GoFundMe money to gamble, but he paid the
money back to the campaign.
Promislo told CNN she can't speak to the claims made in the Inquirer.
Promislo
said Bobbitt is currently living on the streets of Philadelphia "in
harm's way." He was very successful at a methadone clinic before, she
said. He had detoxed himself, but she said he is not physically in detox
now.
Full Article & Source:
Philadelphia homeless man's lawyer says couple who raised $400k for him is withholding money
2 comments:
So sad for this man, can't they just make the couple hand it over?
If he is truly an addict,this much money needs to be handled by someone TRUSTWORTHY or he will surely overdose or die trying. Her intentions were noble but money changes enen good people, just my experience.
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