Daily Times (Primos, PA)

GoFundMe, law firm says homeless man to get cash

- By Mike Catalini

FLORENCE, N.J. » Police raided a New Jersey couple’s home and hauled away a new BMW on Thursday after a homeless man accused them of helping themselves to some of the $400,000 in online donations they supposedly raised to help him start a new life.

Citing “enormous public interest” in the case, county prosecutor Scott Coffina confirmed in a Facebook post that Mark D’Amico and Katelyn McClure are under investigat­ion, though no charges have been filed.

It was the latest twist in a onetime feel-good story about Johnny Bobbitt, who spent his last $20 to buy gas for McClure when she became stranded on a highway in Philadelph­ia last year, and the couple who found 14,000 people online who were so touched by his kindness that they donated to a fund to help him start a new life.

GoFundMe and the law firm representi­ng Bobbitt issued a joint statement later Thursday that said he would receive all the money raised for him. GoFundMe and Cozen O’Connor law firm said Bobbitt would get an amount equal to the balance he did not receive through the fundraiser, The Philadelph­ia Inquirer reported .

Earlier on Thursday, police armed with a search warrant left the couple’s home in Florence, New Jersey, about 30 miles (48 kilometers) northeast of Philadelph­ia, with bags and boxes of material and the BMW, according to news outlets at the scene when the raid occurred. Bobbitt has questioned where they got the money for the new car. They have said they used their own money for it.

The couple’s attorney, Ernest Badway, did not return calls seeking comment on the police investigat­ion. They have previously denied any wrongdoing.

The couple are also being sued by Bobbitt, the homeless man who was to receive the donations, which were made through a GoFundMe page. In the suit, he says they used the account as a “personal piggy bank” to “fund a lifestyle they could not otherwise afford.”

In court Wednesday, the couple’s lawyer said Bobbitt has gotten about $200,000. But Bobbitt’s lawyer said he had received only about $75,000, which includes the value of a camper and a 1999 Ford Ranger.

A judge presiding over Bobbitt’s lawsuit ordered the couple to give sworn statements Monday on the status of all the money raised, as well as to turn over documents. Bobbitt, whose attorney says he is entering a drug addiction program, will also be deposed.

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 ?? DAVID SWANSON — THE PHILADELPH­IA INQUIRER VIA AP ?? This photo shows Johnny Bobbitt Jr. Kate McClure and Mark D’Amico, who raised more than $400,000 for Bobbitt Jr., a homeless man after he used his last $20 to fill up the gas tank of a stranded motorist in Philadelph­ia, are accused of mismanagin­g the money raised for Bobbitt.
DAVID SWANSON — THE PHILADELPH­IA INQUIRER VIA AP This photo shows Johnny Bobbitt Jr. Kate McClure and Mark D’Amico, who raised more than $400,000 for Bobbitt Jr., a homeless man after he used his last $20 to fill up the gas tank of a stranded motorist in Philadelph­ia, are accused of mismanagin­g the money raised for Bobbitt.
 ?? DAVID MAIALETTI — THE PHILADELPH­IA INQUIRER VIA AP ?? Martin P. Duffey, left, Christophe­r C. Fallon Jr., center, who are lawyers for Johnny Bobbitt, and Ernest E. Badway, right, who is the lawyer for Kate McClure and Mark D’Amico, listen during a hearing on missing funds in the Johnny Bobbitt case in the Olde Historic Courthouse in Mt. Holly, NJ, Wednesday. McClure and D’Amico are accused of mismanagin­g the money raised for Bobbitt.
DAVID MAIALETTI — THE PHILADELPH­IA INQUIRER VIA AP Martin P. Duffey, left, Christophe­r C. Fallon Jr., center, who are lawyers for Johnny Bobbitt, and Ernest E. Badway, right, who is the lawyer for Kate McClure and Mark D’Amico, listen during a hearing on missing funds in the Johnny Bobbitt case in the Olde Historic Courthouse in Mt. Holly, NJ, Wednesday. McClure and D’Amico are accused of mismanagin­g the money raised for Bobbitt.
 ?? NATHAN CONGLETON — NBC VIA AP ??
NATHAN CONGLETON — NBC VIA AP

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