Crime & Safety

NJ Man In $400K GoFundMe Scheme Seeks To Have Charges Dropped

Mark D'Amico's attorney told the court he would seek to have the charges dropped against his client on Monday.

Mark D'Amico will seek to have the charges against him dropped.
Mark D'Amico will seek to have the charges against him dropped. (Image via Burlington County Prosecutor)

BURLINGTON COUNTY, NJ — The last of three people charged in connection with the high profile alleged $400,000 GoFundMe scam is attempting to have the charges against him dropped.

Mark D’Amico’s attorney announced his intention to file a motion to dismiss an indictment against him during a court appearance Monday morning, a spokesperson for the Burlington County Prosecutor’s Office confirmed. That motion will be heard when D’Amico next appears in court on Nov. 22.

D'Amico has been indicted on charges of second-degree financial facilitation of criminal activity, second-degree conspiracy to commit financial facilitation of criminal activity, second-degree theft by deception, second-degree conspiracy to commit theft by deception, second-degree elements of computer theft and second-degree misapplication of entrusted property, Burlington County Prosecutor Scott Coffina previously announced. In May, the Florence man pleaded not guilty to those charges.

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D'Amico is accused of conspiring with 29-year-old Kate McClure, of Bordentown, and 36-year-old homeless veteran Johnny Bobbitt Jr. to defraud the public out of over $400,000 through a fraudulent online fundraiser that was launched in late 2017.

The stated goal of the fundraiser was to raise $10,000 for Bobbitt after the trio said he spent his last $20 to help McClure get gas after she broke down on I-95 on her way into Philadelphia. The fundraiser gained steam, and the amount they raised continued to escalate to over $400,000.

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But late last year, authorities began investigating the fundraiser and charged all three with conspiracy and theft by deception. Authorities said the story about Bobbitt helping McClure was made up.

In the past few months, both McClure and Bobbitt have pleaded guilty to charges at the state and federal levels.

Bobbitt was placed on special probation for up to five years while he fulfills the requirements of a court-sponsored drug treatment program. McClure faces four years in state prison at sentencing on June 3. Both must pay restitution of $402,766, and have both agreed to testify against D'Amico.

D'Amico claimed he was initially unaware that the story was made up, but McClure claimed she was the one who was duped by D'Amico. Both attorneys said the story was exaggerated, but that nothing criminal had taken place.

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