Skip to content
Link copied to clipboard

Johnny Bobbitt to return to New Jersey to face charges in GoFundMe scam

Johnny Bobbitt Jr. will now be transferred to Burlington County.

This November 2018 photo provided by the Burlington County Prosecutors office shows Johnny Bobbitt. A feel-good tale of Bobbitt, a homeless man using his last $20 to help Katelyn McClure, a stranded New Jersey woman, buy gas, was actually a complete lie, a prosecutor said Thursday, Nov. 15, 2018. A GoFundMe that was set up by McClure and her boyfriend Mark D'Amico raised more than $400,000 to help Bobbitt.
This November 2018 photo provided by the Burlington County Prosecutors office shows Johnny Bobbitt. A feel-good tale of Bobbitt, a homeless man using his last $20 to help Katelyn McClure, a stranded New Jersey woman, buy gas, was actually a complete lie, a prosecutor said Thursday, Nov. 15, 2018. A GoFundMe that was set up by McClure and her boyfriend Mark D'Amico raised more than $400,000 to help Bobbitt.Read moreBurlington County Prosecutors Office

Johnny Bobbitt Jr. settled outstanding drug charges in Philadelphia on Monday, the last hurdle before he is extradited to New Jersey to face charges of defrauding more than 14,000 donors who contributed over $400,000 to the fabricated GoFundMe campaign.

Bobbitt, 35, who appeared before Municipal Court Judge Wendy L. Pew wearing a T-shirt reading "Explore the Outdoors," was found in violation of probation on three misdemeanor drug-possession convictions from July 2017. If not for those cases, he would have been sent to New Jersey last week, when he waived his right to a hearing.

Pew resentenced Bobbitt to one year's probation, combining his punishment in the three cases into one sentence. While on probation, he must prove that he is staying off drugs.

The formerly homeless Bobbitt, who said he now rents an apartment blocks from Frankford Avenue's trendy bar-and-restaurant corridor in Fishtown, has been held at the Detention Center on State Road since his Nov. 14 arrest on charges of fraud, theft by deception, and conspiracy. He was expected to be transferred to Burlington County as early as Monday afternoon.

The other two defendants in the fraud case, Katelyn McClure and Mark D'Amico, are free on bail while awaiting trial. Their next court appearance is Dec. 24 in Superior Court in Mount Holly.

McClure, D'Amico, and Bobbitt are accused of fabricating a narrative that Bobbitt spent his last $20 to help McClure after she ran out of gas on I-95 in Philadelphia. McClure and D'Amico in turn set up the GoFundMe campaign to raise money to get Bobbitt off the streets. The effort, which had an initial goal of $10,000, was wildly successful, attracting thousands of donations from across the country and beyond. And the Good Samaritan story went viral, as Bobbitt and the couple appeared on national television.

But in the end, prosecutors say, it was all a scam. The three concocted the story to prey on the sympathy of donors, authorities said. McClure and D'Amico spent much of the money on vacations, gambling excursions, and luxury handbags, authorities said. Bobbitt, too, spent tens of thousands, prosecutors say, some of it on drugs.

All donations to the GoFundMe campaign, created in November 2017, have since been refunded, a GoFundMe spokesman said.