A couple raised $400,000 for a Philadelphia homeless man ­— but he says he hasn't seen it

When a homeless man gave a couple his last $20 for gas, they wanted to pay it forward with fundraising - but things haven’t gone according to plan.|

When a homeless man in Philadelphia gave a stranded couple his last $20 so they could buy gas, they were so inspired that they started an online fundraiser to help him.

The goal on GoFundMe was set at $10,000. But over nine months, more than 14,000 people donated over $400,000 to the man, Johnny Bobbitt Jr.

Less inspiring: He says he has yet to see any of the money. And he’s filing a lawsuit against the New Jersey couple, Mark D’Amico and Kate McClure.

Bobbitt is still homeless and was panhandling until he checked into rehab.

“He is living off the kindness of strangers,” Jacqueline Promislo, a lawyer for Bobbitt, said in an interview.

The couple told their side of the story Monday morning on “Megyn Kelly Today” on NBC.

At first, D’Amico and McClure said, they tried to move the money to a bank account for Bobbitt, but he did not have any identification. They said that they gave him $25,000 in cash last Christmas but that Bobbitt spent all the money in 13 days. They added that Bobbitt had used their Lyft account to order a car service to take him to locations known for selling and buying drugs.

They decided to hold onto the rest for his own good, they said. “We didn’t want to give him the whole $400,000,” D’Amico said.

Instead of giving him more cash, they tried to buy things for him. They helped him buy a trailer that he parked at their house.

“We took him and he picked it out,” D’Amico said in the TV interview.

While that story played well on the show, Promislo, who said she was representing Bobbit at no charge, said he had no trailer.

“They bought it in their name and kept it in their name,” she said. “I believe they sold it.”

Bobbitt believes the couple is spending the money on vacations and a new BMW. The couple said the car they bought was used.

Promislo declined to say who was paying for Bobbitt’s rehab and how long he had been in drug treatment.

“He wants the money put in a trust and assistance figuring out how to spend it,” Promislo said. A court would appoint a trustee, according to the filing, but she declined to say if a family member or her firm would be willing to take on that role.

She added, “The money was never given for Mark or for Kate, but they put the money in their own personal account.”

D’Amico said in the TV interview: “I wanted to make sure that at the end of the day when he was ready, that there was something left for him.”

He did admit to gambling $500 with Bobbit’s permission but said that he had since repaid it.

Financial mismanagement of donations and fraud are not new problems for online crowdfunding sites.

“It happens more often than GoFundMe admits to,” said Adrienne Gonzalez, who runs GoFraudMe.com, a watchdog site.

For example, she said, there have been many cases of people raising money for cancer that they do not have, or failing to turn over donations raised for expenses like funerals.

GoFundMe will refund donations to donors if it suspects misuse or make sure the money gets to the beneficiary, a spokesman said.

As for Bobbitt, Promislo said, “He wants a home. He wants his money.”

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