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A California woman has been charged for allegedly pretending to have cancer and scamming dozens of Facebook friends with a fake cancer diagnosis.
Cristina Lagman, 39, from Riverside County received thousands of donations and gifts after she had posted her story on her Facebook page.
Lagman asked her followers for money saying she was dying of terminal cancer and was facing financial hardship.
“I’m trying to stay as active as possible,†Lagman posted in February, “but my lower back is really starting to hurt me, as the cancer is in my spine.â€
Lagman would post updates about her suffering through chemotherapy. She also posted pictures of herself with a bald head and wearing cancer awareness T-shirts.
“I am so scared..I have fought really hard..I don’t think I really believed it might really take me till today,†Lagman posted in February.
“I’m down to possibly just weeks..my children and parents are in their own worlds and I’m left with the burden of dying by myself,†Lagman wrote.
Authorities said Lagman’s posts during her cross-country road trip began to raise the suspicions of some of her Facebook friends. People wondered how she could manage the trip while she was supposedly near death and in dire financial straits.
Valerie Cortes noticed a picture that Lagman posted of herself receiving chemotherapy was a stock photograph posted widely online.
Cortes confronted Lagman and told her that a lot of people had doubts that she had cancer, she then offered to take her to a doctor to confirm her diagnosis.
"She had no proof. I asked her to show me a prescription bottle, a doctor's visit, paperwork, something," Cortes said.
[video=youtube_share;T2rXf75-Sfg]http://youtu.be/T2rXf75-Sfg[/video]
After a few months of investigating, police say her cancer story was a fraud. They didn’t find any trace of her cancer and never came across her medical record.
"I am angry with her. I am disgusted by her. She has caused our community to doubt when people say they've got cancer and need help," Cortes said.
Lagman is sticking to her story, she said that indeed has cancer and the allegations against her are what’s false.
“That’s how cancer is,†Lagman said. “Every day people are told they’re not going to make it and miracles happen."
Lagman was charged with felony theft by false pretenses. Riverside County court records show that losses are estimated a little over $3,000. She is due in court for arraignment December 2.
Cristina Lagman, 39, from Riverside County received thousands of donations and gifts after she had posted her story on her Facebook page.
Lagman asked her followers for money saying she was dying of terminal cancer and was facing financial hardship.
“I’m trying to stay as active as possible,†Lagman posted in February, “but my lower back is really starting to hurt me, as the cancer is in my spine.â€
Lagman would post updates about her suffering through chemotherapy. She also posted pictures of herself with a bald head and wearing cancer awareness T-shirts.
“I am so scared..I have fought really hard..I don’t think I really believed it might really take me till today,†Lagman posted in February.
“I’m down to possibly just weeks..my children and parents are in their own worlds and I’m left with the burden of dying by myself,†Lagman wrote.
Authorities said Lagman’s posts during her cross-country road trip began to raise the suspicions of some of her Facebook friends. People wondered how she could manage the trip while she was supposedly near death and in dire financial straits.
Valerie Cortes noticed a picture that Lagman posted of herself receiving chemotherapy was a stock photograph posted widely online.
Cortes confronted Lagman and told her that a lot of people had doubts that she had cancer, she then offered to take her to a doctor to confirm her diagnosis.
"She had no proof. I asked her to show me a prescription bottle, a doctor's visit, paperwork, something," Cortes said.
[video=youtube_share;T2rXf75-Sfg]http://youtu.be/T2rXf75-Sfg[/video]
After a few months of investigating, police say her cancer story was a fraud. They didn’t find any trace of her cancer and never came across her medical record.
"I am angry with her. I am disgusted by her. She has caused our community to doubt when people say they've got cancer and need help," Cortes said.
Lagman is sticking to her story, she said that indeed has cancer and the allegations against her are what’s false.
“That’s how cancer is,†Lagman said. “Every day people are told they’re not going to make it and miracles happen."
Lagman was charged with felony theft by false pretenses. Riverside County court records show that losses are estimated a little over $3,000. She is due in court for arraignment December 2.
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