Iowa woman, Madison Russo, who falsely claimed to have cancer and shared her fabricated «battle» on various social media platforms, has been spared from a prison sentence. A judge has sentenced her to probation and imposed a 10-year suspended sentence.
Russo, aged 20, made unfounded assertions about suffering from pancreatic cancer, leukemia, and a football-sized tumor wrapped around her spine on platforms such as TikTok, GoFundMe, Facebook, and LinkedIn.
Shockingly, her deceitful claims prompted more than 400 people to send her donations.
As part of her sentence, Russo has been ordered to pay $39,000 in restitution and a fine of $1,370. If she successfully maintains a clean record during three years of probation, she will remain free.
Russo had previously pleaded guilty in June to first-degree theft.
During the recent court hearing, Judge John Telleen declined a defense request to expunge her conviction upon completing probation, emphasizing that future interactions with Russo should be informed by her participation in a «criminal scheme» and the principle that «serious crimes must have serious consequences.»
The judge highlighted the wide-ranging impact of Russo's deception, stating, «Through this scheme, you deceived your friends, your family, your community, other cancer victims, charities, and strangers who were motivated by your supposedly tragic story to donate to help support you.»
In her defense, Russo revealed that she concocted the false cancer narrative in the hope of bringing her troubled family together, stating, «I didn't do this for money or greed. I didn't do this for attention.