logo
Sports star used iPhone cord to pretend he had cancer to scam thousands of people

Sports star used iPhone cord to pretend he had cancer to scam thousands of people

Metro4 hours ago
With a 'tube' up his nose and lying on a 'hospital bed', the photo appears to be of Ireland's most famous sports stars being treated for cancer.
There is one problem – he didn't have cancer.
DJ Carey, seen as one of the greatest hurlers of all time, has pleaded guilty to pretending to have cancer to trick people into giving him money.
The sports legend even conned Irish billionaire Denis O'Brien into giving him money to fund cancer treatment.
Carey, 54, pleaded guilty to 10 counts related to defrauding people out of money while pretending to have cancer at the Circuit Court in Dublin's Criminal Courts of Justice on Wednesday.
The sportsman won five All-Ireland titles and nine All-Star awards in hurling.
Hurling is a stick-and-ball field game of ancient Gaelic Irish origin played by men and women. Carey has been described as the sport's 'first superstar' and a 'hurling legend'.
However, he was said to have tricked his victims into making a monetary payment to him between 2014 and 2022 after saying he needed money to fund cancer treatment.
Since pleading guilty, an image of Carey with 'tubes' up his nose and lying on a 'hospital bed' has resurfaced.
The image, thought to have been sent to his victims, appears to show an iPhone cable taped to his face.
Carey was charged with inducing him to make a payment to him between January 2014 and late 2022.
Carey's defence team told the court that while cancer was referred to in the indictment, the sports star 'does have very genuine health conditions' which required surgery for a heart condition last year.
They told the court he must attend check-ups periodically and that evidence from his surgeons can be provided.
Despite his legendary status after he retired from hurling, Carey publicly battled financial problems.
In May 2011, Allied Irish Bank (AIB) secured an initial debt repayment court order for about £7.3million.
However, this debt was then reduced from nearly £8.2million to £51,000 in a settlement with AIB in 2018.
In 2015, speaking on RTE's Ray D'Arcy radio show, Carey said: 'I am not one of those who would say 'I don't care' about repaying debt.'
'You borrow money, it should be paid back.'
Carey appeared in court in late 2023 charged with 21 counts under the Theft and Fraud Offences Act, with a four-week trial expected to take place this year.
He was due to stand trial on deception charges at the Dublin Circuit Criminal Court.
About 28 witnesses were expected to give evidence for the prosecution at trial.
But the prosecutor told the court that Carey would be entering guilty pleas, with a sentencing date now set for October 29.
Carey has been remanded on bail until then.
The hurling star's fall from grace follows a period of celebrity status after retiring from hurling in 2006.
Carey's family members are also well-known in the world of Irish sport.
His sister, Catriona, was a member of the Ireland women's field hockey team, while his brother Martin was also a hurler.
One of the most high-profile cancer-faking scandals unfolded a decade ago with influencer Belle Gibson.
In 2015, it was uncovered that the Australian wellness influencer, who had built an online community and profited off the back of selling a story about being diagnosed with cancer, was a fraud.
The author of The Whole Pantry mobile app and cookbook claimed to have had malignant brain cancer that she managed through diet, exercise, natural medicine, and alternative medicine therapies. More Trending
After an investigation regarding the legitimacy of Gibson's claims that she was donating a sizeable amount of her income to charities, it was discovered she'd lied about her age, personal life and actually having cancer at all.
She eventually confessed, admitting that 'none of it's true'.
Gibson was convicted in 2017 of engaging in misleading or deceptive conduct and fined $410,000 (£211,000) for breaching consumer laws.
Get in touch with our news team by emailing us at webnews@metro.co.uk.
For more stories like this, check our news page.
MORE: 'Beautiful and much-loved' mum and daughter, 6, killed in car crash named
MORE: The origin story of Baby Guinness reveals you've been doing the shots all wrong
MORE: Irish musician and comedian cancels all of his gigs for the year
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Cody returns for Cats as Tipp unchanged for semi-final
Cody returns for Cats as Tipp unchanged for semi-final

BBC News

time2 hours ago

  • BBC News

Cody returns for Cats as Tipp unchanged for semi-final

Eoin Cody and Shane Murphy have been restored to the Kilkenny line-up to face an unchanged Tipperary in Sunday's All-Ireland Hurling semi-final at Croke Park. The match, which will throw in at 16:00 BST, will be shown live on BBC Two NI, the BBC iPlayer and the BBC Sport website. There will also be live text updates on the BBC Sport website. Ballyhale Shamrocks club-man Cody returns to Derek Lyng's full-forward line after missing the Leinster final win over Galway on 8 June with a leg boss Liam Cahill has opted to stick with the same 15 that beat Galway in the quarter-finals for the Munster county's first last-four appearance in six Breen, Ronan Maher, John McGrath and Jason Forde all started Tipp's 2019 All-Ireland final win over Kilkenny. Kilkenny: Eoin Murphy; Mikey Butler, Huw Lawlor, Shane Murphy; Mikey Carey, Richie Reid, Paddy Deegan; Cian Kenny, Jordan Molloy; Adrian Mullen, John Donnelly, Billy Ryan; Martin Keoghan, TJ Reid, Eoin Aidan Tallis, Tommy Walsh, David Blanchfield, Padraic Moylan, Killian Doyle, Zach Bay Hammond, Fionan Mackessy, Stephen Donnelly, Luke Hogan, Luke Connellan, Billy Rhys Shelly; Robert Doyle, Eoghan Connolly, Michael Breen; Craig Morgan, Ronan Maher, Bryan O'Mara; Willie Connors, Peter McGarry; Jake Morris, Andrew Ormond, Sam O'Farrell; Darragh McCarthy, John McGrath, Jason Barry Hogan, Joe Caesar, Sean Kenneally, Seamus Kennedy, Brian McGrath, Noel McGrath, Oisin O'Donoghue, Johnny Ryan, Conor Stakelum, Darragh Stakelum, Alan Tynan.

Rodgers in Celtic admission ahead of Cork friendly
Rodgers in Celtic admission ahead of Cork friendly

The National

time3 hours ago

  • The National

Rodgers in Celtic admission ahead of Cork friendly

The Parkhead side will face the Irish club in a warm-up match on Tuesday but it is unlikely players returning to training tomorrow will take part in the match. Kieran Tierney will be among the group of Celtic first-team players reporting for pre-season on Saturday the morning after the 1-0 win over Queen's Park. Celtic did have Auston Trusty, Ross Doohan, Callum McGregor, Arne Engels, Luke McCowan and Johnny Kenny as first-team players involved in the win at the City Ground on Friday. However, a number of first-team players will only begin their pre-season training on Saturday and into the new week ahead of the trip to Ireland. Rodgers has confirmed a training session will be held on Saturday before travelling to Ireland on Monday for the Cork friendly. Read more: And he confessed it's expected a number of first-team players will sit out of the Cork match. "We are back in tomorrow morning," said Rodgers. "We will have a good session tomorrow. "We will train and travel on Monday. The guys who have just come back probably won't be involved in the Tuesday game, it's just too soon. "But they will be involved next Saturday when we play in Portugal but they will all be there and ready for the game." On taking Celtic to Ireland for the friendly, he added: "It's always a privilege to take Celtic anywhere. "To go to Ireland with Celtic is always really special. "We look forward to seeing our friends over there and having a really good game."

Ireland fall to Italy in U20 World Championship thriller
Ireland fall to Italy in U20 World Championship thriller

BBC News

time3 hours ago

  • BBC News

Ireland fall to Italy in U20 World Championship thriller

Ireland fell to a dramatic 18-16 defeat by hosts Italy in the second Pool C game in the World Rugby Under-20 Championship in Viadana. Italy, who lost their opener to New Zealand, took the lead after 12 minutes when number eight Nelson Casartelli went in for the game's first try. Irish fly-half Tom Wood's penalty reduced the deficit, but Edoardo Todaro's reply gave the Italians an 8-3 half-time lead. A second penalty from Wood's boot again narrowed the gap to two points, but Italy extended their lead to 15-6 when lock Pierro Gritti grounded at the end of a driving maul. But after Casartelli was yellow carded, replacement Irish hooker Mikey Yarr finished in the corner to give Neil Doak's side renewed hope despite a missed conversion attempt. With Ireland second row Billy Corrigan sent to the bin, another Todaro penalty put Italy 18-11 ahead with less than 10 minutes remaining. Ireland - who beat Georgia in their first game - refused to give in and scored their second try through 19-year-old replacement back row Oisin Minogue. However, Sam Wisniewski missed his conversion attempt to earn a dramatic draw with the last kick of the game to spark jubilant scenes for the home side at Stadio Luigi earned a losing bonus point, Ireland sit on six points, three adrift of Pool C leaders New Zealand, who they face on Wednesday. Italy are on four points, two ahead of Georgia. The winners of each pool and the best second-ranked team will qualify for the semi-finals.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store