Belle Gibson is a 32-year-old Australian convicted scammer. Reports suggest that she convinced millions of people on social media that she was diagnosed with terminal cancer. However, she learned how to manage living with it by following a healthy lifestyle and consuming nutritious food. Gibson also earned a lot of money by keeping this narrative in place.
Unsurprisingly, Gibson was exposed in 2015, and according to Cosmopolitan, the media and her peers had doubted her story for a long time. Eventually, a police investigation took place, and soon after, she confessed that her cancer diagnosis was untrue. In a conversation with The Australian Women’s Weekly, the interviewer asked her about the authenticity of her illness. Gibson replied, “No. None of it’s true.” Two and a half years later, a judge ordered her to pay a hefty fine because she breached Australian consumer laws. Initially, it looked like her wrongdoings could cost her 1.1 million Australian dollars. However, the Australian Federal Court announced that her exact fine was 410,000 Australian dollars.
At the height of her fraud, Belle Gibson claimed that she donated her money to charity. However, officials learned that this endeavor was also not true. As punishment, Justice Debbie Mortimer ordered her to give “some or all” her money to the organizations and charities she previously stated she gave to. Per the Independent, Gibson now supposedly lives in the Melbourne area. Furthermore, she is completely inactive on social media.
The documentary Bad Influencer: The Great Insta Con takes a closer look at Belle Gibson’s exploits. According to IMDb, its synopsis reads, “One-off documentary about Belle Gibson. An Australian woman who successfully convinced the world of many false facts, including Apple and publisher Penguin.
The director of Bad Influencer: The Great Insta Con is Ziyaad Desai.
What did Belle Gibson do?
Belle Gibson’s popularity across social media spread like wildfire over a decade ago. Reports suggest that she told her followers that she suffered from cancer and once had only a couple of months to survive. However, she managed to live with the disease by not following traditional medical treatment methods and going for alternative therapies and whole foods.
Gibson’s actions have thousands of desperate families with false hope. People believed that she was telling the truth. She was reportedly alive and healthy, and four years after her cancer diagnosis, her story influenced millions across social media. Furthermore, she launched The Whole Pantry app and a book of the same name that earned her a fortune. At the time of her ruling, Judge Mortimer stated that Gibson was immensely obsessed with herself, and her dishonesty was reprehensible. Mortimer said, “One of the clear demonstrations of the dishonesty and self-interest attending Ms Gibson’s conduct was the fact she.” She further said, “And the company she controlled did not in fact make any donations to the organisations she had mentioned in her publicity statements until public questioning of her claims.”
In a 2015 interview with The Weekly, Gibson said she didn’t require forgiveness for her wrongdoings. She also added that she did the right thing by revealing the truth.