A charity is sued by the parents of a nine -year -old boy affected by cancer who wants to spend the money on their terminally ill daughter.
Craig Evison and Victoria Morrison’s son Kyle Morrison died in 2020 after diagnosed with incurable brain cancer.
Before his death, well-wishers donated thousands to pay for the treatment in the USA, and the experiences for the memory for the family, but the Covid 19 pandemic meant that Kyle was unable to travel.
The couple had the daughter Ruby-Rose, now two, but she is seriously ill with a genetic metabolic disease and it is unlikely that she will live beyond the summer of 2025.
They began a Gofundme page that is separated from KYLES fundraiser, which is now the subject of the legal claim to bring them to Disney World in Florida to meet Minnie Mouse.
But the couple says when they tried to claim the money donated to Kyle at almost £ 100,000, they were informed that they could not be paid for because Ruby-Rose has no cancer.
The parents from Cheshunt, Hertfordshire, are now suing gold geese, the charity organization that keeps the money at the high court and explains that the money should be spent on ruby rose.
The charity, however, says that the donations for Kyle were provided as a cancer patient and can now only be spent on attempts or another child in a “similar” situation for him.
In Kyle in 2019 at the age of eight, diffuse intrinsic pontnglioma (DIPG) was diagnosed how he was eight years old, as the court heard.
The attempts to collect money for his treatment began with a Facebook campaign by the Warriors of the Group One Pound, which encourages the donors to give small but regular sums for charitable purposes for charitable purposes.
However, the group then continued to cause Kyles for the gold geese based in Essex, a charity that benefits children with cancer.
The money that was flooded and should go to the USA for treatment at the end of 2020, but was loosened up when Covid travel restrictions were loosened.
He died in October 2020.
Used for cancer cancer
The couple, who also has another son, had the daughter Ruby-Rose in 2022, but a Megdel syndrome was diagnosed with her, a inherited disorder that affects several body systems and which is usually fatal in early inflant hout.
Ms. Morrison, Kyle’s mother, told judge Marc Glover that they believed that the money collected for Kyle should now go to their daughter.
But William Moffett, who reacted for the charity organization, said that the money could only be used for cancer cancer and not for other diseases.
He added that the contract that the couple had agreed, explained that if the money was not spent on the treatment of her son before his death, it would go to another DipG process or the cause of a child in a “similar” position.
There was no way that donors could have meant the money for ruby rose because it was not even born when it was promised, he said.
A judgment will be issued at a later date.