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Bad nanny's chilling note: Scam artist Samantha Cookes who conned vulnerable families wrote disturbing message about death of her baby daughter the day she was due to be adopted
Bad nanny's chilling note: Scam artist Samantha Cookes who conned vulnerable families wrote disturbing message about death of her baby daughter the day she was due to be adopted

Daily Mail​

time09-07-2025

  • Daily Mail​

Bad nanny's chilling note: Scam artist Samantha Cookes who conned vulnerable families wrote disturbing message about death of her baby daughter the day she was due to be adopted

Convicted scam artist Samantha Cookes wrote a disturbing message after the death of her infant daughter in 2008, a new documentary has revealed. Rebecca Fitzgerald, Lucy Hart, Lucy Fitzwilliams, and Sadie Harris are just some of the aliases used by Cookes, the jailed serial fraudster and fantasist with victims in the UK and Ireland. Her story is the subject of a BBC documentary that airs tonight, which seeks to untangle her web of lies over two episodes. But before she became the con artist known by many different names, she was a young mother whose first born - a daughter named Martha Isabel Cookes - tragically died in infancy, on the day she was due to be taken away for adoption. It appeared she never healed from her past as Cookes - who was in March sentenced to three years in prison for scamming the state of €60,000 in welfare benefits - penned a note denying she had any role in Martha's death. 'I stand shoulder to shoulder with the coroner that I did not murder my daughter,' Cookes, then 23, wrote in a diary that would be discovered by one of her victims who has shared her story in the documentary titled 'Bad Nanny'. The scamster was referring to the inquest that found her four-month-old daughter had died due to accidental suffocation. Cookes' declaration she did not 'murder' Martha stood out because at no point was there any such accusation against her. Cookes, who had at least five different identities, was living as a disability activist Carrie Jade Williams and posted a TikTok in 2022 that ultimately led to her downfall. 'I stand shoulder to shoulder with the coroner that I did not murder my daughter,' Cookes, then 23, wrote in a diary that would be discovered by one of her victims who has shared her story in the documentary titled 'Bad Nanny' The 'sickfluencer' who used the platform to share her experiences living with the terminal Huntington's Disease found herself in the spotlight after she claimed she was being sued for €450,000 by her 'ableist' Airbnb guests in a now-viral video. There was an outpouring of sympathy for the disability activist on social media - until the world learned the truth behind the video. 'Carrie' wasn't real and neither were the heartless Airbnb guests the internet was looking for. The video went onto expose Cookes as a notorious scam artist with a long history of conning vulnerable families out of thousands of pounds while posing as someone qualified to look after children. Before she became Carrie in 2022, Cookes was autism therapist Rebecca in 2017, au pair Lucy Hart in 2014, and a surrogate mother called Claudia in 2010. In 2008, however, she was still Samantha, 20-year-old whose daughter Martha Isabel Cookes died in infancy under mysterious circumstances. An inquest into the baby's death in 2009 revealed that Martha died due to 'accidental' suffocation when a V-shaped pillow wrapped around the baby's neck while her mother was sleeping. It was at this point Cookes made the statement later found by Layla, a mother-of-two living in Tullamore, who was one of her first victims. Layla hired 'Lucy Hart' to look after her two children after finding the fake profile on an au pair website in 2014. Speaking on the documentary, Layla revealed she didn't carry out any background checks on 'Lucy' and 'took her at face value' after they bonded over both being English women living in Ireland. 'She was Mary Poppins,' Layla said as her daughter Charlie, who also appeared in the documentary, described 'Lucy' as a 'big ball of fun'. Layla explained how 'Lucy' regaled them with stories about her life as she was always looking to orchestrate a 'wow' moment. The mother-of-two recalled 'Lucy' telling her was adopted and that her mother Jane Hart manufactured sandpaper for B&Q. Around the same time that Cookes entered their home as Lucy, the family were grappling with rising rent prices while looking for somewhere to live. 'Lucy', who claimed to be a Jehovah's Witness, said a church elder had offered to let them live in a more affordable home in the area. After packing up their home and handing in their notice with the landlord, the family prepared for a move to the new property. However, every time Layla asked 'Lucy' whether they could view their new house, 'there was always an excuse', she said. It would become clear as day 'Lucy' had conned them after she pretended to faint at a Tesco while they were en-route to view the house, as Layla said: 'Why didn't I pick up on this sooner? There is no house.' 'Lucy' disappeared pretty quickly after this incident, telling the family she was going on a 'writers retreat'. As Layla began clearing up 'Lucy's' room, she discovered the ominous note that made her blood run cold. 'I stand shoulder to shoulder with the coroner, and I did not murder my daughter,' it read. 'I pray she is at peace Speaking on the documentary through tears, Layla said: 'Who have we had looking after our children?' She continued: 'She never mentioned any children to me, that she has ever had any children, that's strange, very strange. 'As a parent leaving my children in her care, if I had known for one second that she had children things would have been a whole lot different. 'I would warn anyone about her, don't let her in your home, don't let her in.' Martha's father was one of Cookes' former boyfriends, who remained anonymous for the documentary as he opened up about their toxic relationship in 2007. They were both 18 years old when they started dating, but he claimed he ended the relationship when he began to spot Cookes's pattern of lying. However, she revealed she was pregnant with his child and began bombarding him with messages and calls. He said: 'Was it real, was it a tactic? That whole "being in a family" thing was a real wish for her, it was something she would have referred to. 'The whole period is not something I look on with much pride. My involvement in pregnancy was next to zero really. There was going to be an adoption.' In July 2008, Cookes gave birth to Martha but she tragically died on the same day she was to be given up for adoption. The father said: 'I found out that baby Martha had died from a local newspaper report. There had been this death on the day that Martha was going to be taken. Those details do raise questions for me.' In 2013, the circumstances into baby Martha's death were to be re-examined by the high court due to concerns over her death - however by this point, Cookes had been reported as a missing person to UK police after she fled to Ireland. The case was closed and Martha's 2009 accidental cause of death still stands today. In 2010, Cookes started a relationship with a man, whose identity is not being revealed to protect him and his family. The pair had a child. The same year, Cookes, then 23, offered her services as a surrogate on Facebook. After making contact with a couple about being their surrogate, she passed on the contact of a woman called Claudia, who had previously used her as a surrogate. Claudia gave the excited couple a glowing review of Samantha. Having never met her face-to-face, the couple gave Cookes £1,200 out of their savings to cover the cost of the insemination kit, legal fees and other expenses. Sadly the baby never came, and as both Cookes and Claudia avoided the couple's messages, they realised they had been duped. The police were contacted and a 23-year-old woman was arrested at her home in Shropshire. The case came to trial in 2011 and Cookes pleaded guilty to fraud. She received a suspended sentence of nine months in prison and a fine of £1,890 to be paid to the couple. But what the trial also revealed was that Cookes was Claudia - her first fake persona. Meanwhile in 2012, her second child was taken away from her due to welfare concerns. Social services requested a psychological assessment of Cookes and she was diagnosed with Pseudologia Fantastica. PF, also known as pathological lying or mythomania, is a mental disorder characterised by persistent, pervasive, and often compulsive lying. In 2013 she became pregnant with her third child with the same man. Determined not to lose custody of this unborn child, Cookes fled to Ireland in the winter of 2013 and delivered the baby in January 2014. However, a neighbour reported her to Irish social services and the child was taken into care. After appearing at Irish family court, the father was again given custody and the baby was transported back to the UK. By August 2014, she had lost custody of both her living children after Martha's death six years ago. A month later she had changed her name to Lucy Hart and was working for Layla as an au pair. In January 2015, she left Layla's home under the pretense of attending a writer's retreat after her lies were discovered. In 2016, Cookes moved to County Geery and became Lucy Fitzwilliam and in 2017, Rebecca Fitzgerald arrived in Fermoy. In 2019, she became disability activist Carrie Jade Williams, a prize-winning writer, autism guru and terminal illness sufferer who posted routinely about being diagnosed with Huntington's Disease. The fraudster went viral on TikTok in 2022 after claiming to havebeen sued by Airbnb guests because they couldn't stand to be around a disabled person, leaving millions outraged for her. The story even started the #thisworldcanbeaccessible trend. But the it was later revealed that the story was completely made up, and Carrie was outed on a podcast called Carrie Jade Does Not Exist, which is hosted by VICE journalist Kat Denkinson and comedian Sue Perkins. In 2024, she was discovered working as au pair Sadie Harris in rural Ireland for a family of six - having rebranded as a 'conservative Christian' who 'doesn't think women should wear trousers'. She is believed to have worked for family for six months before fleeing once their child's school alerted them to her true identity. In March 2025, Cookes was jailed in Ireland for deception and theft charges after she claimed thousands in welfare benefits for a terminal illness that turned out not to exist.

CHRISTOPHER STEVENS reviews last night's TV: Will we ever know the truth about ALL this serial scammer's evil lies?
CHRISTOPHER STEVENS reviews last night's TV: Will we ever know the truth about ALL this serial scammer's evil lies?

Daily Mail​

time09-07-2025

  • Daily Mail​

CHRISTOPHER STEVENS reviews last night's TV: Will we ever know the truth about ALL this serial scammer's evil lies?

Despite her eager smile and open face, Samantha Cookes is a compulsive liar. She is also a deeply evil woman. As the true-crime documentary Bad Nanny unfolded, chilling parallels with another highly plausible but evil criminal emerged. For anyone who finds it impossible to believe in killer nurse Lucy Letby 's guilt, this two-part report, which concludes tonight, should be required viewing. None of the charges against Cookes, a 37-year-old serial scammer, is as appalling as Letby's murder of at least seven babies on a neonatal ward — though there are disturbing circumstances around the death of Cookes's own infant daughter in 2008. Letby operated by befriending the people whose babies she murdered. Gloucester-born Cookes has a record of defrauding friends with scams of exceptional callousness. In 2012, for instance, she posed as a willing surrogate for a Yorkshire couple desperate to have a baby. She took thousands of pounds from them, and then disappeared. Turning up in Ireland under another name, she sought out mothers with disabled children and weaselled her way into their lives, before taking their money. In 2022, at the height of the TikTok craze, she launched her most brazen fraud — masquerading as a terminally ill patient facing death with inspirational courage. Social media is so overpopulated with people seeking attention for their diseases, real or imaginary, that a word has been coined for them: 'sickfluencers'. But Cookes, now calling herself Carrie Jade Williams, took her pretence to extreme levels, by claiming that she was being sued by an American couple who had rented her home on Airbnb. These paying guests, she said, had been traumatised by her illness, and were now demanding £450,000 in compensation. Stated so baldly, it's all an obvious lie, but Cookes is a highly convincing liar. Money poured in to help her. She has been diagnosed with a psychological condition called 'pseudologica fantastica', or pathological lying. But that doesn't explain her obsession with targeting mothers of young, often fragile children. Cookes was eventually arrested for benefits fraud and is serving a four-year sentence. The whole complex saga was recounted by a dozen or more of her victims, but the fraudster herself refused to comment, so we never fully understood what drove her to invent such vicious lies — just as no one really knows what goes on in Letby's head. On at least two occasions, when she fled a neighbourhood overnight, she left sheafs of incriminating notes — similar to the confessions scrawled on Post-its that helped to convict Letby. 'I stand shoulder to shoulder with the coroner that I did not murder my daughter,' read one. Her baby, Martha, was found suffocated in her cot, hours before she was due to be handed over to social workers from an adoption agency. A verdict of accidental death was recorded. Whether that or anything else in Cookes's life can be taken as true, we'll never know.

BBC true crime series unveils 'Bad Nanny' who scammed vulnerable families
BBC true crime series unveils 'Bad Nanny' who scammed vulnerable families

Daily Mirror

time08-07-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Daily Mirror

BBC true crime series unveils 'Bad Nanny' who scammed vulnerable families

Serial con-artist Samantha Cookes assumed multiple identities and made up wild stories. BBC's documentary tonight sheds a light on the true crime case Like an evil Mary Poppins, serial con-artist Samantha Cookes posed as a nanny and scammed families with disabled children - even taking their money for a fake trip to Lapland. Gripping two-parter Bad Nanny (Tues 8th July, BBC1, 10.45pm) rakes over all the shocking details of this true crime case, that saw Cookes assume multiple identities, including a child therapist, an arts teacher and a surrogate mother, to con families in the UK and Ireland between 2011 and 2024. She even posed on TikTok as Carrie Jade Williams, a terminally ill woman and disability activist, winning the sympathy and support of thousands. But when one of her posts went viral, some followers became suspicious and began to dig, discovering her real name was Samantha Cookes, a fraud with multiple aliases and a troubling history. ‌ Speaking for the first time, Katie and Luke in North Yorkshire describe how she posed as a surrogate mother, defrauding them of their savings. ‌ Mother-of-three Layla describes how she believed she was hiring 'Lucy Hart', a Mary Poppins-like au pair at their home in County Offaly. When Layla became suspicious, 'Lucy' vanished, leaving an ominous note that left Layla fearing for her children. And Dublin mums Lorraine and Lynn reveal how they hired 'Lucy Fitzwilliams' as a child therapist for their disabled children, eventually handed over desposits for a fake trip to Lapland. 'Lucy' also told wild stories, pretending she was the 3M company heiress and was set to marry a pastor. Lorraine says: 'She took advantage of people's trust and their emotions and vulnerability.' Bad Nanny is airing on BBC One tonight at 10.45pm There's plenty more on TV tonight - here's the best of the rest... TRAINWRECK: THE REAL PROJECT X, NETFLIX ‌ The Trainwreck documentary series revisits headline-making events that went terribly wrong. This latest instalment recounts what happened when a teen's birthday invite accidentally went viral on Facebook, leading to a full-blown riot. In 2012, a teenage girl in the small Netherlands town of Haren created a Facebook event for her sixteenth birthday party, but made the page public instead of private. Inspired by a love of the Hollywood movie Project X, which saw three high school seniors throw a party that spiralled out of control, Dutch teenagers made the event go viral, and soon thousands of people had RSVP'd. Despite warnings, police and local authorities didn't seem to think that anyone would turn up, so no provisions were made to entertain the 3,000 young people who arrived in Haren. Before long the quiet Dutch town became host to a night of drunken chaos, the birthday girl fled her home and riot police were deployed. If it wasn't true, you'd never believe it… ‌ SHARKS UP CLOSE WITH BERTIE GREGORY, NAT GEO WILD, 8pm Wildlife filmmaker Bertie Gregory is a braver man than most as he gets extremely up close to some scary-looking sharks. Arriving on the coast of South Africa, he says: 'I have dived with a lot of sharks around the world, but I have never seen the most famous and the most feared - the Great White. I'm going to try something that my mum really doesn't want me to do. I'm going to dive with a Great White Shark without a cage.' There is only one place where this is possible, thanks to its shallow waters, which prevent sharks from attacking from below, and clear visibility, which allows the team to see the predators coming. It still doesn't feel completely reassuring. Bertie works alongside local shark spotters, a community-led initiative developed in response to past fatal shark attacks. Their shared mission is to explore how humans and Great White sharks might coexist in these waters. With a cage, I'd suggest… ‌ A YORKSHIRE FARM, 5, 7pm As a new series kicks off, farmers Rob and Dave Nicholson pick sloes from their farm hedgerows before turning them into artisanal chocolate. JB Gill takes a trip to the rolling hills of Wales, visiting a farmer who is reaping the rewards from a rather unusual diversification - he's making medicine from daffodils. And on his farm in the Cotswolds, Adam Henson works hard looking after his native pigs, which are some of the rarest breeds in the UK. ‌ EMMERDALE, ITV1, 7.30pm Joe is fearful as the harassment campaign against him continues with an envelope containing a blackmail demand for £100,000 being placed in the Home Farm kitchen. Unsure of who else to trust, Joe shows the blackmail demand to Sam, but he's none-the-wiser. When Ross confronts Robert about the missing weed, Robert threatens to cancel the land deal with Moira, forcing Ross to back down. Forced to take Gabby's car to Kammy at the garage, Vinny faces unavoidable questions about his sexuality.

Bad Nanny review: Incredible story of fraudster Samantha Cookes skilfully told in excellent documentary
Bad Nanny review: Incredible story of fraudster Samantha Cookes skilfully told in excellent documentary

Irish Times

time12-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Irish Times

Bad Nanny review: Incredible story of fraudster Samantha Cookes skilfully told in excellent documentary

Gaslighting, fake illnesses, real pregnancies – and a trail of deception leading from Yorkshire to Kenmare . The first episode of the excellent two-part documentary Bad Nanny (RTÉ One, Monday) takes off like a true crime podcast on rocket boots as it tells the incredible story of Carrie Jade Williams, aka Samantha Cookes – a serial fraudster who posed as a terminally ill author when she moved to Kenmare, Co Kerry. Seemingly sweet and harmless, the chirpy Englishwoman was in her element in small-town Ireland. 'If I met her today, I'd still like her. She has that personality,' says one former acquaintance. 'She's very likable. She's a people person. You would go, 'she's lovely'.' Those qualities allowed her to deceive her neighbours, her landlord – even RTÉ's Documentary On One, which greenlit a radio doc about her trip to Los Angeles for experimental surgery for her terminal Huntington's disease, her regular updates about her health having made her a minor star on TikTok. But Carrie Jade Williams was not terminally ill – and her backstory was a tissue of fraud extended to university and earlier. In Shrewsbury in England, an old college friend recalled how bubbly and friendly his pal 'Sam' had been. Until, that is, he asked for his money back after she claimed to have booked tickets for a weekend away. Confronted by her friend, the mask fell away. 'She went from the bubbly girl to being really horrible.' When a tutor advised the friend to dig deeper, he discovered she had been convicted of defrauding a couple by posing as their surrogate parent. READ MORE One twist follows another. Cookes's first child had been removed from her by social services in the UK and entrusted to the care of the father. Then she became pregnant again. She turned up pregnant in Edenderry, Co Offaly, where she ran a camp for kids and hoodwinked locals into paying for a non-existent weekend in Disneyland. [ Serial fraudster Samantha Cookes's funding applications considered by Arts Council on 'artistic merit' Opens in new window ] However, the most disturbing aspect of the documentary concerns her work as a nanny in Tullamore, Co Offaly, where she bonded with Layla and her daughter, Charlie. 'I was 10 turning 11,' says Charlie. 'She was genuinely a big ball of fun, everything up my alley.' Once again, lie followed lie, and after 'Lucy', as the family knew her, faked a fainting fit in Tesco in Maynooth, Co Kildare, Layla's mother went through the nanny's belongings. 'There was a little index card notebook and I just started to read,' Layla recalls. I just went, 'Who have we had looking after our children?'' This horribly gripping case has also been the subject of an RTÉ podcast. But the unsettling story translates readily to the screen and Bad Nanny skilfully weaves together Cookes's many deceptions to tell the hard-to-believe tale of a woman whose forked tongue allows her to move freely around Ireland and Britain and whose ultimate superpower was her ability to be nice to strangers.

BREAKING NEWS Mother reveals chilling note she found exposing the fraudster who had been posing as a nanny to her three children - and the dark secret she'd been hiding
BREAKING NEWS Mother reveals chilling note she found exposing the fraudster who had been posing as a nanny to her three children - and the dark secret she'd been hiding

Daily Mail​

time12-05-2025

  • Daily Mail​

BREAKING NEWS Mother reveals chilling note she found exposing the fraudster who had been posing as a nanny to her three children - and the dark secret she'd been hiding

A mother-of-three has recalled the chilling moment she discovered a note revealing the dark secret of the scammer she'd hired as a nanny after she'd fled the family home. Layla, from Tullamore in County Offaly, Ireland, hired a woman called Lucy Hart to look after her children in 2015 - at the time believing her to be a 'Mary Poppins-style' au pair. However, Lucy Hart was just an alias masking the nanny's chequered past - her real name was Samantha Cookes. Under different guises, Samantha, originally from Gloucestershire claimed to be an award-winning writer, expert in autism and also said she was suffering from a terminal illness - and was eventually exposed to have had six different false identities including Carrie Jade Williams. Cookes was jailed for three years in March after pleading guilty to two counts of deception and 16 sample theft charges, having snagged government welfare payments. Now for the first time, some of Cookes' victims are speaking out about their traumatic experiences in a two-part documentary made by BBC Northern Ireland and RTÉ, Bad Nanny. One such victim is Layla, who got on well with Cookes when she first hired her as a nanny for her three children. However, before long, cracks began to show in the scammer's squeaky-clean image. When she and her family began to ask questions about 'Lucy's' background, the scammer disappeared - telling them she was going on a 'writers' retreat'. However, while vanished into thin air, Cookes left behind an ominous note which Layla discovered - and it left her fearing for her children's safety. Samantha's note read: 'I stand shoulder to shoulder with the coroner that I did not murder my daughter.' Speaking on the documentary through tears, Layla said: 'Who have we had looking after our children?' After finding Samantha on a nanny website, Layla, who is originally from the UK, revealed they got on 'like a house on fire'. She claimed they bonded because they were both English women living in Ireland, which also led to a false sense of security with 'Lucy'. The mother claimed she didn't do any background checks on the woman she hired to look after her children because she 'took her at face value'. The children appeared to love their new nanny and the family got on well for a number of months until a few red flags started to appear. With rising rent prices, the family were struggling and 'Lucy', who claimed to be a Jehovah's Witness, said a church elder had offered to let them move into a more affordable home in the area. After packing up their home and handing in their notice with the landlord the family prepared for a move to the new property. Under different guises, Samantha, originally from Gloucestershire claimed to be an award-winning writer, expert in autism and also said she was suffering from a terminal illness - and was eventually exposed to have had six different false identities including Carrie Jade Williams However there was always an excuse as to why they couldn't view the inside of the home. Layla said: 'Each time we asked if there was any way we could go and view the place, there was always an excuse. 'One particular day when we were driving past the house there was a gentleman standing in the garden, so we were like great! But all of a sudden she started to feel ill. 'She was like I really need to use the bathroom is there anyway I could use the restrooms. We were parked in the car park and she went upstairs, the two girls went with her. 'Then my two children came running downstairs telling me that she collapsed in Tesco.' This was a 'lightbulb moment' for Layla who realised that 'Lucy' was lying about the new property. She said: 'Why didn't I pick up on this sooner? There is no house.' 'Lucy' disappeared pretty quickly after this incident, telling the family she was going on a 'writers retreat'. Layla said: 'I had to clear up her room, I started pulling things out of her wardrobe and found a notebook.' A line in the notebook read: 'I stand shoulder to shoulder with the coroner that I did not murder my daughter.' She continued: 'She never mentioned any children to me, that she has ever had any children, that's strange, very strange. 'As a parent leaving my children in her care, if I had known for one second that she had children things would have been a whole lot different. 'I would warn anyone about her, don't let her in your home, don't let her in.' One of Cookes' former boyfriends, who remained anonymous for the documentary, opened up about his toxic relationship with Samantha in 2007. They were both 18 years old when they started dating, but he claimed he ended the relationship when he began to spot her pattern of lying. However, Samantha revealed she was pregnant with his child and she bombarded him with messages and calls. He said: 'Was it real, was it a tactic? That whole 'being in a family' thing was a real wish for her, it was something she would have referred to. 'The whole period is not something I look on with much pride. My involvement in pregnancy was next to zero really. There was going to be an adoption.' In July 2008, Samantha gave birth to her first child, Martha Isabel Cookes, however the child died on the day she was due to be given up for adoption. The father said: 'I found out that baby Martha had died from a local newspaper report. There had been this death on the day that Martha was going to be taken. Those details do raise questions for me.' An inquest into the baby's death in 2009 revealed that Martha died due to 'accidental' suffocation when a V-shaped pillow wrapped around the baby's neck while her mother was sleeping. Four years later in 2013, the circumstances into baby Martha's death were to be re examined by the high court due to concerns over her death - however by this point, Samantha Cookes had been reported as a missing person to UK police. The case was closed and Martha's 2009 accidental cause of death still stands today. Meanwhile in 2012, Samantha's second child was taken away from her due to welfare concerns. Social services requested a psychological assessment of Samantha and she was diagnosed with Pseudologia Fantastica. PF, also known as pathological lying or mythomania, is a mental disorder characterised by persistent, pervasive, and often compulsive lying. In 2016, Hillery Geelan, from Dublin, was struggling with her autistic son Rhys and was 'desperate' for help. Her friend Lorraine recommended Samantha, who at the time posed as a therapist for children with additional needs under the alias Lucy Fitzwilliams. 'Lucy' earned their trust by saying she was setting up a women's refuge and she collected items of clothing, food and money from them. She would call to Hillery's house once a week to help with her son's behaviour. Hillery said: 'I didn't know enough about occupational therapy to know this is wrong.' Soon 'Lucy' started collecting money for a bogus trip to Lapland, and a few women gave her a deposit of €400. However the friends started to question 'Lucy' when her lies started to become more bizarre and extreme. They couldn't find any evidence of her women's refuge- nor could they find any social media pages for Lucy Fitzwilliams. Lynn McDonald, from Dublin, also hired Samantha, who was still under the alias of Lucy Fitzwilliams, to help with her daughter Ellie. But in 2022, high on her success as an online disability activist, Carrie told a lie that would eventually unravel her web of deception She was introduced to the scammer by a friend when she was experiencing a difficult time and needed more support. Lynn's younger daughter, Daisy, was born in 2013 with Rett syndrome, a rare genetic disorder that affects brain development, resulting in severe mental and physical disability. In her guise as a child therapist, Samantha visited twice a week to give Ellie, Lynn's older daughter, one-on-one time. 'There was definitely a bond of trust. Ellie was trusting her with her secrets and her worries,' Lynn said. 'I don't think anybody, when they met her, knew what's really underneath that skin.' Ahead of the fake Lapland trip, Samantha was pushing Lynn to sign paperwork that would allow her to take Ellie out of the country as a guardian. 'My massive concern with that is, if a woman has consent from me to take my child out of the country, then my child is at risk of being abducted.' The bond soon unravelled after Lynn and others discovered she was a scam artist. Samantha fled, leaving Lynn worried 'she would come back in the middle of the night and take my child'. She added: 'I slept with a hatchet beside my bed.' Hillery added: 'We never heard from Lucy again, no more phone calls, no more Lapland, we had just been scammed. We lived in fear for a very log time.' In 2021, it appeared that Samantha changed her identity yet again, this time under the alias Carrie Jade Williams, a terminally-ill award-winning author. She said she had been diagnosed with the terminal illness Huntington's Disease and was living in Kenmare, County Kerry. But in 2022, high on her success as an online disability activist, Carrie told a lie that would eventually unravel her web of deception. She posted a TikTok calling out Airbnb for allegedly siding with guests who had complained about having to use her accessible doorbell. 'I know able-ism exists, and I've experienced it,' she said in a teary video. Carrie claimed the guests, who had stayed at her home, were so 'traumatised by being around her as a disabled person' they had complained to Airbnb - and that Airbnb had instructed her to refund them as a result. The video went viral as people were horrified by the overt display of able-ism and Carrie soon posted a follow-up video - where she claimed the guests were now suing her for 450,000 euros for the trauma caused. They also allegedly slapped her with a list of 13 bizarre demands to cope with the trauma, including an emotional support animal and 25 adult colouring books a year for the remainder of their lives. However on October 5, 2022, an anonymous Reddit user posted links to articles about a convicted fraudster - whom they claimed was Carrie. Carrie issued a statement saying this was in fact her sister who had struggled with mental health problems and that it was defamatory for anyone to link the pair. This led VICE journalist Kat Denkinson and comedian Sue Perkins to investigate the story in podcast Carrie Jade Does Not Exist and over the course of two months, they uncovered the truth. Carrie Jade did not exist. As people began to clock on to Samantha's lies, she disappeared from her home in Kenmare in 2023. However, four months after she was exposed in Kenmare, the podcast received an email from a woman claiming Samantha was 'exposed as a fake person' in her town of Kildare, she was hiding behind the new alias of Sadie Harris. The email read: 'Hi, I just came across your podcast and this woman has been living in our community and going to the same church as me. She has been exposed as a fake person yesterday. 'As far as we can tell she hasn't committed any crimes but understandably this has shaken many people, she has been going by the name Sadie Harris, living in Ireland, working as an au pair.' Samantha joined a local church and was posing as a 'deeply conservative Christian woman' who didn't believe that woman should wear trousers and she claimed to have baptised 150 sex workers in a Dublin hotel. A woman Samantha befriended while in Kildare wrote into the podcast to say she thought she was 'generous and kind' but, after listening to the podcast, felt guilty for letting the fraudster around her children. She added: 'My kids new her and they were comfortable with her. Something that is hitting me now in hindsight is that everything had a story to it, even her Birthday which was on Day. 'She had this story that when he was a kid she thought St. Patrick's Day was about her. She said she was going to buy a building space and run toddler classes and asked of I would help her with it. 'Even now knowing everything was a lie, I still genuinely miss the friendship I thought we had, I miss the person I thought she was. It's strange to process losing someone who never existed.' Earlier this year the fraudster was sentenced to three-years in prison for scamming the state of €60,000. Samantha had been jailed in Ireland for deception and theft charges after she claimed thousands in welfare benefits for a terminal illness that turned out not to exist. In March the sentencing judge on the case, Judge Ronan Munro, accused her 'cynically exploiting' the 'natural goodness' in people and for deliberately lying about having the degenerative disease. Samantha pleaded guilty to two counts of deception and 16 sample theft charges, having snagged government welfare payments. She later also cashed in for disability allowance between February 28th, 2020 and June 12th last year. While at Tralee Circuit Criminal Court in Ireland, Judge Munro claimed her plan had been 'carefully orchestrated' to grift cash, having amassed a €60,334 over almost four years through 238 different payments. A number of aggravating factors made her case yet more heinous, with the judge describing her 'determined and sophisticated effort to perpetuate the fraud'. In 2020, she claimed to the Department of Social Protection that she was suffering with both Huntington's disease and epilepsy, insisting that her prognosis was life-limiting and would prove terminal. But Samantha claimed that she was unable to provide evidence of her illness to the department because of Covid, a factor which the court said essentially allowed her to continue abusing the system while going undetected. In a letter to the department said she was being discriminated against because she was unable to hold or use a pen as a result of her illness. She even went as far as to approach a GP to ask them to help fill out her forms so she get her hands on the government payouts, claiming she was struggling to have a grip of things, use the stairs or shower. Believing her symptoms true, the GP was led to fill out a form saying Samantha had previously been diagnosed with the disease - despite this being far from the case. The gardaí finally cottoned onto the deception after being alerted by department officer to her medical records, which revealed that Samantha had failed to turn up to appointments and scans ordered by the GP - and had no genetic testing for the condition. Judge Munro said the GP was 'blameless', having only done her best to do her job by sending the fraudster to appointments and scans. The judge also revealed that in the run up to the trial, Samantha had written to him trying to claim that she had been suffering with psychosis, even saying she would rather be euthanised than live with the mental illness - despite there being no medical evidence to point this being true. The judge said the self-diagnosis would bear no weight, adding that plenty of those suffering from mental health issues 'don't engage in this type of behaviour'. Samantha was initially sentenced to four years in prison but this was cut by 12-months so she could seek treatment, as she had implied she would. She was also given an additional two-year sentence for a second deception charge and concurrent sentences for theft charges. The judge said it was a serious offence to abuse the public system, but took into account some extenuating factors including her experiences with child loss. The sentences have been backdated to July last year, when she first went into custody after being arrested outside Tralee Post Office. At the time Cookes has been living under a false name for the prior 18-months. Bad Nanny will be available on BBC iPlayer from Monday 12 May, 9pm.

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