JK Rowling reveals how she has been scammed by con artists after becoming super-rich – as it is revealed she has given £200million to charity

JK Rowling has revealed she has been ‘scammed a few times’ as it emerged she has donated around £200 million to charity. 

It was while writing the sixth instalment of her world-renowned Harry Potter wizarding series, when the author came across a picture of a small five year old Czech boy, Vasek Knotek, with his face leaning against barbed wire. 

Since then, the impassioned 59-year-old sent letters to the former director of fundraising for Save the Children, MEP Baroness Nicholson of Winterbourne, keen to help vulnerable young people in the ex-Soviet country. 

A year later in 2010, Rowling and Baroness Nicholson set up a charity named Children’s High Level Group, later renamed Lumos, a name of a charm in one of Rowling’s books – a shining light in the darkest of times.

In the two decades since the author first saw the image of the Czechian orphanage, the Harry Potter author has given £63 million to the charity aiding children in the eastern European country. 

According to the Sunday Times, in total, Rowling has donated nearly £200 million to three charities – Lumos, the Volant Charitable Trust and the Anne Rowling Regenerative Neurology Clinic. 

However, the author also shared how she has been forced to exercise more ‘due diligence’, to ensure her cash is going to those who need it, as she revealed she had ‘definitely’ been ‘scammed a few times’. 

Retelling her agony of skimming through countless letters begging for help, she shared how once she had received correspondence from a Lloyd’s investor who had lost a considerable amount of money in 2005. 

JK Rowling revealed she has been 'scammed a few times' as it emerged she has donated around £200 million to charity

JK Rowling revealed she has been ‘scammed a few times’ as it emerged she has donated around £200 million to charity

According to the Sunday Times, in total, Rowling has donated nearly £200 million to three charities - Lumos, the Volant Charitable Trust and the Anne Rowling Regenerative Neurology Clinic

According to the Sunday Times, in total, Rowling has donated nearly £200 million to three charities – Lumos, the Volant Charitable Trust and the Anne Rowling Regenerative Neurology Clinic

The author first became passionate about helping children in the eastern European country when she saw a distressing photo of a Czech orphan (Pictured: Rowling with her husband Neil Murray)

The author first became passionate about helping children in the eastern European country when she saw a distressing photo of a Czech orphan (Pictured: Rowling with her husband Neil Murray)

‘They told me how lucky I was to have grown up poor, so I’d never know the agony of losing a fortune, and asked me to give them money because they and their spouse could no longer afford to go to the opera,’ she told The Sunday Times.

While adding how she is the last person who would complain of her wealthy lifestyle, she explained that life is filled with dilemmas ‘you never dreamt of having to deal with’ when you obtain a great deal of money. 

Reflecting on her own difficult childhood in Chepstow, southeast Wales, and then her life in poverty after leaving her short-lived marriage, where she headed to Edinburgh with her infant daughter, Jessica, Rowling shared she would at times go hungry.

‘I prioritised feeding my daughter, but that wasn’t the worst of it. It’s the daily indignities — overwhelmingly, not being able to give your child the things you’d like,’ she said. 

‘I remember meeting another mum whose son was the same age as my daughter. He had a roomful of toys. I had a shoebox in which Jessica’s two toys lived. It’s that kind of thing that really gets to you.’ 

Rowling’s charitable revelation comes shortly after she engages with a furious war of worlds with Boy George after he accused her of hating men amid the Supreme Court’s ruling on the legal status of transgender women.

Rowling, who also writes under the male pen name of Robert Galbraith, blasted the Culture Club singer after he said that she could not tell the difference between a transgender woman and a biological man. 

The 63-year-old popstar has expressed support for transgender people online, in line with other stars such as Tilda Swinton and Pedro Pascal , who recently branded Rowling a ‘heinous loser’ on Instagram.

It comes after Culture Club singer Boy Goerge claimed that Rowling 'hates men' because of her campaign to protect 'women's sex-based rights'

It comes after Culture Club singer Boy Goerge claimed that Rowling ‘hates men’ because of her campaign to protect ‘women’s sex-based rights’

Boy George was responding to a tweet criticising Pedro Pascal. The actor (above) has been unequivocal in his support for transgender people (seen in the viral 'Protect the Dolls' t-shirt sold in support of trans rights)

Boy George was responding to a tweet criticising Pedro Pascal. The actor (above) has been unequivocal in his support for transgender people (seen in the viral ‘Protect the Dolls’ t-shirt sold in support of trans rights)

Responding to a tweet suggesting that Pascal – an outspoken supporter of trans rights – was a misogynist, the singer wrote: ‘Stop this nonsense that if you don’t agree with @jk_rowling you hate women. She hates men. This is where this truth lies.

‘She cannot differentiate between a ‘trans’ woman and a biological male. Which is weird with her imagination?’

But Rowling – who now tweets almost daily about what she has called ‘sex-based rights’ – fired back with an eye-rolling emoji and the retort: ‘I do not hate men.’

She wrote: ‘I’m married to a man, George. I do not hate men.

‘I simply live in reality where men – however they identify – commit 98 per cent of sexual assaults, and 88 per cent of victims are female.

‘Trans-identified men are no less likely than other kinds of men to pose a risk to women or girls.’

She did not elaborate on how many of those committing sexual assaults were thought to be trans.

She then added: ‘Accusing me of hating men because I don’t think trans women should be given access to all women-only spaces does rather suggest that… you’re well aware that these are, in fact, men.’

Rowling has been vocal on the subject of trans people for several years; in 2018, a spokesperson explained that her ‘like’ of a tweet calling trans women ‘men in dresses’ had been a ‘middle-aged moment’.

The Supreme Court ruling on April 17 was brought about following an appeal by For Women Scotland (above). Judges were keen to stress that the ruling was not to be seen as a 'triumph'

The Supreme Court ruling on April 17 was brought about following an appeal by For Women Scotland (above). Judges were keen to stress that the ruling was not to be seen as a ‘triumph’

The Equality and Human Rights Commission has hurried to update guidance on single-sex spaces, banning transgender people from their preferred toilets

The Equality and Human Rights Commission has hurried to update guidance on single-sex spaces, banning transgender people from their preferred toilets

And following the Supreme Court judgment on April 17, Rowling has consistently referred to transgender women as being ‘men’.

The ruling, on an appeal brought by campaign group For Women Scotland, concluded that the legal definition of a woman was that of a biological female, when interpreting the Equality Act.

It has led to the Equality and Human Rights Commission overhauling its rules on single-sex spaces – meaning that even trans people with gender recognition certificates (GRC) are still considered to be their biological birth sex.

MPs have pointed out that the judgment will likely lead to discrimination against those who do not appear traditionally male or female.

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