"We don't need any money at all. Please save your money."
The Dog is going after the buzzards.
Duane Chapman has warned followers not to fall for fake donation pages trying to profit from his beloved wife's death, just one day after she succumbed to cancer.
Even though he is clearly deeply in mourning, the bounty hunter's first thoughts in a press conference was to protect the couple's fans from being scammed, assuring them the family did not need their money.
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View Story"We do have one problem," he told Hawaii News Now. "We've got people — mostly from the mainland — that are setting up funds, 'donate here to Beth' and all that."
"Right now, so far we don't need any money at all. Please save your money," he said, suggesting if fans really wanted to make a gesture they could send flowers.
"There's nothing been authorized by any of us, but you know how buzzards are."
He added: "People in Hawaii or all over the world, we love you, but sometimes you can show love without money."
In a tear-filled interview, the reality star revealed his wife's last words.
"When she had an attack I didn't know anything to do but to say 'in Jesus' name' and hold her and when I said 'in Jesus' name' she said, 'Say it again, say it more'," he recalled. "And then she told the girls and everybody, with her mouth — she came out of it a couple times — 'I love you' and 'Are you guys all okay? Don't worry,'... but she never accepted it."
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View StoryHe managed a smile when he said his wife was already controlling his life from heaven.
"I'm sure she's still controlling me and I've got notes in my pillowcases, on my sink, in my shaving thing," he said. "She's still telling me what to wear."
Dog begged the scientific community to keep up their search for a cure, comparing cancer to the polio epidemic of the 20th century, which is now almost eradicated.
"The cancer gig, of course, we gotta find a cure," he said. "Because all we have now is some get lucky, but most pass away."
"It's just incredible when you walk alone in the bedroom and you're there and she was there two days ago," he continued. "I hope to god there is a God. I trained myself [to think] 'What would Jesus do?' and I hope I'm not just talking to myself. I hope there is a God and if there is, I'm gonna see my honey again. That's all we can do is hope."
"I loved her so much," he concluded. "As Lazarus lay, Jesus said he's not dead, he's sleepeth. My final words are Beth isn't dead, she's sleeping."
Chapman confirmed on Wednesday morning that his wife of 13 years had passed after a valiant battle against throat cancer. She was 51.