Umit Sucu told Alison Wood about his ill mother and said he needed money to send abroad for her treatment, a court heard.

But the former boxer, known as the “Turkish Warrior,” allegedly used the cash to fund his lifestyle at home instead.

Sucu, 44, was handed a suspended sentence earlier this month and told to pay back 14,600 British pounds ($17,161).

Wood, 51, claimed she is actually owed at least double that amount.

“I was blinded by what I thought was love, but now I see what he really is,” she said.

“It’s just a shame it took me as long as it did to figure it out.”

A court heard the pair started a relationship after meeting in a pub, where he was supposedly celebrating his divorce, in October 2018. Sucu soon became “pushy” about Wood’s finances in the months that followed, it was alleged.

Then, on vacation in Tunisia, Sucu said his mom, who lives at his family home in Turkey, had breast cancer.

He claimed he was struggling to access his bank account in Istanbul and proceeded to ask Wood for a string of payments to the tune of nearly 13,600 pounds ($16,000).

She paid up, and also handed over a further 1,000 pounds ($1,175) after Sucu said he needed to pay a fine.

But prosecutors at Bristol crown court in southern England said Sucu didn’t send the money abroad and actually used it to pay for “everyday items such as loans and tickets.”

Project manager Wood, from Speedwell, Bristol, said: “Looking back on it I think how could I have just believed him, but I loved him and wanted to do everything I could to help his situation.

“My mom died shorty after meeting him which made things worse. He targeted my dad as well as me as he knew we were vulnerable.

“He even helped us arrange the funeral, really cementing himself into our family dynamic.

“It got to the point where he was such a big part of my life, I never thought to question his intentions.”

According to Wood, Sucu’s lies began to unravel when she bumped into his ex-girlfriend a year into their relationship and learned he was still married.

She alleged that she then visited his wife’s place of work, who he’d claimed to have divorced, and she confirmed that they were living together in a taxpayer-subsidized house.

Wood claims: “I spoke to his wife who said they were still sharing a house and even a bed.

“I wanted to believe it wasn’t true but it suddenly all started to make sense in my mind.

“He’d promised to pay me back from his inheritance which I found out didn’t exist and at that point I contacted the police.

“The premises of our whole relationship was based on deception both financially and emotionally as he’d also been being unfaithful throughout our entire relationship.

“I have got horrendous anxiety and that all stems from what he’s done.

“It has taken me a couple years at least to feel myself again, but forming personal relationships will now forever be a struggle.”

Sucu, of Thornbury, England, was caught in October 2020, and pleaded guilty to two counts of fraud.

He was handed a two-year suspended sentence and 200 hours of community service at Bristol Crown Court earlier this month.

The fraudster was also ordered to pay back 7,120 pounds ($8,369) to Wood after the court accepted he had already refunded her 9,000 pounds ($10,579) prior to sentencing.

Wood said this is less than half of what she is actually owed and the real figure is around the 35,000 pounds ($41,000) mark.

She claimed to have paid him 25,000 pounds ($30,000) for cancer treatment but because some of it was paid in cash, it was untraceable and therefore couldn’t be proven in court.

Wood also alleged he used another 10,000 pounds ($11,174) of her money to pay off personal debts and purchase a Chrysler automobile, which was later repossessed.

She said: “I’m still owed a lot more money, but because a lot of it was cash payments a lot of the transactions can’t be traced.

“The sentence is extremely light for the pain and misery he’s caused me and no doubt he’ll do the same again to somebody else in the near future.

“I hope by sharing my story it will help bring him to justice further and warn women to stay away from him.”

Produced in association with SWNS.

This story was provided to Newsweek by Zenger News.