Overview
- The British influencer posted a tearful TikTok on Nov. 10 acknowledging she falsely told someone in 2017 that she had cancer.
- Her video quickly went viral, drawing millions of views and a mix of supportive and critical responses.
- Miller says friends created a fundraising page without her direction, claims she had it shut after seeing two donations, and states she took no money.
- Coverage notes she was convicted in July 2020 of fraud by false representation and received a 12‑month conditional discharge with compensation and costs ordered.
- Renewed attention followed a Nov. 4 Sun report and years of online allegations, with former friends criticizing her and a reported social-services inquiry ending with no further action.