A woman who raised hundreds of pounds to put towards the funeral of her next-door neighbour "should have been jailed" according to the victim's daughter.
Kelly Hails felt the community order handed to Leanne Fox was too lenient after £590 raised disappeared without a trace.
38-year-old Fox, of Larkspur in Gateshead, was sentenced to a 12 month community order with 50 hours unpaid work after she pleaded guilty to theft.
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But Kelly, whose mum Margaret Graham died in January 2019, feels the court should have made an example of Fox for her crime.
Kelly said: "You would think somebody couldn't stoop that low. People do wrong, I get that, but I never thought somebody would steal from the dead.
"Why would you do that? She is the epitome of evil. If I walked in and robed a shop I would get more than a community order.
"They should have made an example of her. I don't think it sets a good example. I would have liked to see a prison term."
Fox approached Kelly after her mum's death and said she would raise funds - but Kelly heard no more from her until she approached her seven months later.
Fox told her "people had been greedy" and only donated between £48 and £58 - when the real total was actually £590.
Kelly explained that Fox's actions had left her feeling like nobody cared about her mum, who had been part of the community for 36 years.
She said: "We were called tramps for asking for money and I didn't receive a penny. I was walking past these people for a year before I knew about it. People must have thought I was so rude, not saying thank you.
"My mam was so generous and so down-to-earth. Everybody loved little Margy, people were grieving when she died saying they felt like they had lost their own Nanna or their mam.
"My mother had been a resident there for 36 years, she didn't have a bad word to say about anybody and I was thinking nobody must have liked my Mam. It really got to me.
"I don't think you can have a heart to do this, you just can't.
"I don't hate her though - to hate her means she has some sort of control on my life."
Mum of three Fox, who has two previous convictions as a youth, pleaded guilty to theft at Newcastle Crown Court and was sentenced to a 12 month community order with 50 hours unpaid work.
The court heard Fox is remorseful and a low risk of harm and further offending.
Asked what had happened to the money, Miss Lamb said she didn't know.
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