A website called Everhere is selling flowers and online memorial candles in memory of the Humboldt Broncos bus crash victims but the money isn’t going to the victims’ families, the National Post reports.

The site calls itself one of North America’s “largest databases” for online obituaries, and 11 of the people who died in the crash are listed on the site, though much of their information is incorrectly listed. As the Post discovered, the families of the victims didn’t give the site permission to share the photos and other personal information it currently contains.

“We never gave them permission. It’s obvious when the birthplace and place of death are wrong,” Russell Herold, father of the late 16-year-old Adam Herold, told the National Post. 

The fake obituary for the late Dayna Brons—the athletic therapist travelling with the Broncos on the night of the accident—says that she died in Lake Lenore, Saskatchewan. However, Brons did not pass but attended school in Lake Lenore.

Everhere did not respond to the Post for comment.

The Go Fund Me campaign—started in support of the victims and the families of the Humboldt Broncos players—raised more than $15 million in donations, becoming the largest Go Fund Me campaign in Canadian history.