93. The Teenager (Malachi Love-Robinson)
βββ-β----------------------------------------
BECOME A VALUEDLISTENERβ’
Spotify
Apple Podcasts
Patreon
βββ-β----------------------------------------
DONATE: SwindledPodcast.com/Support
CONSUME: SwindledPodcast.com/Shop
WATCH: SwindledVideo.com
βββ-β----------------------------------------
MUSIC: Deformr
βββ-β----------------------------------------
FOLLOW:
SwindledPodcast.com
Twitter.com
TikTok
Thanks for listening. :-)
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Listen and follow along
Transcript
Support for swindled comes from Simply Safe.
For the longest time, I thought home security meant an alarm going off after someone broke in.
But if the alarm is already blaring, it's too late.
The damage is done.
That's a reactive approach, and it leaves you with that awful feeling of violation, even if the intruder runs away.
That's why I switched to Simply Safe.
They've completely changed the game with Active Guard outdoor protection.
designed to stop crime before it starts.
Their smart, AI-powered cameras don't just detect motion.
They can tell you when there's a person lurking on your property.
That instantly alerts SimplySafe's professional monitoring agents in real time.
And here's the game changer.
The agents can actually intervene while the intruder is still outside.
Talk to them through two-way audio, hit them with a loud siren and spotlight.
and call 911 if needed.
It's proactive security, and that's real security.
I trust SimplySafe because there are no long-term contracts, no hidden fees, and a 60-day money-back guarantee.
They've been named best home security systems by U.S.
News and World Report for five years in a row, and I can see why.
Get 50% off your new SimplySafe system at simplysafe.com/slash swindled.
That's 50% off your new SimplySafe system by visiting simplysafe.com/slash swindled.
There's no safe like SimplySafe.
Support for swindled comes from Honey Love.
It's officially cozy season.
Soft sweaters, layered looks, comfort on every level.
But if your bra still feels like medieval body armor, it's time for an upgrade.
Honey Love makes the best wireless bras you will ever wear.
Seriously.
No wires, no digging straps, no weird bulges, just support that actually feels good.
Think you'll miss the structure of an underwire?
Think again.
Honey Love's smart design does all the lifting and shaping without any of the pain.
Honestly, it's the first bra you won't rip off the second you get home.
You can wear them under a sweater, on a night out, even just lounging around the house.
And every time, you'll forget you're even wearing it.
This is the bra you'll actually enjoy wearing.
Honey Love's crossover bra will be your new go-to.
But their new cloud embrace wireless t-shirt bra sold out in a few days for a reason.
It feels like a cloud against your skin.
And they don't just stop at bras.
They've got shapewear, tanks, and leggings that are just as comfortable and supportive.
Treat yourself to the most comfortable and innovative bras on earth and save 20% off site-wide at honeylove.com/slash swindled.
Use our exclusive link to get 20% off.
Honeylove.com/slash swindled.
After you purchase, they'll ask you where you heard about them.
Please support our show and tell them we sent you.
Experience the new standard in bras with Honey Love.
Hello, just wanted to make you all aware of a special bonus episode we are about to release for our lovely valued listeners called The Vacation Rental.
It's about this woman with a terminal illness and an Airbnb.
It's fascinating, I promise.
It will be out in a couple days, so go sign up now and listen to the other 40 plus bonus episodes in the meantime.
ValuedListener.com.
You can listen on Spotify, Apple, or Patreon.
It's only five bucks, and it's the best way to support the show.
Thank you.
ValuedListener.com.
This episode of Swindled may contain graphic descriptions or audio recordings of disturbing events which may not be suitable for all audiences.
Listener discretion is advised.
It's almost fittingly that we are in the world of fantasy because that's exactly what prosecutors claim that Matthew Scheid was in the fantasy world for about a week or more than a week at this ER, at this Oceana Regional Medical Center here.
Even in grade school, Matthew Scheidt Jr.
wanted to be someone else.
He told schoolmates that his father was a police officer and his mother was a nurse.
He told them he lived in a lovely house with a manicured lawn.
None of these things were true.
In reality, Matthew's parents divorced when he was five years old and he lived in a Florida trailer park where he watched his mom get arrested for possession of crystal meth.
Matthew Scheidt was forced to grow up too quickly.
At age 12, he participated in the Osceola County Sheriff's Office Volunteer Explorer Program, which teaches the law enforcement officers of tomorrow the basics of the job.
At the same time, he volunteered at a Florida hospital because he also had an interest in medicine.
Matthew had lied about his age to get into both.
At age 17, Matthew Scheid was living on his own.
He was taking high school classes online and working a part-time summer job as a file clerk at a surgical company in Kissimmee.
One of his duties was to run documents back and forth between the Osceola Regional Medical Center across the street.
On one of these errands in August 2011, Matthew Scheid approached the hospital's human resources department.
He told them he was a 23-year-old physician assistant student at Nova Southeastern University.
He claimed he was assigned to Dr.
Ramirez and needed an ID badge that granted him access to the emergency room.
Okay, said the HR employee, who just took Matthew's word for it.
She printed the requested credentials right there on the spot.
Matthew Scheid bought some apps for his phone and some books to learn medical terminology.
And for the next two weeks, a 17-year-old boy wearing scrubs, a pager, and a stethoscope wandered the halls of the Osceola Regional Medical Center's emergency room.
Matthew Scheid interviewed patients, conducted physical exams, and accessed confidential medical records.
Sometimes he was asked to help restrain unruly patients or hold the hand of a child receiving sutures.
But never was Matthew asked to assist in an emergency.
Except for that one time.
On August 25th, 2011, a woman was brought into the ER unresponsive.
Her husband said she had overdosed on painkillers.
Soon after, a physician tending to the woman burst into the hallway, screaming for assistance.
Matthew Scheit was the only one standing there.
You, start CPR, the doctor ordered.
So we did.
Matthew performed the procedure for over 20 minutes and posted on Facebook that evening about how his arms were sore.
He says he was certified.
The woman died the next day, but there's no evidence that Matthew Scheid's actions contributed.
In the days following, the 17-year-old phony physician's assistant grew bolder.
He tried to use his Osceola Regional badge to enter a different medical center, but was turned away.
And he kept pestering HR at Osceola Regional to give him access to a restricted part of the hospital.
It raised a red flag.
Someone double-checked Matthew Scheit's qualifications and discovered there were none.
Then called the police.
Time now 6'10 and an unbelievable story here.
We're learning new details this morning about the teenager who posed as a doctor at a Central Florida hospital.
Police say 17-year-old Matthew Scheidt used his part-time summer job as a file clerk at a surgical company to obtain badges at a nearby hospital, claiming he was a physician's assistant.
On September 2nd, 2011, Matthew Scheit Jr.
was arrested and interrogated for three hours.
Initially, he was defiant.
He blamed the HR staff for entering him into the computer system as a physician's assistant in the error.
Let's even say that I settled with the physician's assistant.
Let's just say that I was.
Are you that stupid that you're just going to put me into the system with that?
Are you gonna without any credentials or any paperwork or nothing?
I just want to find out who did this and put that into the system and have whoever did this fired because apparently they are too ignorant to have that position, Matthew Scheid told the detective.
This is my future.
This is everything.
I no longer have a job.
I no longer work for the sheriff's office.
Those are the only two things I ever wanted in life.
Matthew was referring to his time in the volunteer explorer program when he was 12.
He no longer, quote, worked at the sheriff's office because he'd been caught repeatedly wearing his badge and a bulletproof vest in public, pretending to be a real deputy.
Never ever said that
I was a PA or an MD or anything like that, no, sir.
Never at all, no.
Never at all.
Eventually, during the interrogation, Matthew Scheid admits to making a mistake.
I messed up, he told the detective.
I just didn't want any questions asked.
I just wanted to learn as much as I possibly possibly could for the longest time that I could.
As for the incident involving him performing CPR, Matthew said he only performed the procedure for a minute or two while the doctor retrieved medications.
Quote, I swear to God, I did not do nothing.
I felt so uncomfortable even doing that.
And you know, the only reason why I did do it was because there was nobody else in there, and I'm not going to let her die.
One of the techs had to run out of the room to go get something, and I was told to take over by a physician.
At the end of the interrogation, Matthew Scheid wrote an apology letter to Osceola Regional Medical Center.
I was just wanting to be exposed, it read.
I am so sorry.
I have learned to mature.
I am so sorry, and owe your hospital the biggest apology.
The Osceola Regional Medical Center released a statement of its own.
Patients treated in the ER during this time received the medical care they needed.
We will continue our review of hospital practices practices to ensure that this will not occur again.
On October 6, 2011, Matthew Scheidt Jr.
was formally charged as an adult with two counts of impersonating a physician's assistant and four counts of practicing medicine without a license.
He pleaded not guilty.
His trial was set for the following year.
I don't know if I need to get him some psychiatric help.
I don't know.
The local media asked Matthew Scheidt Sr.
for a response, but he was at a loss.
If you can come up with the reason, I'm all ears, he told WSVN.
I'm embarrassed.
I'm floored.
I love him, and those are the best things that I can say right now as a parent.
I'm scratching my head right now.
I'm scratching my head so hard that my hair is probably going to fall out.
Matthew Scheid Sr.
probably kissed his last strands goodbye about three months later when his son was arrested again while out on bond, this time for impersonating a cop in Miami.
Local teen accused of impersonating a cop remains in a South Florida jail tonight.
Matthew Scheit was arrested in Miami after he identified himself to real officers as an Osceola County Sheriff's Deputy.
That arrest prompted new charges here where Scheit is already accused of impersonating a physician assistant.
On September 2nd, 2011, Matthew Scheit Jr.
was cruising in South Beach in his recently purchased White Crown Victoria.
He had a laptop mounted to the dashboard and takedown lights on his side mirror.
While at a stoplight, Scheid motioned to the car next to him.
Hey, buddy, put your seat belt on.
Why?
The other motorist asked.
Are you a cop?
Yes, I am, Scheit responded.
So am I, the motorist replied.
I'm undercover.
Why don't you pull over to the side there?
Inside Matthew Scheid's car, the cops found a handgun under the seat, a taser, handcuffs, and t-shirts that said deputy.
There was also a badge that he had kept from the volunteer explorer program and a non-functioning police radio that had been marked as stolen.
Matthew Scheid had in his possession one of our agency unoperable radios, and we're currently investigating as to how he was able to steal that radio.
So at this point, you have no idea how we got hold of that radio.
No, that is under investigation at this time.
Matthew Scheid was kept in jail until his trial, which started in late August, 2012.
Scheid's defense blamed the hospital administrators for letting it happen.
They were prosecuting a teenager to save their own ass.
Money.
This is about money.
This is about liability.
But it's no big deal.
You know why they say, let's shift the blame.
Why?
Because Matthew's only 17 years old.
It's no big deal to him.
You heard Matthew Scheid.
You got to know him.
He's a 17-year-old kid, ambitious.
He really is every mother's dream.
The prosecution said what happened was no mistake.
No, Matthew Scheit Jr.'s actions were bold and calculated.
As a result, as many as 450 patients were exposed to the risk of being cared for by a teenaged physician's assistant.
Why go to the ER at nights when the administration staff is not there?
Why wear the scrubs?
Why wear the lab coat?
Why use the stethoscope?
Why buy the books at Barnes β Noble and go to the library?
Why put the apps on your phone?
Because it was not a mistake.
On August 30th, 2012, Matthew Scheit was convicted of two of three counts of impersonation and two counts of practicing medicine without a license.
One charge was dropped because there wasn't enough evidence to prove that Scheidt had removed an IV from a patient.
We, the jury, find the defendant guilty of impersonating a physician's assistant as charged in the information.
Matthew Scheidt reportedly wept as the verdict was read.
He was facing up to 25 years in prison.
But on November 14th, 2012, he was only sentenced to one with a year of house arrest.
and eight years probation and some mental health counseling.
The judge cut Matthew Scheid some slack because he was, quote, too young to appreciate the consequences of the offense.
Three years later, Scheid told the news program 2020 that he still regrets that time in his life.
If I could go back and change the day that I went back and asked for that ID, of course I would change that.
I can't get a house on my own.
I can't go to school.
I can't go to college or university.
I'm a convicted felon for the rest of my life.
I'm 21 years old now.
I'm an adult.
I know where my mind's at, Scheid said.
Nothing like that will ever happen again.
I can promise you that.
Well, Matthew, I can promise you this.
Something like that always happens again.
A teenager in Florida impersonates a medical doctor on this episode of Swindled.
They bribed government officials fight accounting clear violations of the A State Law earlier.
They pay to plans of taxpayer dollars that were wasted
tens of millions of dollars
that we have the clubs and records
responsible for the collapse of the entire system in the school of some god of swindler etc
support for swindled comes from delete me delete me makes it easy quick and safe to remove your personal data online at a time when surveillance and data breaches are common enough to make everyone vulnerable.
It's easier than ever to look up someone's home address, phone number, even their relatives' names with just a few clicks, and that information can have very real consequences, whether it's identity theft, harassment, or being targeted just for voicing an opinion online.
As someone with an active online presence, I know how unsettling it feels to realize that strangers might have access to details about my personal life.
That's why I use Delete Me to help keep that information off the internet and protect my privacy before it can be exploited.
Take control of your data and keep your private life private by signing up for Delete Me.
Now, at a special discount for our listeners, get 20% off your Delete Me plan when you go to joindeleteme.com/slash swindled and use promo code swindle.checkout.
The only way to get 20% off is to go to joindeleteme.com/slash swindled and enter code swindled at checkout.
That's joindeleatmeat.com/slash swindled, code swindled.
That's right.
It is very hard to believe.
Now, witnesses told police that the teenager walked around with a white lab coat.
They say he also had St.
Mary's logo on that white lab coat, had a stethoscope, and as well as a face mask.
They say the report says that he was even in an exam room.
On January 13th, 2015, a pregnant patient at St.
Mary's Medical Center in West Palm Beach, Florida felt like something was off about the doctor in her exam room.
He looked the part with his stethoscope, face mask, and lab coat, but he appeared to be a child.
That patient asked other hospital staff about him.
They weren't sure who he was either, but they'd seen him around the building for a month.
roaming the halls and entering patients' rooms.
Finally, one OBGYN named Dr.
Sebastian Kent had an encounter with a mysterious figure that put an end to it.
Kent said the boy had left a note claiming to be an anesthesiologist on his desk and asked to shadow Dr.
Kent.
The first thing I thought was, I'm really getting old because these young doctors look younger every year, Dr.
Kent told Fox 13.
He told the South Florida Sun Sentinel that he was suspicious because of how young the kid looked, quote, He tried to ingratiate himself with me so I would take him around and after a while while it started to not make sense to me.
I thought something was wrong.
Dr.
Kent shared his suspicions with security, who escorted the boy off the premises and called the police.
Police interviewed the kid and searched his car.
They found an additional lab coat hanging in the back seat.
Dr.
Malachi A.
Love Robinson.
He told police that he was 17 years old.
and that he had been a doctor for years.
Malachi said his mother could vouch for him.
She was on her way to the scene.
When Malachi's mother arrived, she told the police quite a different story.
She said her son had a mental illness and refused to take his medication.
Malachi felt like that was irrelevant.
This was all a simple misunderstanding that was being blown out of proportion.
He had not treated any patients.
He was simply shadowing physicians to learn as much as he could.
St.
Mary's Medical Center agreed.
They released the statement that read, quote, the individual never had contact with any hospital patients and did not gain access to any patient care areas of the hospital at any time.
The hospital immediately notified local authorities who took the individual into custody and we are cooperating with their ongoing investigation.
St.
Mary's declined to press charges, and the police determined no crime had been committed.
Neither Malachi Love Robinson's name nor age was released to the public, just like it hadn't been when he pulled a similar stunt a year before.
In January 2014, 16-year-old Malachi entered an education services center, flaunting a PhD and seeking employment as a medical instructor.
He tried to do the same thing at multiple high schools in the area before someone finally called the cops.
The report says several principals at high schools told school police the student visited each school in the attempts of integrating himself with the medical academies as an instructor/slash teacher.
The report says when school officials questioned him, he replied, he knew he was not a medical doctor, believes he is a compulsive liar, and may have a medical condition.
Malachi Love Robinson has always wanted to be a doctor.
He wasn't about to let a few rules and regulations or education stand in his way.
And about eight months after he was thrown out of St.
Mary's, it became clear that Malachi had already made his next move.
The Florida Department of Health received a package from an anonymous source that included a letter and other documents regarding Malachi Love Robinson.
The letter stated that the now 18-year-old had been impersonating a medical doctor, a naturopathic doctor, and a psychologist.
The letter, dated September 16, 2015, requires the highest priority, it starts off by stating, and continues to describe how Malachi Love Robinson claims to have three degrees, all acquired by the age of 18.
Please intervene, it states.
He's a very skilled con man,
The package also contained printouts of websites like HealthGrades.com, a doctor review platform on which Malachi had a profile.
He was listed as an MD.
It said he was 25 years old, and he had a five-star rating.
On that same page, there was a self-written biography section.
It read, Hello, I am Dr.
Malachi Love Robinson.
I am a well-rounded professional, misspelled, that treats and cares for patients using a system of practice that bases treatment on physiological, psychological, and mechanical methods such as air, water, light, heat, earth, phototherapy, food and herb therapy, psychotherapy, electrotherapy, physiotherapy, minor and orificial surgery, mechanotherapy, naturopathic corrections and manipulation, and natural methods of modalities, together with natural medicines, natural processed foods, and herbs, and nature's remedies.
Dr.
Love Robinson's bio did not list any schools.
His name is nowhere to be found in the Florida Department of Health's license verification database.
He is truly a danger to the general public, the anonymous letter read.
Around the same time that letter was sent, Malachi had been laid off from his most recent role.
as program director at a Boynton Beach rehab facility after the business was sold.
He had been promoted in less than three months.
Love Robinson routinely met with patients at New Directions Treatment Center, which was an intensive outpatient program for drug and alcohol addiction.
When state health investigators followed up on that anonymous letter and questioned Malachi about his duties at New Directions, he told them he would counsel the patients, he would listen to them, pray with them, and advise the medical doctors on staff if the patient's medication needed adjustments.
Love Robinson admitted that he never attempted medical school and he is not a licensed medical doctor, the report states.
Quote, Love Robinson stated he considers himself as a medical doctor and has people refer to him as a medical doctor.
His PhD, he told investigators, came from ULife Church, an online Christian school.
Universal Life Church Seminary.
is one of those websites for people off the street to get instantly ordained when they're asked to officiate a wedding.
But they offer other products too, such as a, quote, doctorate in divinity, an honorary degree for those who have demonstrated an outstanding commitment to ministry and theology.
It costs $29.95.
There was no studying required.
You pay the money.
ULife sends you an official-looking diploma on which your name is printed along with the prefixes and suffixes you've rightfully earned.
At the time, the website stated, quote, you will legally be entitled to use the title doctor in front of your name and DD after your name.
That's what 18-year-old Malachi Love Robinson did, and that's why New Directions hired him.
They thought he was a PhD.
Plus, he lied about his age and provided an additional diploma from Arizona State University that showed he had a doctorate in psychology, which he would later admit was a fraud.
He fooled all of us, Dr.
Lisa Sassetti told WPBF.
Dr.
Sassetti was the owner of New Directions.
She was the person who hired Love Robinson.
He was paid up to $70,000 a year.
When he came to us, he said he was 28 and that he was sick for 10 years in France and that he, when he came to the United States, that they made a mistake and put his date of arrival on the birth certificate instead of his date of birth.
Florida health investigators determined that Malachi Love Robinson went too far in his role at New Directions, committing the quote, practice or attempted practice of medicine without a license and leading the public to believe he was a licensed medical doctor without holding an active license.
The state ordered Malachi Love Robinson to cease and desist from practicing medicine and issued a citation of $1,253 for the three months he worked at the rehab facility.
Fortunately for Malachi, After paying the fine, he would still have plenty of money left over to do what he really wanted to do.
Support for Swindled comes from Simply Safe.
For the longest time, I thought home security meant an alarm going off after someone broke in.
But if the alarm is already blaring, it's too late.
The damage is done.
That's a reactive approach.
and it leaves you with that awful feeling of violation even if the intruder runs away.
That's why I switched to Simply SimplySafe.
They've completely changed the game with Active Guard outdoor protection designed to stop crime before it starts.
Their smart, AI-powered cameras don't just detect motion.
They can tell you when there's a person lurking on your property.
That instantly alerts SimplySafe's professional monitoring agents in real time.
And here's the game changer.
The agents can actually intervene while the intruder is still outside.
Talk to them through two-way audio, hit them with a loud siren and spotlight, and call 911 if needed.
It's proactive security, and that's real security.
I trust SimplySafe because there are no long-term contracts, no hidden fees, and a 60-day money-back guarantee.
They've been named best home security systems by U.S.
News and World Report for five years in a row, and I can see why.
Get 50% off your new SimplySafe system at simplysafe.com/slash swindled.
That's 50% off your new SimplySafe system by visiting simplysafe.com swindled.
There's no safe like Simply Safe.
So many physicians, they speak to me and they're just in awe.
And it's not because I'm a great person, not because I'm some miracle from heaven sent.
It's just because I have a passion for helping people.
Some people have been telling me that opening this practice was a bad idea because, you know, of my age.
And I tell them, well, you know, if that's the case, then why did Jesus come?
He was 12 when he started preaching.
In January 2016, Facebook friends of Malachi Love Robinson were sent an invite to an event for the grand opening of New Birth, New Life, Alternative Medicine, and the Urgent Care Clinic.
The new clinic offered family planning and holistic healing.
It was owned by Dr.
Malachi Love Robinson.
The event page said that New Birth was located at 4700 North Congress Avenue in West Palm Beach.
in one of those medical office buildings full of every kind of practice with the letterboards on the first floor that list all of the physicians names.
There he was.
Suite 303.
Dr.
Malachi Love Robinson.
MD comma PhD comma psi D,
H H P dash C comma and AMP-C.
Nobody is sure what those last two meant, but he had the same thing listed on the clinic's website and Facebook page.
Probably some kind of naturopathic bullshit, even though the state of Florida stopped issuing naturopathy license in 1957.
Dr.
Malachi Love Robinson did have a legitimate national provider identifier, however.
It's the number a provider needs to accept payments from Medicaid and Medicare.
How did Malachi Love Robinson obtain his NPI?
Nobody knows, but it's fun to think about how many so-called doctors are doing the same thing right now.
The local ABC affiliate, WPBF, was tipped off to Malachi's current current endeavor and showed up unannounced with the camera.
Anchor Terry Parker said Malachi took off his lab coat and stethoscope when he saw them approaching.
I would never prepare myself as an MD.
I have no reason to.
And, you know, some people, they've, you know, they've caused problems for me in the past, and it's been a very emotional ride.
The thing is, I never.
But you do call yourself Dr.
Robinson.
Yes, because I do have a PhD.
I do, yes.
In
what?
I have a PA PhD in holistic and alternative medicine, as well as I have a Ph.
PhD in science and
theology.
Sorry, I get nervous.
I'm hitting on camera.
Malachi told Terry that he holds a PhD in holistic and alternative medicine and that he was in the process of hiring licensed professional medical doctors.
He had already hired two other employees, an operations director with no experience in the medical field, and a program director with the same PhD in divinity from U Life Church.
Anyone that wants to portray me as a bad person, by all means, I haven't broken the law.
I haven't seen patients.
I haven't performed surgeries or any of this nonsense.
And whatever you see on the internet, feel free to copy, feel free to paste it, feel free to take a picture of it.
But I've never wrote these things.
I've never sat here and went on to these sites and registered.
I've never sat here and went and said I'm an MD.
Never.
Because I have an understanding of how these things work.
See, my mother,
she didn't raise a fool.
And I'm thankful for her.
Because one thing she always taught me was to make sure that my I's were dotted and my T's were crossed.
Starting this practice, I made sure I wasn't stepping out of my boundaries.
I made sure that I wasn't doing something I should not have been doing.
At one point, Malachi Love Robinson asked the team to stop recording, but he then invited them back for an exclusive sit-down interview.
Balkai was adamant that he had done nothing wrong.
I didn't operate.
I didn't reach in someone's uterus.
You know, I didn't snatch out a baby.
I didn't do any of that.
I haven't broken the law.
I haven't operated.
I haven't done surgery.
I have not said I'm an MD and I'm going to sit here and
do a, you know, whatever.
I have not said that.
What I have said is that I specialize in nastropathomed.
That is what I do.
That is the field.
And whether people want to assume that I've done the wrong way the right way, that is for them to proceed.
But I don't think any board or any community or any healthcare system would just allow someone to rent a building, allow someone to put up licenses, allow someone to order office material as such as egg, as such as tables, exam tables, and equipment and not question whether these things are real.
I have been scrutinized before I even got this building.
They requested information on my education.
They requested information on my license.
They requested information on all this stuff.
And even in order to approve me for this place.
If Malachi wasn't passing himself off as an MD, then why?
Terry Parker asked.
Did the placard on his door read, Dr.
Malachi Love Robinson, MD?
Actually, no, it doesn't.
That has actually been changed, and that has actually been redone.
That was actually a mistake on the building management's behalf.
Malachi pointed to the tape over the suffix as proof, but Terry reminded him, this wasn't the first time he's been accused of doing this.
What about that police report when he was confronted inside of St.
Mary's?
No, ma'am.
I requested to shadow some
physicians.
Next thing I know, cops are there.
That's all I know.
All I know.
Have no idea.
This story was broadcast everywhere like I'm some insane maniac that's just out here doing
crazy things.
I will say this.
Allegations and
accusations can be as a dagger in the back.
I would simply say shadowing of position.
There's nothing wrong with that.
Whatever the community assumes and whatever the community
whatever picture they want to paint, it can be beautiful or it can be ugly.
It's whatever they want to see.
But I will say that there are some instances with the news that have not been done correctly.
They have not been corrected.
They have not been reconciled.
They've been posted out.
And it happens with a lot of people.
The news comes, they get a little snippet of information and they blast it.
Oh, it's everywhere.
Oh, it's everywhere.
And it's like, geez, I'm famous.
But not for
a good reason.
And it's detrimental.
It's detrimental to a person's character.
It's detrimental to a person's business, it's detrimental to their family, it's detrimental to their overall well-being.
Whatever anyone wants to perceive from that story, they can perceive.
I have nothing to hide.
I have no story to tell.
I have no lie to give.
I have no, really, no care to give.
On February 16th, 2016, the Palm Beach County Sheriff's Office sent an undercover agent to Dr.
Love Robinson's clinic.
The female officer complained of a sore throat.
Malachi introduced himself as a doctor of homeopathic medicine and took her back to exam room 1, where he weighed her, took her temperature, and measured her blood pressure, which he described as perfect.
He then used his trusty stethoscope to listen to her lungs, which he said were clear.
and her heart, which he said sounded strong.
Dr.
Love Robinson assured the undercover agent that she was, quote, healthy and should not have any issues.
He recommended using some over-the-counter medication for her allergies.
Soon enough, the agent signaled for backup.
Narcotics agents entered the exam room and arrested Malachi Love Robinson.
How many patients he saw in the three months his clinic was open is unclear.
An 18-year-old down in South Florida is facing serious charges after detectives said he was practicing medicine without a license.
Investigators arrested Malachi Love Robinson for allegedly giving a physical exam to a female undercover officer.
They told you, Malachi, not to do this again.
The Department of Health told you that back in October.
Like I said, all these are accusations, and I will have my lawyer contact you all.
I'm hurt because of the accusations and the allegations, but like I said, this is not the first time where I've been accused, and I will pursue this.
Malachi Love Robinson was charged with a third-degree felony, and for the second time ordered by the Department of Health to cease and desist from practicing medicine without a license.
Just like St.
Mary's, Malachi said it was all a big misunderstanding.
He scheduled a press conference after he bonded out of jail.
This is what he had to say.
Good evening, everyone.
First of all, I would just like to simply say that on behalf of myself and my family,
we thank you for the concerns in the community about the accusations that have happened.
I just want to say that I am deeply saddened and a little disrespected by some of the things that have come forth.
But I will say that my attorneys are working hard.
They're working around the clock to make sure that this issue gets resolved in the best way possible.
I would just simply ask that you please allow the attorneys to do their job.
You respect the privacy, you respect my privacy, and my family's privacy.
And just please allow us to deal with this issue the way any normal family would.
And I would simply ask that if you could please pray pray for us in this time that everything that has happened, that we get the truth out of it.
And not only the truth, but we can shed some good light on some of the things that are happening in the community today, that we can shed a good light on some of the positive things that are happening and stop worrying about bashing someone and start lifting them up.
Once again, I want to thank everyone for their support, whether it was good or bad.
I've had some great supporters and I've had some people who have said some negative things.
But everyone is entitled to their opinion.
And once again, I am not upset.
And I respect the community for the concerns that they have.
But once again, just please respect our wishes and allow our attorneys to do the best that they can to work on this case.
Thank you so very much and have a great night.
Malachi didn't even respect his own privacy.
He willingly appeared on Inside Edition, Good Morning America, The Today Show, and others to defend himself.
The highlight of his media tour came when Love Robinson walked out of an interview with ABC's Nightline after correspondent Matt Gutman asked Love Robinson if he was a fraud.
Are you a fraud?
I don't appreciate your tone.
I don't appreciate the way you're portraying this interview to actually be.
I'm sorry, I'm going to have to cut
this interview short.
There is no law that states that you have to have a bachelor's or a master's or a PhD to take someone's scripture.
Anyone should be able to open a clinic?
This is a free country.
Anyone with the funds to open a clinic, let me finish, can open a clinic.
This was me simply trying to do something for the community in a light that I saw that was needed.
And honestly, if you ask me, many people are getting tired of hearing that they have to take a script just to feel better.
When it comes to that instance, like I say, a allegations.
And once again, allegations.
And if someone asks me again, allegations.
Now, I will say that I'm not pleading guilty because honestly, my attorneys will handle that.
But what I will say is that the practice is a separate entity from any personal matter.
Malachi also talked to the New York Times.
I'm not trying to hurt people, he said.
I'm just a young black guy who opened up a practice.
who's trying to do some good in the community.
If that is a negative thing, we have a lot more work to do in the community than to single out me.
The South Florida Sun Sentinel talked to Malachi's grandfather, who raised him.
Malachi did what he did because he felt like he was doing the right thing, William McKenzie told the paper.
He's not out doing drugs.
He's not out trying to rob nobody.
He's trying to do something constructive.
And if he did do something and the paperwork wasn't right, well, he can get ahead of himself sometimes, and he may have been trying too hard, but he had good intentions.
If he has slipped and did something wrong, I did ask that
everybody pray for him.
Malachi's lawyer, Andrew Stein, begged to differ.
He said his client had done nothing wrong at all.
He shared his primary defense to reporters that the state does not require someone to have a medical license to run a clinic.
Therefore, Malachi Love Robinson did not break the law.
Mr.
Love Robinson told her several times with a witness present that he was not a medical doctor and that if she would want to come back when the doctor was going to be there they would like to make an appointment for her and she refused.
Stein also said that a mental health defense might come into play.
I know he's a grown man in the eyes of the law, Stein told CBS 12.
But the point is he's still a young man and he's very, I would say, tender in how he has been raised and how he has grown up.
And we can't lose sight of that.
He has the entrepreneurial spirit of somebody like a Donald Trump or a Bill Gates.
I've never met somebody, and I'm much older, obviously, who has such an entrepreneurial spirit.
If it was channeled maybe in a different direction,
you know, things could be different here today.
Two weeks later, Malachi Love Robinson was arrested again.
Support for swindled comes from Bombas.
Falls here.
The kids are back in school, vacations are done, and cozy season has officially started.
Which means time to slide into some bombas.
You know bombas, the most comfortable socks, slippers, tees, and underwear out there, all made from premium materials built for this time of year.
We're talking merino wool that keeps you warm when it's cold, but cool when it's warm.
Sapima cotton that's softer, stronger, and more breathable than the regular stuff.
And even rag wool, the thick, durable, classic cozy sock that's practically made for fall.
And it's not just socks.
Bombas has slippers too.
The sharper-lined Sunday slippers that make it hard to leave the house.
The gripper slippers, perfect for travel, even waterproof Friday slides.
But here's the best part.
For every item you buy, Bombas donates one to someone experiencing homelessness.
That's over 150 million items donated so far.
And with their happiness happiness guarantee, if you're not 100% satisfied, they'll make it right.
No risk, all reward.
I've worn bombas for years, and honestly, they've outlasted every pair of socks in my drawer.
They stay soft, they don't sag, and it feels good knowing my purchase helps someone else.
Head over to bombas.com/slash audio and use code audio for 20% off your first purchase.
That's bombbas.com/slash audio.
Code audio at checkout.
A teen accused of posing as a doctor and seeing patients is arrested again, and this time he's accused of fraud and stealing from an elderly woman.
86-year-old Anita Morrison began to experience severe intestinal pains in December 2015.
The gastroenterologist she saw was no help, so she decided to try a homeopathic remedy.
With the help of her home nurse, Anita found the number to New Birth, New Life Medical Center online.
Ms.
Morrison was very impressed with Dr.
Malachi Love-Robinson the first time he came to her home.
The baby-faced physician spoke intelligently and clearly and wore a white lab coat with a stethoscope.
Dr.
Love Robinson examined Anita's lungs, heart, and legs during that first visit.
He diagnosed her with arthritis, which Anita Morrison thought was weird.
She had seen hundreds of doctors in recent years and no one had ever mentioned it.
Don't worry, Miss Morrison.
Dr.
Love Robinson could provide some relief.
He went to the store and bought valerian and melatonin, two very common sleep aids, and he sold them to Anita Morrison for thousands of dollars.
It was a shame because Anita Morrison said they didn't even work.
Quote, maybe I wanted to believe because I was in such pain.
I just went along with it.
Dr.
Malachi Love Robinson returned to Anita Morrison's home on four more occasions, raising the price of his house call each time.
In total, Anita Morrison paid $3,494 to New Birth New Life Medical Center.
During those examinations, Malachi recommended she have a colonoscopy, an endoscopy, an ultrasound, and a pap smear.
Anita refused the last one, but paid thousands of dollars to have some of the other procedures done.
Dr.
Love-Robinson said he would reimburse the cost.
When he finally did, Anita Morrison cashed the check, and it bounced.
Honest mistake, Anita assumed.
She kept in touch with the doctor.
He was the first person she called one day when she was in excruciating pain.
Malachi Love Robinson rushed to Anita's home, where he quickly determined there was nothing he could do.
He called 911, told them his name was Dr.
Love, and that one of his patients needed emergency medical care.
When the ambulance arrived, Malachi convinced Anita Morrison to leave her keys and purse behind.
He watched the ambulance take her away before ripping out a few checks from Anita's checkbook.
Dr.
Love Robinson visited Anita Morrison that evening in the hospital.
He recommended she take some expensive tests that she didn't need.
He wished her well and then he left.
And Anita Morrison never saw him again.
It was for the best, because she would love to wring his neck.
When Anita Morrison was discharged, she discovered almost $40,000 was missing from our bank account.
I thought I trusted him.
He was very personable.
And
I didn't suspect he was a fraud.
And it was very alarming when I started to put things together.
And I noticed things were not right.
One check was made out to Dr.
Malachi A.
Love for $500.
But Nita's signature had been forged.
Another check was made out to the New Birth New Life Medical Center for more than $1,200.
Again, the signature was forged.
Other checks totaling more than $35,000 were used for credit card and auto loan payments.
The check cashed by the dealership had Malachi's name in the memo line.
Well, he's forged my signature and he took funds out of my bank account.
And
I don't know what they'll do with him, but he deserves some kind of punishment.
Anita Morrison turned her bank statements over to the authorities, who then obtained ATM footage of Malachi Love Robinson depositing Anita's checks to himself.
He pulls up in a red Nissan Maxima that Miss Morrison unknowingly just paid off.
He's wearing his signature lab coat and stethoscope.
The sheriff's office did some more research on Malachi, which led to the sting that snared him for impersonating a doctor.
When they arrested him that day, investigators questioned Malachi about his relationship with Anita Morrison.
Alright, tell me how you know this one.
Ms.
Morrison called me for
Ms.
Morrison called me.
She had some questions about alternative medicine.
She asked me
what holistic herbs were good, what herbs was using, and I told her the herbs that I was using, and that's what she requested to use.
I made sure I told her that
I was not a doctor, and
that I wanted to make sure that she understood that this was just for questions that she had.
She never gave you any money.
It was just for the men.
I'm sorry I'm nervous.
It's okay.
Additional charges related to stealing Anita Morrison's savings were filed on March 1st, 2016.
Malachi Love Robinson was now facing 10 charges in total.
Two counts of practicing naturopathy without a license, three counts of forgery, two counts of grand theft from a person 65 or older, and three counts of fraudulent use of personal identification information.
He faced a maximum punishment of up to 70 years in prison.
Another charge was added later, related to Malachi's old boss, Dr.
Lisa Sassetti.
Back when he worked for her, Dr.
Sassetti noticed some unexpected expenses on her credit card statement.
There was a cell phone payment, car insurance providers, some company called Next Day Diplomas.
Worst of all was a $28,000 payment to a car dealership for a new Nissan rogue.
In total, Malachi Love Robinson had spent almost $42,000.
Dr.
Sassetti confronted Malachi at the time and he apologized profusely.
He wrote a check for $5,877 on the spot with a promise to pay her back the rest at a later date.
Of course, that check bounced.
What's going on?
Malachi Love Robinson posted $18,000 bail.
He was free until trial.
The widespread news coverage did Malachi no favors in the court of public opinion, but his principal investor, Perseus Wells, said he'd wait for the verdict before he threw his old friend under the bus.
That's right.
Malachi Love Robinson had a financial investor.
He had met Perseus Wells at a cell phone store where Perseus worked.
Perseus gave Malachi $6,000 as an investment, not so much into the person, but into the idea of a medical practice.
It seemed like it could pay dividends.
He told me he was a natural doctor, so I didn't know anything about
natural doctors and what they do.
So I just took him at the word and seen all the certifications and
his degree from some state, Arizona state, and transcripts.
And, you know, so
what can I say?
Were you surprised when he was arrested?
Was I?
Oh, yeah.
So, you know, I look at people who ask me, how can you be fooled?
How can the state of Florida be fooled?
You know, how can St.
Mary's be fooled?
This is no average 18-year-old.
He called me the night he got out, Perseus told WBPF.
He gave me a long apology and said it was just a misunderstanding, and he would never put me in the situation where he would involve me in stuff.
He still tells me that he is innocent.
I feel like I shouldn't judge until I know.
When the gavel hits and the jury decides that he was lying and the evidence mounts up to the fact that he is a liar, that's when I'm going to say to myself,
yep, he's a liar.
Unfortunately, Perseus Wells would have to wait longer to decide.
Malachi's trial was delayed.
During a proceeding where everyone expected the defendant to take a plea deal, Love Robinson's lawyer requested to withdraw from the case.
He told the judge that Malachi hadn't been answering his phone calls.
Until those court issues were sorted out, the 18-year-old doctor still had his freedom, which he used to get arrested again.
On August 29, 2016, Malachi received new charges of grand theft for writing a bad check to West Palm Nissan for a $1,500 down payment on a car he never possessed.
Soon after, Malachi's new lawyer quit.
He posted bail again, this time for $8,000.
And two weeks later, on September 10, 2016, he was arrested again.
This time in Stafford County, Virginia, a place not in Florida, the state he wasn't supposed to leave.
Now 19 years old, Malachi Love Robinson tried to buy a $35,000 Lexus using his godmother's information.
The dealership googled his name because he was acting kind of funny.
They saw his previous arrest and called the cops.
The cops asked Malachi's godmother if she had authorized the purchase.
Absolutely not, she told them.
So they hauled him off to jail.
On May 22nd, 2017, Malachi Love Robinson pleaded guilty to one count of false statements to obtain credit and a forgery charge.
He was sentenced to one year in a Virginia jail.
His trial in Florida would have to wait.
But finally, on January 4th, 2018, Malachi, now 20 years old, pleaded guilty to 14 criminal charges.
He was ordered to repay his victims $80,000.
And while facing 90 years in prison, he was only given 3.5.
He felt like he was trying to do the right thing.
So he wasn't trying to hide from nobody.
So you don't think your grandson should be considered a con man?
No, he wasn't trying to be a con man.
He was trying to help somebody.
Later that year, Inside Edition interviewed Malachi Love Robinson in prison.
I was a young kid, he told them.
A young kid that got overly ambitious and just said to hell with the rules and regulations.
I 100% regret what I've done.
And the reason being is that because, number one, I've messed my life up, you know, a great deal.
Do you still want to be a doctor?
I do.
Love Robinson is scheduled to be released in 2020.
Malachi Love Robinson was released from prison on September 23rd, 2019, about 20 months into his three and a half year sentence.
Four months later, Malachi was arrested.
And a South Florida man who made national headlines for pretending to be a doctor when he was a teenager is now facing new fraud charges.
23-year-old Malachi Love Robinson was arrested yesterday morning in Palm Beach County.
The shipping broker he worked for accused him of telling clients to send money to his personal account instead of the company.
Investigators say he stole more than $10,000 of the company's money.
Malachi Love Robinson had landed a contract position at United States of Freight in Del Rey Beach.
He applied using his middle name Alex.
A few months into his new job of connecting customers to transport companies, someone at United States of Freight noticed that money was missing.
Turns out, Malachi was instructing customers to pay him directly using PayPal and Venmo, or they could write a check to National Logistics Division LLC, a company that he created two months after getting out of prison for the sole purpose of ripping off his new employer.
Truly astonishing.
I can't say how truly sorry I am.
I don't want to go to jail, Malachi said in a text to his boss when confronted.
He promised to pay the money back.
I'm doing everything I can to make it right, he wrote.
You may remember this guy as Dr.
Love, the then teenager who was arrested after practicing medicine without a license, while the now 25-year-old Malachi Love Robinson is heading back to prison.
Malachi Love Robinson pleaded guilty to his latest grand theft charges on January 2nd, 2nd, 2023.
He was sentenced to 28 months in prison.
He's scheduled to be released in 2026.
See you then.
Probably.
Swindled is written, researched, produced, and hosted by me, a concerned citizen.
with original music by Trevor Howard, aka the former, aka Dr.
Love.
For more information about Swindled, you can visit swindledpodcast.com and follow us on Instagram, Facebook, Twitter, and TikTok at swindledpodcast.
Or you can send us a postcard at P.O.
Box6044, Austin, Texas 78762.
But please, no packages.
We do not trust you.
Allegations and
accusations can be as a dagger in the back.
Swindled is a completely independent production, which means no network, no investors, no bosses, no shadowy moneymen, no stethoscopes.
And we plan to keep it that way, but we need your support.
Become a valued listener on Patreon, Apple Podcast, or Spotify at valued listener.com.
For as little as five bucks a month, you will receive early access to new episodes and exclusive access to bonus episodes that you can't find anywhere else.
And everything is 100% commercial-free.
Become a valued listener at valued listener.com.
Or if you want to support the show and need something to wear to your fake online religious medical school, consider buying something you don't need at swindledpodcast.com/slash shop.
They're t-shirts, patches, hats, hoodies, posters, coffee mugs, and more.
Swindledpodcast.com/slash shop.
And remember to use coupon code Capitalism to receive 10% off your order.
If you do not want anything in return for your support, you can always simply donate using the form on the home page.
That's it.
Thanks for listening.
My name is Tala from Apex, North Carolina.
My name is Janae from Michigan.
Hello, Swindled Corporation.
My name is Mariana from New Jersey.
And
I am
a citizen and valued listener.
Remember, read the labels on stuff, especially if you eat it.
Have a great day.
Thanks to Simply Safe for sponsoring the show.
Get 50% off your new SimplySafe system at simplysafe.com/slash swindled.
That's 50% off your new SimplySafe system by visiting simplysafe.com slash swindled.
There's no safe like simply safe.
Olivia loves a challenge.
It's why she lifts heavy weights
and likes complicated recipes.
But for booking her trip to Paris, Olivia chose the easy way with Expedia.
She bundled her flight with a hotel to save more.
Of course, she still climbed all 674 steps to the top of the Ivy Tower.
You were made to take the easy route.
We were made to easily package your trip.
Expedia, made to travel.
Flight-inclusive packages are at all protected.