Nobody Should Believe Me - S03 E17: Dangerous Women (Season Finale: Part 3)
Episode Date: January 18, 2024In the third and final installment of our exclusive interview with Dr. Sally Smith, she shares her side of what happened in the Maya Kowalski case, revealing how perilous Maya’s situation truly wa...s when she originally arrived at Johns Hopkins All Childrens in October of 2016.  Dr. Sally Smith also reveals, for the first time, the details of the multi-million-dollar settlement with the Kowalski family and shares the impact that this case could have on medical providers and abused children going forward.  And finally Dr. Sally Smith disclosess her concerns and her hopes for Maya and Kyle Kowalski—the two children thrust into the national spotlight by their father’s lawsuit—and lastly, her reflections on the work she’s devoted her life to.  *** Munchausen Support accepts donations and volunteers at www.munchausensupport.com  Click here to view our sponsors. Remember that using our codes helps advertisers know you’re listening and helps us keep making the show! If you have a story about medical child abuse that you are ready to share you can tag @andreadunlop, email hello@nobodyshouldbelieveme.com or leave us a voicemail at (484) 768-0266 Follow host Andrea Dunlop on Instagram for behind-the-scenes photos: @andreadunlop Buy Andrea’s books here. Download the APSAC's practice guidelines here. *** Note: This episode contains sensitive content related to child abuse. Listener discretion is advised. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Hello, it's Andrea,
and this is our final episode of season three.
This season has been a wild ride.
Thank you for joining us.
We made this season in real time.
My team has been incredible
keeping up with everything I have asked of them.
So thank you so much to the folks
at Large Media, in particular, my amazing producer, Tina Noll, and our incredible editor,
Kareem Kiltow, who have really been burning the midnight oil to make this season happen. So thank
you so, so much. In the last episode, we discussed some of the significant problems with the New York Magazine
piece on the Maya Kowalski case and Dr. Sally Smith, and I have an update. I reached out to
New York Magazine, Andy and Neri asking for their comment with a detailed breakdown of the most
egregious errors in the piece, I heard back from the
Senior Director of Communications, and she said, hello, Andrea, thank you for reaching
out with your concerns.
We have reviewed them and stand by our reporting.
Before we get into the last part of our interview with Dr. Sally Smith, a brief update on where
things stand with the ongoing Kowalski case.
As we discussed with lead attorney for Johns Hopkins All Children's Ethan Shapiro,
there was a motion for a new trial based on juror misconduct. There was a brief interview
with that juror yesterday. It did not amount to much and the judge has dismissed their motion for a new trial. So now
the most likely outcome is that they will carry on to the appeals process. And I will certainly
update on the main feed at some point when we have news on that and on the Patreon and subscriber
feeds on Apple. Dr. Bex and I will continue to recap the goings on there. And we are also going to be
watching and recapping the Gypsy Rose Blanchard Lifetime Special that is airing starting today,
January 5th. So if you are interested in that, join us there to chat about that. As you may know,
Gypsy Rose Blanchard, who conspired to murder her mother, Dee Dee Blanchard, after enduring a lifetime of
munchausen by proxy abuse, was just released from prison last month. So that has obviously been a
big headline. Join us on the subscriber feeds if you're interested in that. And of course, that is
a great way to support the show. And I am so grateful for all of you who have left ratings and reviews of the show.
Those help so much.
If monetary support is not an option, that is really the best thing that you can do to
help us keep making this show and also just spreading the word.
And on a personal note, I have gotten so many messages from you this season, and I cannot
even put into words how much these mean to me. So many of you shared
your personal stories either as healthcare workers, as family members of survivors, as survivors.
These just make everything that we do here worth it and I thank you so much. People believe their eyes.
That's something that actually is so central to this whole issue and to people that experience this
is that we do believe the people that we love
when they're telling us something.
If you questioned everything that everyone told you,
you couldn't make it through your day.
I'm Andrea Dunlop, and this is Nobody Should Believe Me.
Have you ever had that dream where you're standing in a room full of people and you're
screaming at the top of your lungs and no one can hear you and you're just paralyzed. In some ways, since
everything that happened with Megan, my sister, 13 years ago, I feel like I have just been forever
stuck in some version of that dream. And I'm just in this liminal space where I'm trying to sound the alarm and feel like I'm the only one that sees
this danger and my voice is just getting like swallowed by the wind. And then last summer,
when we were a few episodes into our second season, everything changed overnight, practically. Suddenly, all of these people were listening. And for me,
it felt like I'd been standing in this room screaming since forever, and no one was looking
at me. And then all of a sudden, all these faces turned in my direction all at once.
You know, I'm really proud of the work that we do on the show. And I had no idea what kind of audience this show would find when we started airing it. I just wanted it to find the people who needed it. over the span of a couple of weeks, you know, it was really exciting and I was happy about it,
but it was also a little bit jarring
because as I expected,
honestly, from the beginning of making this project,
not everyone is happy about what I have to say.
And this season of Nobody Should Believe Me
has been really different from the first two.
I, of course, I have not experienced anything
like the vitriol and threats that Dr. Sally
Smith has endured.
But nonetheless, having people malign you and spew hatred at or about you, even if it's
safely contained to the internet, is really unsettling.
And I've gotten some of that this season.
People have called me a creep,
they've called me an ableist, an opportunist, and some other things that I'm not going to repeat
because my dad gets really upset when we use foul language on this show. And I've also been accused
of fear-mongering and trying to create a moral panic about medical child abuse. And, you know, the implication there is that
it doesn't exist, and I'm trying to freak people out about something that's not real.
And, you know, these criticisms are very different tenor than what I got initially, which was just
the usual podcast stuff of people complaining about my voice or the number of ads in the episode, the people who are
criticizing me now are accusing me essentially of being dangerous. And as we've learned so far
about Dr. Sally Smith, that's something that she is very familiar with. So, so far, we've talked
to her about her life and work. And in the last episode, we covered this parade of, quote, false accusations that are not that.
Today, we get to the heart of it, the missing piece of the story that we've been talking about all season.
What really happened to Maya? What do you remember about getting that first call? I believe
it was from Dr. Tepe Sanchez? Correct. Well, she called me on a Saturday. And for 32 years,
I was on call 24-7, 365, unless I was out of the country, to get those calls. So, you know, I'm talking to her on a Saturday.
Dr. Tepe Sanchez was the pediatric critical care physician who saw Maya Kowalski when she was originally admitted at Johns Hopkins All Children's.
She was the doctor who called in the original report, which was screened out.
And at that point, she called Dr. Sally Smith to get her advice.
So I think she probably did give me a little bit of information about the unusual treatment with
the high-dose ketamine. And I think they were concerned about not only the mother's behavior,
but the child's behavior at that point, and had concerns for medical child abuse. And I think, as I recall,
in terms of the conversation, it was, what do we do? And I said, well, what needs to happen is
you've got to get every medical record that kid ever had and review that and see if there's enough
evidence to support this. So in the way that the system works, like our child protection team reviewed
every report for Pinellas County every day to see if they met certain criteria where we needed to do
a medical evaluation or not. And what are called screened out reports don't come through.
Oh, I see. Okay.
Sometimes they're referenced in the next report that there was a screened out report, but not always.
And so in this case, what I got was only the information related to what turned out to be the second report.
I had no idea that there was a first report that was screened out until much later.
There was much ado made about this being the second report, the inference being
that somehow Dr. Tepe Sanchez called Dr. Sally Smith and they sort of cooked up some way to make
this look like child abuse. But that's not what was happening here. You know, medical child abuse
is profoundly complicated to investigate, and this was not Dr. Tepe Sanchez's area of expertise,
and it was Dr. Smith's. So there's nothing untoward at all about her asking her for advice
on how to report. And when the second report was accepted, Dr. Smith dug in.
In this specific case, I clearly needed to know better about complex regional pain syndrome and take a look at some
of the preliminary records and things. I kind of preferred to do that before I got an extensive
history. So I kind of knew what questions to ask. So I got the request to provide the evaluation that Monday morning.
And I looked at some of the medical records that were in there and hers went back a ways.
So that was actually...
She'd been to Johns Hopkins All Children's quite a few times over the past years.
Over the preceding year and a few months, 15 months, I think, or so. And so I could look at
that stuff. And then as you scroll through these medical records, you see names of people who have
seen the kid. So there's references to Dr. So-and-so that the child went to yesterday.
There may not be any additional mention of that person
through the rest of the medical records, but it's there. So I just started making a list of
all the physician names I could find, all the hospital names I could find. And my wonderful
medical assistant at the time, I handed her the list and said, get me all the records you can.
It's a big job.
And we had, so under Florida statute, in order to be able to do these evaluations, obviously, you need to be able to review medical records.
This wasn't Dr. Smith's first time with a medical child abuse investigation.
And while she's been painted as somehow having a vendetta against Beata from the jump, this was a woman she'd never so much as met.
And her initial reaction to the possibility of doing the investigation in this case was quite the opposite.
I had briefly looked in the computer when we had the conversation on the Saturday, but I was somewhat hopeful that I would not have to do the medical child abuse evaluation because it was an out-of-county case.
And so then I'm like, OK, I guess it's me. You wouldn't know this from watching the film, but by the time Dr. Sally Smith met with Beata Kowalski, the DCF investigators had already spoken with both parents.
They'd already obtained some information in terms of what was being presented as the history.
I had some conversation with them.
The way it works in Florida is that
you make the call to the hotline,
and depending on the type of case,
it's either an immediate response or a 24-hour response.
And so the investigators had already been out there, I think it was the
Sunday, and talked to the parents. So in Florida, law enforcement responds with or-
Every time?
Pretty much, yes. Not necessarily the very first time, because this was an out-of-county case,
and they came up to the hospital.
There were some people from Pinellas County that did some stuff initially.
Anyway, but by the time that discussion took place with Beata, law enforcement was involved. of events, of course, was omitted from the Take Care of Maya film to fit neatly into this narrative
about Dr. Smith making snap decisions about abuse. She never stated who she was. She just walked in,
looked at me, looked at Maya. She came in and she acted like a regular doctor that worked for the
hospital. And she started to ask questions.
If they would have known who she was,
we would have never spoken to her.
Before this interaction with Jack Kowalski ever happened,
Beata had a lengthy meeting with Dr. Sally Smith,
and she certainly knew who she was.
And we know that she told Jack about this meeting
because it came up in her text messages
during trial. And there was really no mistaking the nature of this meeting with Beata and Dr.
Sally Smith. So there were a couple of child protective investigators that were present.
There were a couple of law enforcement people that were present and then myself. And they
kind of just listened while I, and probably took notes and stuff, while I
got the history from her. What do you remember about just maybe even like your impressions of
her when you first met her? You introduced yourself. I did.
The reason Dr. Smith and I are laughing here is because this anecdote about her not introducing herself
or misrepresenting who she is comes up over and over again in the media coverage of her.
And it's just not true.
She knew exactly who I was.
There was no question that this was related to the Child Protective Investigation.
Right.
The conversation.
What do you remember about her during that conversation?
I think understandably, considering what had been going on for the few days, she even made reference to being tired and not getting sleep and things.
She seemed somewhat, I would say, like agitated or pressured somewhat to me, somewhat animated.
And, you know, I approached the history taking in a fairly methodical manner.
And I even put in my report that I would ask a question and perhaps there would be some realm of answering
it that would occur, but there was an awful lot of other information that was thrown in
and extraneous things, and it was somewhat disjointed.
I imagine that really any parent is in this situation.
Like, I can empathize, I think, with if you find
yourself in that situation, that would be really scary. The stakes would feel really high. You
would feel, I mean, any parent that's in the ICU with their child is going to be agitated,
I would imagine, or that's pretty common. Sure. Knowing that, especially in that circumstance
where you have DCS investigators with you and the police, that that's going to be, you know, that parent could be feeling intimidated.
Sure.
That could be.
I mean, how do you kind of try and approach a parent to get a coherent history from them
and try and just get the, like, do you try to be just sort of as neutral as possible?
Do you, I mean, like, what is the sort of tactical approach?
I think that it ends up working out the best if you're fairly calm, fairly straightforward.
If a person's going off on a tangent,
not to really go with them,
but to redirect back to what you were trying to ask about.
I mean, in a case like this, I want to kind of get what she sees as the medical history since birth and try to figure out, was there some point in time that something happened?
And all of a sudden, you know, there's this much more intense focus on medical issues. Has this been a child
who's always had serious medical issues? And just ask a question from before the wandering occurred
in a calm, you know, kind of objective sounding manner, then you can sort of get people a little bit
back on track. It was fairly disjointed and gave some information about, you know,
kind of what led up to everything, but not necessarily in a real sequential coherent manner. The presentation was essentially that this had all started with asthma.
Right.
And I had already looked up complex regional pain syndrome and read some articles like
Monday evening or whatever. So that isn't a trigger for complex regional pain syndrome. So we have asthma and then that's being treated.
And then suddenly she can't walk. Right. You know, that was kind of all presented. I mean,
I think in some ways I would, as I recall, she seemed somewhat excited about the whole ketamine coma in Mexico thing.
What do you mean by that?
I guess just more specifically focusing on details about that and maybe steering the
conversation somewhat into all the medical things that were wrong kind of thing.
And the idea that this was sort of the worst case ever
and she required the most intensive treatment and, you know, that kind of idea.
Right. And almost like, and I mean, this corroborates very closely
with how she describes the situation.
In her own words, like it's sort of
grandiose, I guess. It's sort of like, I'm the youngest child to ever receive this procedure.
I have the most severe case of whole body CRPS that anyone has ever seen. Right. And I think that,
you know, beyond that, the pattern of going to specialists and all different specialists and
everything. I mean, as I recall,
she was kind of interested in presenting all of the different doctors that had had to see Maya.
And, you know, this, again, most of your case, you know, needed the most intensive evaluation
and testing and treatment and everything. That conversation sounds like was pretty focused on the events of like July 2015,
when she had the alleged onset of CRPS on. Right. I mean, I think she, as I recall, I think
once I got the records, there were exaggerations about medical history prior to May to June of 2015. But most of our discussion was related to when things started, which in her,
you know, telling was roughly June 2015. And then you are basically going through the process of
doing an initial record review. So when did you,
when did you meet Jack Kowalski and Maya? I think it was two days later. Okay. That day when I
talked to Beata, I did try to go in the room and that kind of thing. But it, I mean, you know,
sometimes you walk in a room, you know, it's just not an appropriate time to be trying to do a medical exam.
Because I needed, you know, for my medical evaluation, I needed to do an exam.
That's expected.
And typically we take photos and things like that.
But neither one of those things actually ever happened in this case.
So when I came back, I thought, you know, you definitely need to talk to the father as well, especially in a scenario like this that he's in the home.
And so I went back to the hospital a couple days later and tried to talk with him and see if I could do an exam at that point, see if I could take some photos at that point.
Again, that exam and photos part didn't take place, but I did have
some conversation with Jack. And in some ways, it was what I would consider sort of a typical
scenario in which I'm asking medical history and he just was responding, that's Beata's area,
and portraying that he didn't really know anything about the medical care.
So in the film and throughout the trial,
Jack Kowalski portrayed himself and his family as being victimized by the system.
And the reality is, which we've discussed this season,
there are people who are very disenfranchised
by the child protection system in this country.
And they are not the people who can afford
to hire a battalion of attorneys
to represent them in dependency court.
So yeah, there were five attorneys.
I mean, this was a circus from the legal standpoint right out of the gate.
That was part of why it took so long for anything to happen
was because there were hearings and motions and, you know,
Maya had an attorney, Jack had an attorney, mom had an
attorney, there was a guardian ad litem attorney, there's a dependency attorney. And, you know, all
this, the poor judge is head spinning trying to, you know, sort through what's the best thing for
this child. And that's what the judge is trying to decide. And, you know, listening to the evidence that's presented from the Child
Protective Investigation side and the dependency attorney and the defense attorney and the experts
that the parents might have. And, you know, all those things were going on in this case. And the
judge was hearing all this information and then trying to make some kind of a decision about what's
best for the child.
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So they were preparing to go to the shelter hearing.
I'm sorry, I think it was on the 14th, because I did that report on the 13th.
And so they asked me if I could provide something in writing.
And at this point, how much of the medical records did you be able to look through?
I had received probably two-thirds to three-quarters of what I eventually got. And I had pulled up a bunch of articles and taken a look at those. I had
scanned through a fair amount of the records that I had, but there's only so many hours in the day.
So I had a fair amount of information, but there was a lot still to review. I had received it, but not necessarily
reviewed everything. But what I had seen to that point was quite alarming in terms of
the concern for medical child abuse. And I think one of the things that's important
in a case like this is you have to look at the potential risks for the child. How
threatened is their safety? And if a child has an indwelling IV catheter that goes into a major
blood vessel, that's a whole different ballgame than a child who has no kind of access to the internal part of the body. And if the child is getting
very unconventional treatment that's potentially very dangerous, that also is something that I
would take into consideration at that preliminary moment. You know, if it's a child that doesn't
really have those levels of safety concern, then I might be more inclined
to say, I'm still looking at the records. I'm concerned. I don't know exactly where this is
going to lead. But in this particular case, and in cases like this, where there's this high level of risk to the child. Then I'm more inclined to say there's significant concern for risk and harm and those kinds of things in this case.
And those parents cannot provide a safe environment for her at this time.
One of the things that I came to understand more thoroughly by the time I wrote
my final report was that Beata was an infusion nurse. That was her day-to-day job, putting
medications through veins. And I think at that point, I already had seen fairly extensive indication that
she was accessing that port on a routine basis. And I don't think there were multiple lists of
medications, including IV forms of opiates that I knew, you know, were of a concern.
That she was administering at home?
Yes.
I didn't know until somewhat later how much ketamine she had access to in the home.
But anyway, so...
Not oral ketamine.
Well, that's an interesting thing.
Liquid ketamine is intended for IV use, but can also be given orally.
There's not an oral form of ketamine.
So it's not like there's a pill and there's a liquid.
No.
Okay.
They're one and the same thing.
So if you've got this central access and you've got this infusion nurse and you've got this liquid ketamine that can go right in that thing or other medications that are supposedly present, that takes this case optimistically you might look at the medical information.
Because, you know, one of the things that people don't understand necessarily about medical child abuse is that there's often escalation.
You know, certain things are generating attention, whether it's on the internet or from physicians or whatever it is.
But then that becomes less exciting.
And so you ratchet up the...
It's like an addiction in that way.
It is.
We have seen that pattern in every case.
It's very much like an addiction.
And so, sadly, as that escalation occurs, typically there are gastrostomy tubes that end up in place.
There are central indwelling IV catheters that end up in place.
There are other ways that the level of danger can increase because of the equipment that's present and things and the medications that are prescribed and everything.
So it turns out that the risk of mortality for medical child abuse is 10%. Some studies go down
maybe as low as six, but that's a pretty substantial number. And the risk in a person, in a child who has an indwelling IV catheter and a person who knows how to use it is not 6% or 10%. to requested escalation of the treatment that was already fairly dangerous,
then, you know, the level of risk in a case like this just becomes something that you can't really accept that risk,
that we'll just hope everything works out for the best at home.
Early on in Maya's ketamine infusion treatments that she'd been receiving,
Beata had requested that she get an indwelling port. So this is a very common element in medical
child abuse cases. Hope Ybarra, who we covered in the first season, took blood out of her daughter
and caused her to be severely anemic using her port. And Brittany Phillips, who we covered in the second season,
poisoned her daughter through her port.
And this is what I think so many onlookers to this case
have just missed entirely about this situation.
Immediate, potentially lethal danger that Maya was in
if she had been allowed to leave the hospital
in October of 2016 with Beata. Those who have cast Dr. Sally Smith's initial report as a rush
to judgment fail to grasp that Maya may not have survived a less drastic course of action. There is a profound cognitive dissonance for me
in listening to people pick at Dr. Smith's actions. Whether she looked at the records before she was
supposed to, she didn't. Whether or not she ought to have included that warning from Dr. Kirkpatrick
in her report about not falsely accusing Beata of Munchausen by proxy.
And that report, of course, is something the public has never seen, you know, and then this
question of like whether she should have weighed more heavily that the Kowalski family did receive
some therapy, which was one of the things the doctor suggested they do, you know, at some point at this Eagle's Wing Counseling Center in Sarasota.
And during our interview, I found myself asking Dr. Smith about these criticisms
because they had come up so much.
Talk about that Eagle's Wing thing.
And then, you know, it wasn't until I was actually sitting in the room with her asking
these questions that it struck me how absurd these criticisms were. Because who cares?
The point is that Maya could have died.
To look at Maya now, she's this beautiful, active young woman.
You know, it's easy enough to forget that there was another way that this story could have ended.
The treatments that Maya was receiving were extraordinarily dangerous.
She'd already endured one ketamine coma treatment, plus a round of boosters in Mexico. There were, of
course, also the 55 rounds of high-dose ketamine infusions she received from Dr. Hanna. And in
April of 2016, during the time period where Maya was supposedly doing so much better before her
October 2016 relapse that brought her to Johns Hopkins, her parents were
raising money to send her to Mexico for another coma treatment. Just to remind you, this is again
a procedure with a 50% chance of death. In the blog that Beata wrote in Maya's voice,
she talks about them connecting when they were in Monterey with this family and this young woman, Jessica Stevens, who was receiving this same treatment for CRPS.
Jessica Stevens was positioned by the plaintiff at trial as an example of someone who had died from CRPS.
But what Jessica Stevens actually died from was sepsis following one of her
treatments for CRPS. And as we know from Beata's blog, she talked about Maya's death constantly,
starting right around the time of her diagnosis. And she had talked about Maya's death during that Johns Hopkins hospitalization.
She said that she would take her and put her in hospice if they let her leave without getting
the ketamine treatment. This is an option that we now know Beata had begun exploring weeks into
Maya's diagnosis when she had had Maya labeled as terminal.
Why wouldn't the doctors take that seriously?
It was only months after Beata's death
that Olivia Gant's mother took her home
and put her in a home hospice
where she starved to death in her mother's care.
The hospital suspected that there was nothing actually wrong with this little girl,
but they let her leave.
So what would people be saying about Johns Hopkins if this had been the outcome?
If they had done what everyone cheering on the Kowalskis is claiming they ought to have done,
which is let Maya leave with her parents.
Olivia Gant's grandparents sued the hospital for their failure to report, and they settled out of court.
And I don't know what the amount was, but I guarantee you it wasn't a quarter of a billion dollars.
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But the doctors at Johns Hopkins decided that this child's life was worth the risk.
Dr. Smith remembers meeting Maya early in her stay.
When I saw her the first time, she was pretty heavily sedated and was in the ICU bed, but,
you know, was not really alert or oriented or anything like that. And when I saw her the second time, she had been weaned off a number of medications and, you know, was
in the course of some medical treatment at the time and that kind of thing. In that beginning
period, it wasn't like there were bruises to take pictures of or burns to take
pictures of or some kind of injuries that needed photo documentation. In her case, as the review of
the case kind of went along, the thing that maybe needed photos was the condition of her extremities.
You know, was there any visible evidence of complex regional pain syndrome or not?
You know, there had been this pattern that had been observed in the hospital. I'd seen it in
the medical records from Tampa General. I'd seen it in the medical records from Lurie Children's,
where numerous people with expertise had observed this incongruity in what she was saying. She
practically was paralyzed. She was so weak.
She was in so much pain. She couldn't do this. She couldn't do that. But then she's 10.
You know, she didn't understand that telling somebody she couldn't grip their finger,
but then being able to grip a cookie, the doctors are observing these things saying, there's a lot of incongruity
here. And the whole diagnosis is focusing on this dystonia, but it had been observed by numerous
people that this was not any kind of neurological fixed positioning of the feet, which is what's
required to call it that. Right, dystonia doesn't come and go, as Dr. Payne explained.
This was clearly voluntary, maybe not intentional, but yet from a neurological standpoint, voluntary.
And so I was actually going to try to take photos of her lower extremities to show that she didn't have any visible evidence of complex regional pain syndrome and dystonia and
things. And then, yeah, she became upset. And I've been doing this for a long time. I didn't see,
you know, certainly not a 10-year-old child. You don't force them to do things. That's more
traumatic than not doing that. And at first I kind of said, oh, well, I'll just come back when
you're sleeping. But then as I'm walking out, I'm like, this child is the victim here. I certainly
don't need to be piling on with inflicting photographs on her. We've got other evidence,
you know, photographs aren't crucial for what I need. And I don't really think that there's any point in upsetting her with this.
Yeah, and I think there's been so much conversation with this case about the idea of her faking things.
And I'd love to know your take on that.
And I think that's an important mindset that physicians approach any kind of
conversion disorder, functional neurological disorder, other kinds of things with these
incongruities is that, you know, people say they're experiencing pain. Okay, you're experiencing pain.
In terms of, you know, does that also mean you have this diagnosis? Perhaps not. You're not necessarily willfully doing all of these things, but in medical child abuse,'s happening. But as children get older,
you know, there are dramatic children. There are, you know, scenarios where it isn't even
necessarily verbalized what the preferred role or the preferred presentation is for the child
to be doing in front of the doctor, there's probably a lot of soft communication
and verbal cues and ways that that parent reacts to what's happening that reinforces these things.
And so I think it becomes very difficult as they get older. There are children who have experienced medical child abuse for a number of years.
And as that time goes along and they get into early adulthood, they become a person that has a factitious disorder.
There was endless talk about CRPS during this trial, and one of the frequent criticisms of both me
and Dr. Smith was that we just really didn't understand this complicated condition.
That, to borrow what became Kowalski attorney Gregory Anderson's catchphrase during this trial,
that we just don't get it. Now, I don't have access to Maya's full medical records,
but you have to make some pretty big leaps of logic to believe that she legitimately has CRPS
at this point because of the way that we now know this diagnosis originated. Beata was messaging
with parents of CRPS children before Maya ever received this diagnosis.
And Beata reported to Dr. Kreisman, the pulmonologist, that Maya had a positive diagnosis of CR parents is that she saw Dr. Kirkpatrick specifically on the recommendations of those parents.
So there was so much fixation on the condition of CRPS during the trial.
But this was not the only thing that Maya was being extensively treated for during this time.
Far from it. There were all of these other things in the mix, such as her being immunodeficient
and a mention of Addison's disease. And of course, the severe asthma that allegedly
kicked off the CRPS symptoms. So with the asthma, for example, as we kind of talked about earlier, reportedly with a very serious history in Chicago before they moved to Florida.
And when I looked, she'd never been hospitalized.
She had two ER visits.
And one of the things that's important from the asthma standpoint is that it was cough variant asthma.
So and the thing that she was having was a cough that was manifesting how severe her asthma was.
So then I think this was testified to by specialists in court.
I don't think I'm saying anything out of line that multiple people said this is a habit cough.
This is a psychogenic cough. You know,
the pattern clearly was not related to asthma. I mean, asthma is always worse at night. And there
were repeated observations that she didn't cough during sleep and, you know, things like that. So part was exaggerated and therefore treated more sort of aggressively than
might have happened otherwise because of exaggerated history.
Because she was taking quite a high dose of steroids.
Right. And, you know, it was interesting in terms of because of that history of more severe issues, the level, had seen her and she had a habit cough and her oxygen level was perfectly fine.
And yet later that day, a large dose of steroids had been given to her, you know, by her mother's decision making and stuff.
And, you know, it all kind of goes together.
So the habit cough, one of the things we think of with coughing is could it be an acid reflux problem? Well, if you can't tolerate the test for the acid reflux to see one way or the other, which is the pH probe, if you can't try it, well, maybe we'll just give an empiric trial of treatment for acid reflux and see if it helps the cough.
Right, because there was this pattern always of Maya allegedly being in too much pain to have
this kind of test done or like to be examined. So yeah, so that was sort of complicated getting
to the bottom of any of these other things that were going on, I would imagine.
Right. And so then all of a sudden, oh, well, she's on this medication because she has gastroesophageal
reflux.
And she got all these steroids in July and August, and somebody did a cortisol level
that was low because cortisol suppresses your adrenal gland and causes your body's
production of cortisol to be unnecessary and
much lower.
And so then that becomes adrenal insufficiency, which these certain doctors say, oh, well,
that's a feature of severe whole body complex regional pain syndrome.
Doesn't have anything to do with some medications
you all just gave her that is causing her to have adrenal insufficiency.
This is a reaction, not a symptom.
And of course, none of this was allowed in to the trial.
And even what narrow pieces Dr. Smith did get to testify about mostly happened out of
the earshot of the jury.
Well, and I think that the whole thing on court TV was very misleading, too, because
it made it seem like there was a fairly balanced presentation because of the proffered questions.
And indeed, what the jury heard was really restricted. I didn't really have the opportunity to testify to anything
about my medical evaluation in court, which to me, that's the whole case.
Yeah. Yeah. It's, yeah.
And, you know, all these individual people presenting their little bit of, you know, the story, but nobody being the one to pull it all together
and make the case for why all these things were done. Yeah, right. The jury didn't hear any of
that. So, I mean, I can't even imagine how they would be able to make any sort of reasonable decision. And so that happened. I ended up somewhere in the 2,500-page realm
of medical records. It turned out to be a 45-page narrative report. And so I just went through in
my report, you know, sequentially starting from her early childhood in Chicago
and the records that I had received from places that, for example, didn't show any asthma
hospitalization ever. And then I ended up making a calendar at the end for that last 15 months that you start to realize how many medical visits there were
just by this is the calendar this was in the police report so that we have seen this calendar
and we wondered who wrote it and now so that was me and so that was how I approached the report in this was I had reviewed this crazy stack of records. And I also had reviewed a lot of the medical literature because I need to be able to speak intelligently about whether there was complex regional pain syndrome or not. No, I'm not an expert in that. But the literature is fairly spelled out about what this is, how you diagnose it,
what you treat it with. I mean, I was looking at things right up to the, you know, 2016 timeframe,
trying to find what's current treatment, is this current treatment? So, you know, I had done all
those things and then did the calendar to give some almost visual to that process of...
Right, because you have to make this digestible for the courts, for DCF, for the police.
You can't just...
I mean, honestly, probably most of them didn't read the whole four or five pages, but the
calendar was probably somewhat illustrative and then the conclusion.
And so anyway, that was sort of the process and then trying to then put this all together. So, you know, I, I got full time jobs while I'm trying to do this. I mean, I spend a lot of time on the weekends, in the evenings, working on this. So anyway, I mean, it was finally early December before I just had to finish it and get
it done and, you know, get the report out there and things like that. So. So, okay. So you submitted
your report in December and then not too long after this, then was Beata's death. Correct.
Do you remember hearing about her death?
Yes.
And who told you?
The DCF attorney that I had been, you know,
kind of working with to help with their dependency case.
And how did that information land on you? Honestly, my mind was kind of blown. I mean, I've never had,
I've, I had evaluated, you know, I would say between 20 and 30, over 30 years, cases of medical child abuse and had some recognition that the mental health issues
of the perpetrator put them at some risk for suicide.
But it's very small, maybe 1% or something like that.
So it wasn't like I had never considered that as a possibility.
But certainly did not expect that to be the outcome in this particular case.
Beata had been the main subject of the investigation, and all of the data that we
have about medical child abuse points to a very high proportion of female perpetrators.
But by the time Dr. Sally Smith had finished looking at all of the
records she'd collected on Maya, she'd really begun to question Jack's initial presentation
of himself as the dad that was just pretty clueless about his daughter's medical care.
Since he had been the parent who took her to, I think, at least half of these unconventional treatments.
I mean, I didn't really know what the dynamic was there and what his level of complicity
might be and, you know, that kind of thing.
And also that, you know, in many cases of medical child abuse, it really is just the mother or in rare cases, it really is just the father.
And so the other parent may be a reasonable alternative for a safe home.
I walked away from what I looked at having no idea if she would be safe with Jack instead,
you know, because of just the whole pattern.
Ultimately, the courts did end up sending Maya
home with Jack following Beata's death
against the recommendations of Johns Hopkins All Children's.
And Dr. Sally Smith, as was her way, carried on.
You know, it was tragic.
This thing was tragic from way before her death,
but, you know, but in terms of getting too caught up in it, I literally put the binders together,
you know, put the box of records over somewhere and moved on with the next case to a certain
extent. And I don't mean that in a callous or cavalier
way or anything like that. It just, it is what it is. I mean, yeah, I mean, I had that ability to
maintain boundaries and things. And so, you know, I certainly wasn't in any way trying to be
unfeeling about it or anything, but this had been a scenario that was consuming a tremendous amount of my time
and energy and emotional energy and everything. And, you know, it just stopped. And so I kind of
moved on. That was the last that Dr. Sally Smith heard of the case until the summer of 2018, when she got a very colorful letter from Gregory Anderson,
who was requesting all of the records. And honestly, my initial reaction then was,
okay, well, you know, bring it. I got a 45-page report. I got thousands of pages of records that
I reviewed. Sure, you know, if you want to talk about whether or not this is medical child abuse,
you know, let's talk. But, you know, obviously, thousands of motions and hearings and all of it
later, I mean, the whole thing, the circus continued and still does, obviously.
Once the media got a hold of it, Dr. Smith was immediately cast as the villain.
And, you know, she's got that resting bitch face that she discussed, and she had settled out of
court with the Kowalskis. And that's something that gives the appearance of her having done
something wrong. So what's been reported is that you settled out of court with the Kowalskis for $2.5 million.
I believe that has been extensively reported.
What actually happened?
What actually happened is that the original lawsuit did not include the Department of Health of the state of Florida, even though they were my primary employer and even though under the way that my compensation from the state was structured, I got additional compensation compared to some other medical directors because of the number of out-of-county cases I did by that referral process to all children. So by all rights, the person who should have been
sued related to me was the Department of Health of the state of Florida.
Like the person who should have been sued as your employer.
Exactly. Would have been the Department of Health. But I mean, I think I can safely say that Mr.
Anderson knows about sovereign immunity. And there are serious limitations
on what compensation can be obtained from the state related to conduct, especially when
a person is acting in good faith. So they were not named in the suit.
They chose to take the position that they couldn't really get involved because they weren't named in the suit.
They would kind of help me a bit, but, you know, such as the legal world or whatever.
And so it fell on this local agency called Suncoast Center Incorporated.
Suncoast had held the contract for the child protection team as
just a small part of their, it's a counseling, mental health. Community-based care organization.
Yes, mental health primarily, you know, agency. So they had the contract for the child protection
team for 12 years or something like that when this case came along.
And, you know, it's a small agency. They had insurance, obviously, that covered all their
staff, including their medical providers. And so it's a small agency with a relatively small insurance company kind of thing. And at the point that this went to mediation in December of 21, I believe that's correct.
And just from an actuarial insurance company standpoint, somebody had died. That was going to potentially be a sympathetic factor for a jury if this went to a jury. They just looked at it at an actuarial table and said, we don't know which way this could go if it goes to trial. And I think at that point, the attorney told me that all the time that he had put into the case as the go to court for at least another year, possibly longer.
And at that point, there had already been hundreds and hundreds of motions and counter motions and hearings and all and depositions.
My deposition for this case was video deposition for a cumulative of 26 hours. And there were probably others
that were at least four to six hours,
like all day depositions,
probably a hundred or more of these that had been going on.
So they had put in all this money.
They looked at the limit.
Their insurance limit was $3 million.
It was purely a business decision.
This was gonna cost them at least another
$800,000 to a million dollars to take it to trial. And then there was a possibility that it would.
And I mean, I was frankly very upset. I felt like I didn't do anything wrong.
This was going to get out into the media as soon as it and exactly what happened.
Oh, don't worry.
It will be confidential.
We're talking about Greg Anderson.
This is not going to stay confidential.
Seriously.
I mean, you know, it was a matter of weeks before the fact that this had been settled was out there.
So this was not your choice.
Oh, God, no.
I seriously considered refusing to sign the settlement agreement. was out there. So this was not your choice and it was not the direction you wanted to do.
I seriously considered refusing to sign the settlement agreement. And there was a clause
they put in that this settlement didn't indicate that I had admitted any wrongdoing. Well, of
course. And then people, well, you must have done something horrible. Why would they have settled
for two and a half million dollars? Well, that's what insurance companies do. I was an employee. I didn't have any choice as to whether
I signed it or not. I, you know, tried to argue a little bit, but I mean, honestly,
within a couple of months, I decided I was going to resign.
Because you felt like, wow, it came down to it And my employer just didn't have my back. I mean,
or that was part of it. You realize kind of how vulnerable you were. The state of Florida didn't
have my back and the statewide child abuse pediatrics medical director tried the best
that she could, but there was just nothing. Yeah. Nobody seemed able to figure out any way to have my back. And, you know,
I mean, I always thought under Florida statute that if I was acting in good faith,
there was sovereign immunity, I certainly would never have any liability for having done a child abuse medical evaluation. If I had a 45-page report with 18 pages of
calendar and multiple pages of growth chart, and that's what I had done, that I certainly would
never be thought. You can show your work. You have the receipts. Committing malpractice or
some kind of medical negligence or something like that.
And this case just turned that completely on its head.
Somehow I have personal liability of some sort when I did my job.
And that's the real rub of this whole case.
The bargain that doctors thought they had in doing their duty has just been obliterated.
Dr. Smith did not end up here because she did something wrong.
She's here because the rules changed in the middle of the game.
And insurance companies, as she said, they do the math.
And here's what that math looks like now. In December of 2023, a Florida state jury found that DCF had been negligent in their failure to properly investigate an abusive head trauma case involving an eight-year-old girl. injuries from this abuse that left her with quadriplegia and severe brain damage for which
she will require intensive care for the rest of her life. The jury in this case awarded her $15
million. That's 5.7% of the Kowalski settlement. As much as there is, I know from being involved with this,
so much disbelief and disinformation about medical child abuse cases, there's also a huge growing
pushback about the existence of abusive head trauma, despite the consensus among medical professionals about it, which is 95% since we're doing math today.
And the other cases in the film all concern abusive head trauma. And so does the next one
coming down the pike at Sally Smith. And so I just looked at, this isn't going to be the first
case. And Greg Anderson's got another one in the wings, as he said, to finish my career.
I mean, he actually put that in a letter to my attorney.
The case that she's referring to here is the case of Elena and Vadim Kushnier.
So this is another case where a family is claiming to have been falsely accused of child abuse.
And another case that involves
both Gregory Anderson and Johns Hopkins All Children's. This is a very complicated story,
and we are going to cover it in a future episode. So then, when the Kowalski case finally went to
court, Dr. Sally Smith thought she might get her chance at last to tell the truth about what happened.
And unlike Dr. Kirkpatrick, who famously left his notes at the hotel, Dr. Smith came prepared.
So Sally, can you tell us what is in this stack of multicolored binders? Sitting in the chair next to Sally Smith during our interview was a gigantic stack of four-inch thick multicolored binders.
And these had also made an appearance in the courtroom.
And so I had gotten some indication from the attorney that was from the insurance company
from before that was working with me a
little bit that my report was not going to be allowed to be entered into evidence. But I didn't
understand walking into the courtroom that I wasn't going to be allowed to talk about any of it.
And they were going to ask me a bunch of questions that I hadn't really prepped for in terms of
whether or not I was an agent of all children's hospital. That was the only thing that I really
testified about before the jury kind of blew my mind. I mean, going into court, so I would say
over 32 years plus a couple of years in New Jersey and my training and my fellowship,
you know, I've seen somewhere between 2,500 and 3,000 child abuse neglect cases. And,
you know, general ballpark, about 10% of those end up in some kind of legal thing where you
either give a deposition or you go to court. So I've been to court two or three
hundred times. So walking into a courtroom doesn't give me any anxiety or anything like that. I
already knew, which from a pediatrician standpoint and even a mother standpoint, I already knew that
those two poor children had been sitting there listening to that whole thing the whole time.
So it certainly adds a little element of taking some care exactly how you say things in front of them because they're children and they've already been traumatized a lot.
And apparently they're going to continue to be traumatized for another few years. So, you know, I wasn't going into a courtroom doesn't make me nervous anymore.
You know, you mentioned Maya and Kyle.
And I wonder, like, if you could say something to Maya specifically after, especially watching how how this has played out because I've
had that same thought of just like just the what they've been dragged through and having their
entire teenage lives really dominated by this lawsuit and the film and reliving the worst
moments of their life over and over again and having to listen to that 911 call over and over again. I mean, what do you hope for Maya and Kyle going forward?
And what would you want to say to Maya?
I think that regardless of exactly where things stand now
about factitious disorder, malingering, or whatever things one
might think about for a 17-year-old girl. This all started when she was nine, and Kyle was seven.
This has been going on like more than half of his life. Regardless of whether she has factitious disorder
or a conversion disorder or complex regional pain syndrome, and whether that is actually
whole body or whatever, as a physician, as a pediatrician, the thing that she needs most,
no matter what it is, is intensive psychotherapy. Because how could she possibly not
have significant post-traumatic stress disorder? Even if this is some sort of lifelong medical
disorder that she is going to be contending with,uring out how to manage a long-term chronic illness
really requires, or I think especially in this case, requires an intensive level of psychotherapy.
The idea that she really hasn't gotten much of any of that over these last five years, I mean, as a mom, kind of breaks my heart.
And Kyle, he's been kind of the invisible kid this whole time.
I feel like both of those children are at high risk. And to kind of ignore that, the adults in the room, what, because if they're getting therapy, that might mean they don't need this big lawsuit?
I just, I don't, I don't get it.
And, you know, I think that especially nowadays with social media and I mean, I have lots of teenagers that I see in my practice and levels of anxiety among teenagers now are very high.
You know, especially for girls, the of mental health intervention for her and her brother, I think, you know, that would be the one thing I would kind of plead with her to consider is trying to get some help with some of that stuff.
You know, this is going to keep going on.
It's not over.
And they've been through a lot.
Yeah.
And neither of them chose this.
Correct.
Yeah.
After we wrapped up our interview with Dr. Smith,
my producer Tina Noll, Dr. Becks, and I walked out of her house in almost complete silence, very rare for the three of us, and got in the car to go to the airport.
Okay, I have to say, like, I, going in, I mean, I don't even realize, like, I wouldn't't even articulated this before we talked to her but I was expecting her to be like a little harsh or like a little
arrogant like I don't think that would have made her anything that people have said she is but like
I guess I just wasn't expecting her to be so nice and just like not bitter i mean i think she's justifiably angry
about the specifics of what happened but like the way she talked about maya and kyle
she clearly is is able to sort of put them aside from the rest of this situation and i don't know
i just i really sort of do chalk it up to this midwestern kind of strength that like she
has a very midwest strength about her that is required to do the work as as deeply and
thoughtfully as she does I think it's like the further I've gone along I've had this deepening
sense that your critiques of her have been so off base and then it was just like you know but I think I just because it's been so intense like you sort of
figure like well there's there's got to be something to this right there's something
you know whatever it's not like no doctor ever does anything wrong or like is arrogant and like
pushes it, you know? And it just like, I just didn't see any evidence. I didn't see any evidence
of that in the documentation. And it doesn't match with the person that we just talked to. I mean,
there's been, as I've gone back and forth, I always wanted to do this interview. I was always interested in it. And as I've seen what the conversation around
her has been like over the course of this trial, especially, and as the conversation about me
has taken a turn over the course of this trial, there are now, and I don't look for it, but people
like occasionally report it to me of like, wow, you're really getting attacked online.
And I'm like, OK, like it just I am sort of like you have become more conscious of the fact that like I have a bigger audience.
And I started to worry like I feel like what is going to happen to me when I air this with her?
Because I have a feeling that at the end of this, I'm going to feel very supportive of her.
And like she's been wrongly maligned and now actually after talking to her I don't fear that anymore I still think
it'll happen but I don't care because I feel very certain that that is the right thing to do and
that that is the truth and it doesn't need any embellishment. It doesn't
need my opinion. It doesn't need my bias. It just is what it is. You know? Yep.
I don't think that most people, frankly, could endure what Dr. Sally Smith has been through over the last few years. And she struck me as incredibly resilient
because she's always understood the importance of her work. And no one sees this more clearly
than her son, Patrick. It's, um, I think that's why she's so sort of solemn when she does this
work is that she sees it as like, sort of a, a,
I'm not religious,
but like,
I think,
uh,
you know,
uh,
sort of a higher calling to do it,
knowing that it's the right thing to do,
even if you have to face like a horrible trial,
you know,
I mean that in the sense of the trials of life,
not a legal trial,
but,
um,
yeah,
she is through to her core,
understands why this family has felt the way that they do.
But that still was the right thing to do. One final question is looking back on your career, like what, what are you most proud of?
Um, you know, it's funny. I kind of grew up in a a in a family well being prideful was discouraged so
you know when people ask me that I struggle a little bit maybe the best way for me to look at
is in terms of how what I value about what I've done in my life I mean I've I know I've helped a lot of children with both hats on.
So in my general pediatric practice, you know, I have a lot of families that I've helped a lot and help those kids get as healthy as they can be.
And, you know, that kind of thing.
In terms of the child abuse, I ended up helping children get to safe places.
Sadly, not always.
Sometimes, despite my best efforts, they were injured again or things like that.
But I think even though it was a long day often and it was a stressful job. I think I brought some good work to the table of my community and the children in Florida.
Even though it was difficult in many ways, I would do it all again. If we have a maker that we go to or something, I have no problem with
sort of what was my life and did I leave it better than I found it or that kind of idea. Well, I wanted to say to you
that I have spent the last several months
on an obsessive deep dive about this case.
And I believe that you saved Maya Kowalski's life.
I think a case could be made, yes.
But I know that anyone who listens to me is going to know that.
So I really wanted to look you in the eye and say that.
I appreciate that.
All right.
If you've been listening to this show for a while,
you know that I have very strong feelings about
what is and is not responsible true crime content. Maybe you've heard me make some pointed comments
about the producers of a certain film, or perhaps you've heard one of my dozen or so rants about a
certain journalist whose name rhymes with Schmeichel. And if you've been with me for a while,
you'll also know
that getting Nobody Should Believe Me on the air was quite the roller coaster. Podcasting is just
the Wild West, y'all. And these experiences are what led me to launch my new network, True Story
Media, where we are all about uplifting true crime creators, doing the work, and making thoughtful,
survivor-centric shows. And I could not be more
thrilled to announce our very first creator partner, You Probably Think This Story's About
You. The first season of this enthralling show from breakout creator Brittany Ard took podcasting
by storm in 2024. Zooming to the number one spot in the charts on Apple and Spotify as Brittany
revealed the captivating story of a romantic
deception that upended her life and traced the roots of her own complicated personal history
that led her there. Britney is back in 2025 with brand new episodes, this time helping others tell
their own stories of betrayal, heartache, and resilience. If you love Nobody Should Believe Me,
I think you will also love You Probably Think
This Story's About You for its themes of deception, complex family intrigue, and its raw,
vulnerable storytelling. You can binge the full first season and listen to brand new episodes
each week by following the show on Spotify, Apple, or wherever you get your podcasts.
You can also find it at the link in our show notes. We are working hard to bring you
the next full season of Nobody Should Believe Me. This is the story of Jordan Hope, a survivor
whose voice you have heard on this podcast before. It is an incredible story of resilience in the face of really all of the hardships that you could throw at a child.
And I am so honored to be able to help them share their story.
In the meantime, we are going to be bringing you some updates from guests from past seasons,
some updates on the Kowalski trial as it continues to play out, and other extra things.
So keep an eye on the feed for those. Thank you so much to the entire team at Large Media,
our senior producer, Tina Knoll, our editor, Karine Keltau, also our incredible sound engineers,
Jeff Gall and Sean Simmons, and Maria Paliologosos who keeps all of the trains running on time around
here. Also wanted to include a special shout out to our secret Florida doctor friend Dr. Becks
who not only contributed to the show this season but also helped with a lot of the research
and a big shout out to to Jess Kramer who helped with the research as well.