Nobody Should Believe Me - S06 E09: Fallout
Episode Date: September 5, 2025As the story of the McDaniel family continues to send shockwaves through the communities Lisa was involved with, we check in with Mishelle about what else has come to light and what her mother has bee...n up to since the season aired. We take a deeper dive into the of role of The Guthy Jackson Foundation–Lisa’s former employer– and cover how they’ve responded to the news about Lisa. We also speak to Rob Reich, Professor of Political Science at Stanford University and author of Just Giving: Why Philanthropy Is Failing Democracy and How It Can Do Better–to give us context for foundations like Guthy-Jackson and why we should pay attention to them. *** This episode discusses allegations and interpretations based on court records, public documents, interviews, and reporting. All organizations and individuals mentioned have been given the opportunity to respond, and their statements are included where provided. Nothing here should be taken as a claim of personal culpability beyond what has been legally or publicly established. *** Read Just Giving by Rob Reich: https://press.princeton.edu/books/hardcover/9780691183497/just-giving Order Andrea's new book The Mother Next Door: Medicine, Deception, and Munchausen by Proxy. Click here to view our sponsors. Remember that using our codes helps advertisers know you’re listening and helps us keep making the show! Subscribe on YouTube where we have full episodes and lots of bonus content. Follow Andrea on Instagram: @andreadunlop Buy Andrea's books here. For more information and resources on Munchausen by Proxy, please visit MunchausenSupport.com The American Professional Society on the Abuse of Children’s MBP Practice Guidelines can be downloaded here. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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People listening to this, they will have heard in the finale, which is very much not the finale, because holy cow, there's a lot happening behind the scenes.
But, you know, we laid out some of what we hoped Guthey Jackson would do in light of the information that they now had.
And, of course, that episode was recorded a couple of months ago.
And so now we do know what they have done.
So I wanted to talk about that.
But before we get into all of that, just how are you doing?
How has this been for you?
Yeah, what alerted question, right?
It's been a lot.
I think that is the best thing I can say is a lot.
It's all been very, very emotional.
And the last episode hit me really, really hard.
of just, like, kind of me and Sabrina having that moment to, like, reclaim college.
What I, I guess what I didn't expect was the outreach that I've gotten.
And, like, everybody has been so incredibly positive and supportive, and I'm so thankful.
But it's also a little overwhelming.
And, like, I don't say that to take away from how grateful I am for it, because I really am grateful for every single person that has listened,
who has reached out to me, but it is a lot and a little, a little overwhelming at times.
So I'm taking lots of breaks from my phone, taking lots of breaks from social media, and, you know,
spending, spend in the summer with my kiddos and just trying to take it, you know, one day
at the time, because there's a lot, there's a lot of information that has come out, you know,
there's just a lot, a lot of new information. Yeah, and I mean, I think we, too, have
been surprised by just the amount of people coming forward with new details. Certainly outpaces
anything that we've had on the show before. There's different groups of people that you've heard
from and that I've talked to and that we're going to be following up with in future episodes.
So you had said something to me that really resonated in terms of what it's been like to hear
from some of these people. And you have said that it made you realize that you really didn't
never know your mom. Yeah, for sure. I think, and I remember you talking about it a lot on the show
before about your sister. You know, I remember you saying, like, grappling with this, these memories
you had of her were never real or were they ever real and kind of come into terms with that.
And I, I really don't think that is something I truly felt until I saw the screenshots that I've
gotten for messages, you know, my mom is sending people until people, you know, have come forward
and told me all these different things about her and all this new information and new information
about her just since the podcast has aired. And so that really has been just kind of in the middle
of really kind of, I don't know even how to say it, but just just really examining did I, yeah,
the person that I thought my mom was like the image I had of her just was never real. And I think a lot
of that comes from, I think it's really hard for like normal, quote, normal people to really
understand this level of abuse. Like, it is very hard for you to comprehend somebody doing these
horrific things to their child. But something that is like easier to digest is the fraud
aspect of it. Like you can, that's just, it's just a little bit easier to digest if that makes
sense. And seeing the screenshots. I mean, there's no looking at that any other way. And so it's been,
it's been a journey for sure still like I really thought I had kind of by the end of our recording
I thought I had kind of understood my mom a little bit more and the only way I could and
kind of understood but then getting all the new information just yeah it really hit that I just
I did I never knew her with dealing with someone like this is like this is something that's been
an evolution for me but then like dealing with your mom's case and watching you go through
this, you know, not just throughout the season, but like throughout the last several years has
really deepened my feeling that like someone like Lisa, someone like my sister, Megan, there's no
person there to like get to, you know, I think from day to day and it's like, I think what we've
discovered with Lisa is that not only did she have a mask, she had a collection of masks and
she'd put on a different mask for different people, for different groups, in different scenarios.
And I think you just realize, like, that it's just all this kind of hall of mirrors, you know?
Yeah, and I mean, it's never ending, you know?
I just, it occurred to me one day that, and it was kind of, it was kind of scary in my brain at the time.
I will never know the lengths that she went to.
I will never know the amount of people that she harmed, the amount of people that she defrauded, the amount of people that she manipulated.
And I will never be able to really see that and calculate that.
And yeah, I mean, I can't even, gosh, you can't even name the people.
You know, there are just so many involved.
And that's just, it's kind of my blowing.
It kind of makes me sick to my stomach to think about because it's, you know,
there's nothing that I can really do about that, you know.
When I was looking at Lisa's online presence while working on season six,
this dissonant image of a polished, caring advocate,
I was struck over and over again by the fact that all of these people who admired her
had no idea who Lisa really was.
And now there's a deeper question. Does anyone?
Our investigation started with questions about Collins' illness and death,
and by the end of it, even if the questions hadn't all been answered,
the picture of what happened had come into much sharper focus.
But the messages that have come pouring in both to Michelle and to our team
have confirmed that what we know about Lisa's lies may be the tip of the iceberg.
Because once the show was out, many people were finding out that Lisa was not at all who they'd believed her to be.
And for one of these people, Victoria Jackson, founder of the Guthey Jackson Foundation,
these revelations about Lisa were especially troubling because she was on their payroll.
The moment I wrapped my investigation, I reached out to representatives from Guthie Jackson
and told them what we'd uncovered, not just Lisa's previous criminal conviction, but the highly
suspicious nature of Colin's illness and death. And now, they'd have to make the choice we all
have to make when confronted with the horrible truth. What will we do about it?
The story of Colin McDaniel's illness and death, purportedly from the rare autoimmune condition
NMO, has been woven into Guthy Jackson's marketing materials nearly from the beginning.
Lisa attended the Foundation's very first patient day in 2009, and that December, the Foundation hired
a film crew to document Colin's story, which included video of him getting treatment in the hospital
from Dr. Jane Ness.
Ness, as you may recall, is the pediatric neurologist who would many years after Colin's death
confessed his older sister Michelle that she wasn't even sure Colin had animo and that his death
haunted her. Lisa's role as Guthie Jackson's director of patient advocacy gave her nearly
endless opportunities to not only talk about Colin's death, but to get a wellspring of
attention and admiration for doing so, not to mention an eventual salary. But as both we and the
folks at Guthey Jackson have now known for months, Lisa wasn't a heroic advocate. She was a
convicted child abuser, and it appears extremely unlikely that her son Colin died from NMO,
the disease that Guthey Jackson is dedicated to. It seems far more likely that he died as a
result of his abuse. In our season finale, we talked about what we hoped the Guthey Jackson
Foundation might do with this disturbing information. And although that episode just aired on the
main feed. My conversations with representatives from Guthie Jackson happened back in May,
so while we shared how we hoped they'd respond, now we know how they've actually responded.
By chance, Guthy Jackson held their annual Patient Day less than two weeks after the first
episode of the season aired, though a record number of listeners had already listened to the entire
thing on the subscriber feed. Guthy Jackson broadcasts part of their patient day on YouTube,
so we were able to tune in. Early on in the programming,
Victoria Jackson steps onto the stage against a colorful backdrop of flags representing all of the many
countries involved in their work. She takes a seat opposite Dr. Michael Yeaman, a close collaborator
of Victoria's who has been one of Guthey Jackson's highest paid advisors since its founding.
After they settle in, they get into it.
Overcome them and move on. We've kind of been learning a little bit about a story that's
out there that we wanted to kind of address and have a chance to come.
kind of just talk about it.
I think, you know, I'm talking to a group of people here that having challenges is
you don't need me to be telling you about how challenges.
And, you know, as a foundation, everything to me that has gone on for 17 years.
And when I have any decision that I'm going to make about anything,
I always want to be really, really thoughtful about it.
And I know some of you know about a podcast that came out recently
that was about a story of somebody that was obviously working with the foundation,
and really, you know, took that very seriously and been, you know, I think gave me quite a lot of pause.
At the same time, I know a lot of you are not here to hear about podcast stories and all of that.
You hear more to hear about, let's call it more like a forecast of the future and where we are in the world of NMO.
But I always want everybody to know, as I've been questioned about this and asked about it,
that for those of you that have been following that story
as soon as we learned about it here at the foundation we take took it
especially me very very very seriously and made changes immediately
and I want everyone to take comfort in at least knowing that
that this means the world to me and to my husband and to the family
and as you've all heard you know 17 years later 80 million dollars
of our family money that we've put in.
People have asked, do you get anything back from pharmaceutical companies or anything
that you've sponsored?
The answer is absolutely no way.
On August 5th, buried at the bottom of an announcement on Guthy Jackson's website about
Lisa's former co-worker Corey Wolf being promoted to Director of Patient Advocacy, they finally
addressed it a bit more directly, writing,
We greatly appreciate each of these dedicated individuals who are the current representatives
of G.J.C.F. Patient advocacy. Only individuals officially authorized by G.J.C.F may act on behalf of the
foundation in patient advocacy roles. In response to questions that we have received, and as many
of you already know, Lisa McDaniel has not been affiliated with GJCF for some time, and she does not
represent the foundation in any capacity. And that, at least from Victoria, was that.
So, enough said? Not quite. Since the show aired, we've heard from a number of patients and caregivers
who'd met Lisa through the Guthie Jackson Foundation. Some of them had been communicating with her
as their advocate for years. This news has clearly hit the community hard. So today, we wanted to
take a closer look at the Guthy Jackson Foundation in its role in this case, and what it means
for other rare disease groups who might be targeted by someone like Lisa. Because while we may have
aired the finale of our season, it turns out it might have been more of an intermission.
This story is developing quickly and we're staying on it. We've heard from so many of you,
both from people who know this family and people who feel like they do after listening to
this heartbreaking story. We know you want answers. We do too. And we're not closing the book on
this until we get some. People believe their eyes. That's something that is so central to this topic
because we do believe the people that we love when they're telling us something.
If we didn't, you could never make it through your day.
I'm Andrea Dunlop, and this is Nobody Should Believe Me.
If you just can't get enough of me in your ears, first of all, thank you.
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I wanted to start with a zoom out on a unique element of this case that has struck me from the beginning.
The fact that it takes place in the context of an ultra-a-ex.
her wealthy family foundation like Guthy Jackson. Munchausen by proxy perpetrators are opportunists,
and Guthy Jackson made a huge mark for Lisa. Cloaking herself within this reputable, well-funded
organization helped Lisa obscure the highly questionable nature of Collins' death. I want to reiterate
that, well, it's not great that Guthy Jackson didn't do a thorough background check on Lisa,
this is, in my opinion, a pretty forgivable error. They'd known Lisa as a patient and then as a
volunteer for years before she was in any kind of paid position. I believe them that they had no
reason to suspect any of this. I count Victoria and the folks at Guthey Jackson who trusted her
among Lisa's many victims. But while they're not responsible for what Lisa has done, they are
responsible for how they're handling this news. As Victoria writes in her book,
No life is immune to being shattered without warning, whether by a terrifying mystery diagnosis
or an unforeseen tragedy. Yet the same truth that says,
as we cannot always see into the future, also says we have the power to choose how to face it
and how to change it. Denial, Victoria writes, is always an option, but it's never a good one.
As you heard in Victoria's brief mention of the situation, she emphasizes that she doesn't get
anything back from the drug companies for her efforts at the foundation. And sure enough,
while a number of drug and biotech companies have donated to the foundation, that money is going
to research, which it's worth noting has been highly effective. As we,
We've emphasized in our previous coverage, Guthy Jackson has made great strides with
NMO and has been very important to the community of patients and caregivers dealing with
NMO that it serves, something that has been underscored by the feedback we've heard.
But it strikes me that this appears to be a familiar talking point of Victoria's.
She says something almost identical in an interview with CBS this morning.
Mascarita Medicine, the power of love and intention, I gathered just the greatest
minds, researcher, scientists from across the world.
I spent $80 million of my own money and no kickbacks, no nothing from anybody, but pure love.
So is this project of Guthey Jackson, as Victoria puts it, pure love? Is it sheer altruism?
Every perpetrator I've covered or read about has at some point prayed on the charity of others,
from churches to the Make a Wish Foundation, to rare disease groups, to ad hoc mutual aid from
other moms and community members.
Unfortunately, kind-hearted people who are trying to do good in the world, often
make the best victims for perpetrators. And it's not their fault when they're victimized.
But nonprofits and charities are a pretty under-regulated space, so it's worth a closer look.
My name's Rob Rish. I'm a professor of political science at Stanford University,
and I'm the author of a book called Just Giving, Why Philanthropy is Failing Democracy,
and how it can do better.
Philanthropy at the level of Guthey Jackson is something we should pay attention to, says Rob,
beyond our knee-jerk positive response. The ultra-wealthy are not just like us,
and neither is their charitable giving.
If we set aside the category of ordinary donations by ordinary people,
the kind of small ball, $50, $100 donations,
and focus just in the activity of the wealthy,
the kind of person who has enough money to set up a private foundation that bears their name.
And big philanthropy is, and I mean this just as a description here,
the direction of someone's private assets to some public-facing purpose.
When someone with wealth directs their own private assets,
to some public-facing purpose, what that person is doing is exercising some amount of power
with respect to the public. It's the private person's power here expressed in the form of money
to shape or change what happens in public. And my simple starting point to someone who thinks
mainly in my professional life about democracy and what makes democracy go badly or well
is that common sense phrase for a citizen is anywhere that power is exercised in a democratic society.
What it deserves is scrutiny, not gratitude.
So let's scrutinize the exercise of power by the wealthy.
I think Rob's framework for big philanthropy is helpful in understanding the power dynamics of this story,
which involve people with the types of money that puts them in a really different world than most of us,
especially because there's a stark contrast between that world and Michelle's.
Michelle and her family are not wealthy.
They can't hire lawyers and private investigators to try to find out what happened to call in.
And they can't call in favors with powerful people to put some heat on the officials who should be investigating his death.
Unfortunately, when it comes to getting justice, when it comes to whose safety, whose life and whose death matter, resources matter.
A lot.
And with ever more resources and power flowing upstream to the ultra wealthy,
And as public programs, including those in the health care space, are being gutted,
it's worth talking about the broader implications of these exercises in power,
which Rob describes with the term that might as well be the word of 2025, plutocracy.
Democracy stems from the Greek origin of the word demos, which is the people, rule by the people.
Plutocracy is ruled by the wealthy.
One thing we agree upon in a democratic society is that citizens are,
equals to each other, everyone gets one vote. So even though, you know, Bill Gates has way
more money and can give philanthropically much more than the rest of us can, when he goes to the
ballot box, he gets the same vote that the rest of us get. That's what it means to be an equal
citizen, one person, one vote. When it comes to your wallet, however, Bill Gates is a plutocrat,
and we are, you know, ordinary, ordinary people. And what philanthropy allows is the
shaping or reshaping of the public through your wallet rather than through the ballot box.
So this is not to reject outright the idea that wealthy people should practice philanthropy.
It's to say that it does not deserve automatic gratitude.
As Rob explains, philanthropic foundations of the very rich are quite different than the organizations
you or I might donate to.
So a nonprofit organization, a 501c3 to use the IRS language about it, is an organization
that provides some type of service, and it's not a profit-making organization where it distributes
its revenues or profits to shareholders or owners, but, you know, can reinvest whatever
revenues or profits it makes into the mission of the organization. So think, you know, soup kitchens,
child care, nonprofit hospitals, meant most universities, even if they're private, are nonprofit
universities. The array of nonprofits we have in the United States is enormous. A foundation differs
from a nonprofit, and the foundation is basically just a banking account stuffed with a bunch
of philanthropic assets with a number of people who then decide how to give that money away.
And the foundation world funds in many respects the ordinary work of the nonprofit world,
even though nonprofits, of course, can make some revenue from charging a fee for a service.
If you go to a museum, sometimes we pay 15 bucks to get in, in addition to all of the people
who donate money to it.
And sometimes nonprofits also get money from the government to provide
whatever service they provide. Many, you know, child cares or pre-Ks that are nonprofits get money
from state grants, for example. But the basic distinction is that a foundation is a pile of money
where people decide how to distribute it. And a nonprofit is a service-providing organization
that is not a for-profit mission. The Guthey Jackson Charitable Foundation is a private foundation,
meaning that they are subject to far less public oversight the non-profit organizations such as your local food bank or animal rescue.
They're essentially a fund created by a single donor or a small group and typically managed by those individuals.
In this instance, Guthey Jackson Charitable Foundation is run by Victoria and Bill.
There is also the Guthey Jackson Research Foundation, which is public.
This was created, according to Victoria's book, The Power of Rare, in part so that they could accept donations from large corporations, including drug and bio.
biotech companies. Victoria frequently mentions this eye-popping number of $80 million of their
family wealth that's been invested in Guthey Jackson. It's an unimaginable sum of money to have in the
first place, let alone to donate to a single cause. But of course, there's another way in which
the very rich are not like us. Their money tends to hang around making other money. People who
earn money off of their investments, you know, it's not that they've labored, as it were for it.
they make investment choices.
I mean, it would be like, you know, any ordinary person sets up a checking account and we get
whatever, you know, interest on the checking account, usually a very low rate, of course,
these days.
But we decide to take all of the interest we earn and put it into a separate account for our
Christmas fund or our, you know, honeymoon fund or something.
And then we finally get to spend that money.
And that's not because we've been sacrificing week by week from our paychecks.
It's because we've gotten a little bit of interest.
And it so happens that if you have a huge amount of money, you can hire, you know, fancy investment
people and get access to different types of investment strategies.
And as you said, wealth begets wealth in many respects.
So while $80 million is a massive amount of money for the researchers who received it,
and to be clear, it looks like this investment has genuinely paid off.
Viewing large donations like this from ultra wealthy people as some kind of significant personal sacrifice
is probably misplaced, which brings us back to the idea of gratitude versus scrutiny.
This might come across to a listener as somehow cynical or maybe unfair, but, you know,
since you're located up there in state of Washington, it's good to use this example.
You know, Bill Gates and the Gates Foundation, he's given away an enormous amount of his wealth,
and he created this thing called the Giving Pledge, maybe a decade or more ago, in which people
would pledge to give at least half of their entire wealth away by the time they die,
even if they, when they die, they are creating a foundation in their name. And many of the people
who have signed the giving pledge, I mean, these are in general billionaires, have given away
a huge amount of money since they've signed the giving pledge. They're not waiting around
until they die. But almost everyone who signed the giving pledge is today wealthier,
when they, then they were when they started the giving pledge. Like, despite giving away
billions of dollars, their mountain of wealth has grown in part because of the way that
investments tend to work when the economy is growing and the stock market is doing well. And
if your money is tied up with, you know, stock in particular kinds of companies, tech companies
over the past, you know, 20 years have by and large done well. So you can see that, you know,
your money is just sort of running away. The, the book, I
wrote Just Giving begins with a scene like this from our first Gilded Age with John Rockefeller,
where his money manager went to him and said, your wealth is accumulating like a mountain.
And unless you begin to give it away, it's going to eventually crush you.
And he was doing what he described of as retail charity.
You know, someone came to him and asked for $1,000 and say, okay, someone else came to him.
He said, no, no, no, no, you need to do wholesale giving.
Wholesale giving is like set up a foundation and give away tons of money at a time instead of
this like happenstance way in which people approach you asking for a hundred dollars or a thousand
dollars because otherwise your your mountain of wealth will just never get smaller.
Victoria leans hard into the narrative of her being a heroic mother who saved her daughter's
life following her dramatic diagnosis. And her story is moving. As a mom, if my daughter were
diagnosed with something like this, I would go to any lengths to help her. And I was very happy to
learn the Victoria's daughter Alley, now in her 30s, is thriving, and that this work has, in fact,
helped many other people. But the links Victoria could go to to help Alley are nearly limitless.
I can't help but be struck by the extreme privilege inherent in the story and what it says
about where we are as a society. Medical debt is the primary factor in over 60% of personal
bankruptcies, and things are not likely to get better in the wake of new legislation that could kick
millions of people off their health care coverage. Contrast this with Victoria Jackson's story
about Allie's first symptoms and their call to their doctor, Dr. Kachievann Hurl, who once described
the care that she provides to wealthy families in an interview with W. Magazine about the rarefied
world of private concierge medicine. Quote, I will come to you, hold your hand, and set up an
ICU in your bedroom if needed. The only time I switched off my phone was on my wedding day
12 years ago. Within a month of Allie's diagnosis, the family heads to the Mayo Clinic, where Victoria
recounts saying to the doctors, you don't know me, but I have a checkbook, and we will be working
closely together. Listen, if I had a checkbook the size of Victoria's and my daughter got a scary
diagnosis, I'd leverage it too. And it's also highly relatable to me to get involved with a cause
because of a personal connection. It's just not best understood, as Rob's work explains, as pure
alterism, because while Victoria isn't getting paid for her work, she's definitely benefiting.
Across the course of several books and dozens of interviews with celebrity pals like
Jay Shetty, Megan Markle, and Jamie Kernlema, Victoria has packaged her story as not only inspirational,
but as advice, framing her story of coming up from a difficult past and selling a billion dollars
of makeup, then revolutionizing medicine to save her daughter, as something that you too could do
if you put your mind to it.
Victoria Jackson is very much the face
and the center of the foundation.
And accordingly, she's received a steady stream
of praise and awards for her work,
including an award from the Pope
and being inducted into the Women's Hall of Fame
by no less than Gloria Steinem.
I am so honored to be the person
who inducts Victoria.
It says, I think,
on the medal for your rare and inspirational activism on behalf of women's health and entrepreneurship
and your transformative work and medical research, Victoria Jackson, you are now inducted
into the National Women's Hall of Fame.
Victoria understands the power of marketing, and she brought her acumen to Guthey Jackson.
And I don't fault her for that. We live in capitalism. There are ways in which I actually
greatly admire the work she's done. It's hard to get people to care of
about stuff that doesn't directly impact them. I get it. I mean, having hundreds of millions of
dollars does help, but there's no doubt that Victoria is savvy about messaging. And throughout her
dozens of interviews about her work with the Guthey Jackson Foundation, Victoria's infomercial
roots show through. She stays on brand using phrases like, from mascara to medicine, and
mom on a mission as her taglines for her evolution. It's a potent mix of philanthropy,
capitalism, and hardcore second-wave empowerment feminism.
And the Guthy Jackson Foundation isn't some quiet behind-the-scenes project.
It's an exercise in power.
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Guthey Jackson's response to the information that they employed an abuser for over a decade
seems largely focused on the potential damage to their reputation,
and this two fits with the world of big philanthropy.
One of the long-standing concerns about philanthropic activity in which the donors are prominently involved
is that philanthropy is a form of social status-seeking and reputation.
management. Sometimes it's reputation cleansing or whitewashing. The best recent example of that is
the Sackler family, the Patrick Red and Keefe book about the opioid crisis and the Empire of
Pain is the name of this book, tells the story of the Sackler family, which through Purdue
Pharma was responsible for a very large degree of the opioid addiction crisis, massive efforts
at getting people to prescribe it. The Sackler family has,
has prominently been a donor to lots of art museums and to the extent that any ordinary person
knew about the Sackler name, it was to associate them with philanthropic support of museums.
But, you know, as, you know, Anand Giridas, the author of Winters Take All puts it, I think,
well, the money making by daylight that produces harm in the world cannot be undone by philanthropic
donations at Moonlight.
Victoria hasn't had any public scandals
throughout her lengthy business career,
and she's not responsible for her husband's behavior.
But it feels worth noting that the
Guthey half of the foundation,
Bill Guthey, who Victoria praises for writing
the majority of the checks, was the subject
of some high-profile litigation
during the time period that Guthey Jackson has been
active. You've seen those late night infomercials
where beauty products, they promise everything.
Well, one of those very popular products is under fire
because some consumers are claiming the win
hair care line created by celebrity hairstylist Chaz Dean makes their hair fall out.
The owner of wind hair care, Bill's company Guthranker, was the subject of a high-profile
class action lawsuit after tens of thousands of people, mostly women, claimed that one of its
products, when cleansing conditioner, caused hair loss, scalp irritation, and other injuries.
Plaintiffs claim that the company ignored thousands of complaints, deleted negative reviews,
and continued marketing the product as safe.
settled in 2016 for over $26 million, without Guthrinker admitting wrongdoing or making any changes
to its products, despite a whopping 21,000 complaints to the FDA. Now, $26 million may sound
like a lot of money, but this product line had reportedly reached $100 million in sales in its
second year on the market. Wend's own website claims that the company has sold more than
40 million bottles of this specific product, which, by the way, you can still buy.
Now, if you're a fellow millennial, you almost certainly remember the infomercials for Guthy Rinker's most well-known product, proactive skin care.
If you're struggling with breakouts that won't go away, don't give up hope.
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This, too, was the subject of a lawsuit, which accused Guthy Rinker of enrolling customers in automatic subscription renewals
without proper disclosure or consent. This resulted in a $15.2 million class action settlement,
an additional restitution through a state-led enforcement action. Even if Victoria is the primary
representative of Guthie Jackson, the issues of trust and transparency that these lawsuits bring up
feel relevant given the vulnerable population that Guthy Jackson worked with, and especially
in light of their response to the information about Lisa McDaniel. And despite everything I've said here,
I don't want to discount at any point the good work that Guthey Jackson has done.
As Rob Reich points out, rare and orphan diseases, or those that affect less than 200,000 people
in the U.S., are one of the areas that nonprofits and foundations can be really effective in.
Now, private investment in pharmaceutical companies is commonplace, and pharmaceutical companies
do a fine job at producing new drugs.
The government through various funding programs also subsidizes and pays for lots of basic research
in the sciences, including for medical work as well.
However, one of the things about orphan diseases that people will often point out is that this
is an especially good case for a philanthropic entity because the marketplace incentive
for people in the pharmaceutical world to invest money for a new drug is to be able to sell
a lot of it.
And if it's an orphan disease, the market share for any successful drug discovery is always going
to be very small.
So you won't find the same market incentives at work for orphan diseases.
And so sometimes people say, well, the government should step in there and fund drug discovery
or medical research on orphan diseases.
And sometimes the government does.
But of course, the way tax dollars are expended is that a majority of our elected politicians
have to decide that they want to support this spending program.
And exactly because orphan diseases have a very small constituency, unless it's part of some
broad-based bill where you don't really know the deal.
details, it's very unlikely that you're going to assemble a majority of all citizens, a majority
of all politicians who will rally behind an orphan disease whose beneficiaries are, by definition,
only a small number of people. Enter philanthropy, where the idiosyncratic preferences of wealthy
people can step into where the market has failed and where the government has failed. And so
some people, if they give a textbook example of where philanthropic entities might be well-situated
is to do something important, often will point to orphan diseases.
So that's maybe something to say on behalf of this particular foundation.
In Victoria's book, The Power of Rare, a blueprint for a medical revolution,
she talks at length about bringing her business acumen to her work with Guthey Jackson
and how this allows her to think big and to break down barriers in silos that exist in medical research.
As the title suggests, Victoria's claims about her work at Guthey Jackson go far beyond
wanting to help just her daughter.
Victoria purports that unlocking the cure to NMO could help cure all autoimmune diseases
and revolutionized medicine as a whole.
I don't know how valid these lofty claims are,
but it's worth saying that the book is co-authored by Dr. Michael Yeaman,
who is a very legitimate researcher.
And if it sounds like I'm going too hard on these folks,
I want to say again that I understand how Lisa slipped through the cracks in the hiring process,
but the damage is done.
And Guthey Jackson's apparent refusal to reckon with it,
or even warn their own community about Lisa, is concerning.
Bill and Victoria have a lot of influence and power,
and there's not much to hold them to account.
One of the strange things about philanthropies and philanthropic foundations
is that there's no accountability structure built into the world of philanthropy,
whereas there is an inner logic of accountability within the business world.
So, you know, if I create a business that tries to sell something
and customers don't buy it, well, I'm going to go out of business.
I don't have any revenue.
And if you decide you want to also compete with me in the same space, your new business outfit is trying to put me out of business by out competing me for market share.
In the philanthropic world, there are no customers and there are no competitors.
Any foundation can do whatever it wants.
And if there's another foundation doing something the same or slightly different, there's very few mergers and acquisitions within the philanthropic world because it is often about the donor and the donor's identity.
or interest in being seen by the public to be involved at this particular cause.
So in the world of orphan diseases, sometimes people will say, you know, everyone has had,
you know, a relative die of some relatively rare disease or not, if not everyone, many people.
And the number of wretch people who have created a relatively small nonprofit or a foundation
dedicated to this or that orphan disease is large.
And so if you scan the entire horizon, there are hundreds of relatively small nonprofit.
relatively small organizations dedicated basically fighting the same disease. Do they coordinate with
each other? Not really. Do they merge together to try to pool their funds? Not very often. Why is that?
Because the purpose of the activity was not to coordinate or somehow maximize the investment dollars
available. It was to give tribute to the relative of theirs that had died and to try to find a way to
honor them in some way, which is a totally respectable activity. But if we thought about this as
actually fighting the disease, we would almost certainly not organize the sector in this particular
manner. And so as a general rule then, the more that the ego and the reputation of the donor is
involved in a place within philanthropy, the more worrisome it is that the unaccountability of
the philanthropic work itself is going to be some kind of problem. And that's all the more so
if there was a problem in the money making in the first place. If there's a stink in the money
making, then the philanthropy is never going to undo that. Let me give you one quick example
just to drive this last point home. I sometimes will say to people, here's like, you know,
coming from the classroom of a philosopher, the sort of thing I would say in moral philosophy
101. So Andrea, if I come and I steal your watch that you're wearing and I go down to the pawn shop
and I sell your watch and I get a couple hundred bucks for it, and then I take those couple hundred
bucks and I give it away to a super effective charity that saves people's lives. Then you show up and you
say, Rob, dude, you stole my watch. And I say, but Andrea, look at the good that it has done in the
world without my having stolen it like these people would not have lived. You still have a complaint
to make against me. And I don't have a, I don't have the title or the justification to say,
I can go around doing bad things in order to produce good things with the result of my bad
activity. Now, perhaps you're thinking, well, it's their money, Andrea. They earned it,
they can use it as they like. But it's not just their money, as Rob explains. Because of the
way our tax system is structured to favor the ultra-wealthy, their donations don't just move private
dollars. They move public dollars as well. So in the United States, we've chosen to have a system
of incentivizing philanthropy via tax deductions. And I want to begin, you know, unpacking this by saying,
Many people who defend philanthropy or the philanthropists will say philanthropy is the liberty of someone to give their own money away for whatever purpose.
If you want to bury your money in the backyard and set it on fire, you know, that's what it means to own something or own an asset.
You know, it's not for anyone else to say anything about.
And in certain respects, it feels natural to talk about philanthropy as everyone, if they have some money, can decide what they want to do with it.
That's what it means to be an owner and have the liberty to decide how to dispose of your assets.
But in the United States, we've decided to provide tax incentives to people to exercise a liberty they already possess.
And functionally, what that means is because in the U.S. we have a progressive tax system, the more money you make, the higher your tax rate, a graduated form of taxation.
I think the top tax rate in the United States now is 39%, something in that neighborhood.
Let's call it 40% just for ease of math.
So if you are making so much money that you're in the top tax bracket and you have a pay tax
at a 40% rate, what that means is if you give $1,000 away, your $1,000 are a tax deduction
from what you would otherwise have as your gross or adjusted income and what you would pay tax on.
And what that cashes out to is $400 of your $1,000 donation is forgiven in your taxes,
and you actually only pay $600 of the $1,000 donation.
If you're in the 10% tax bracket, meaning you're a low-income person who does not pay much in taxes,
you make the same $1,000 contribution to the very same nonprofit organization,
producing the identical social benefit in the world.
That low-income person at the 10% tax rate pays $900 out of their own pocket
and gets $100 in tax breaks.
So the work the Guthy Jackson Foundation has done all these years,
including paying Lisa McDaniel to advocate for patients
and educate doctors about NMO by telling the story of her son's illness and death
many times over, is not just paid for by Bill and Victoria.
It's heavily subsidized by taxpayers.
So that $80 million that Victoria frequently mentions, between state and federal deductions for donors in the top tax bracket, the out-of-pocket cost could be less than half.
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There are plenty of far-ranging concerns about how large philanthropies operate in the rare disease space,
especially as they can make such compelling targets for people like Lisa.
But this isn't just a philosophical exercise.
Real people have been impacted by this.
Not least of all, Collins' older sister Michelle.
Michelle is not a person who can marshal vast amounts of personal and taxpayer dollars to her cause,
or hire expensive PR teams, and call on an array of celebrity.
besties to get attention for her story. She's a person who wants to know what happened to her little
brother. Michelle has bravely spoken up against her abuser in order to try to protect others.
Not least of all, her nephews, who are currently living with Lisa. And rather than Victoria,
or anyone from Guthey Jackson, standing up to protect the NMO community Lisa exploited,
this too has landed on Michelle's shoulders.
So a couple of different things. I guess the, I guess the,
the two most alarming for me was one that she's still contacting patients.
There are a couple of people within the organization that have confirmed and pretty much
proven to me through like screenshots on other things, that they, she's still trying to communicate
with them. And this is like pretty recent, you know, that she is communicating with them.
And then specifically the way it was worded to me was the more vulnerable population, like
the more vulnerable type patients, the more like forgiving, you know, maybe not so great with like
technology, social media, that sort of thing. The ones I guess least likely to hear about the podcast
is kind of the way I took it. I'm assuming that like people started asking, right? Like they run
support groups. Mom has been very involved. One person wrote to me, she's been like a pillar in the
community. She is very about people see her and know her name weekly sometimes, you know. And I think people
started asking and she told some patients that she was on a PTO because my dad was in the
hospital dying of cancer and that one it's just it's this weird place to be in because I'm
not shocked but I'm also a little surprise like how you've gotten this far like you've you've
gotten caught you know your your cards are out like we're the information's out here
and you're still continuing to lie to that degree and just for Claire
My father does not have cancer, and he's not been hospitalized, to my knowledge.
The fact that Lisa has created yet another fake health crisis feels audacious, if not exactly
shocking.
I also wasn't shocked by Victoria's public response, but I was surprised that they didn't tell
their own community.
Part of the reason I contacted them back in May was as a journalist, but it was also to warn them.
Lisa is an extremely dangerous person, and this community should have heard it from
Victoria, not from me. One thing we've heard consistently from the people who reached out is how
much the NMO community created by Guthy Jackson has meant to them. How much not only the research
and treatments have had a positive impact on their lives, but the opportunity to connect with
others going through the same thing. So it's hard to understate how awful it must be to learn that
one of the pillars of that community is someone like Lisa. We sent a detailed request for comment to
Guthey Jackson about their handling of this situation. We alerted them to the fact that Lisa was
continuing to reach out to patients and telling them that she was on leave to take care of her
husband. We asked if patients who'd been in contact with Lisa had been notified and if there had been
any communication about the situation beyond the brief mention at Patient Day. Further, we asked
about their policies for keeping sensitive patient information private and asked what their policy
was for dealing with concerns about child abuse and if they would be offering the community
any resources on Munchausen by proxy abuse in light of what had happened.
Here is Victoria's response.
As we previously noted, Lisa is no longer with our organization.
She was terminated some time ago and has not been involved with us since.
Nor will she be at any stage in the future.
Lisa is not authorized to represent the Guthey Jackson Charitable Foundation in any way,
including fundraising efforts.
The purpose of the foundation has only and always been to help patients and their loved ones.
It is absolutely heartbreaking to think that anyone,
would ever try to use our efforts for any other purpose. As I think you know, we are a research-focused
organization where our goal is to find cures and therapies for NMO, minimizing the impact of this
terrible disease. As such, we do not collect or store any private or protected health information,
and we are actually regulatorily prohibited from doing so. We follow all appropriate laws and industry
standard best practices and are committed to continuing to do so. Now, I clarified with the foundation
that I was asking how they ensured that employees kept records private,
given the stories about Lisa sharing records willy-nilly.
And they said this.
Foundation policy prohibits the sharing of such information,
specifically our employee handbook,
which all employees receive and sign a commitment to follow,
and which Lisa signed,
lays out the important obligation of maintaining confidentiality
and non-disclosure of such information.
They did not respond to my other questions.
I do not want to make anybody in this community feel like,
It is in us versus the mentality, right?
Like I am embracing every single NMO patient caregiver that has messaged me.
I embrace them in open arms because it is not their fault.
It is they are going through some, you know, severe betrayal trauma.
You know, I every like woman friend group I've ever been in, like we talk a lot about and
there's like memes on the internet.
Like you talk a lot about a breakup and how bad a breakup is.
But when you have a best friend breakup, it is like the end of your world.
And that is what so many of these people are going.
through but on like a tremendous horrific level like it's not just a friend breakup like these are people
who i remember my mom talking about like these are people who considered to be best friends with my
mother um and it has just yeah that the lack of of response is has stuck with me um the way things
were handled at patient day has stuck with me um the way you know i i really was not upset because i want to make it
clear. I don't think Victoria owes me anything. She does not owe me anything. However, I do feel
strongly, and I don't want to speak for the NMO community because they can speak for themselves.
But I do feel strongly that she owes her community something. You know, these are people who are
vulnerable populations. And when they're messaging me because they don't have a space in their
own community to go to and talk about these things, there's a problem, you know? And I don't mind.
I don't mind talking to anybody, but at the same time, you know, I don't know how this is going
a land for a lot of people, but for Victoria to get on a stage and talk about how much she cares
about this community and this is her community and talk about how she has personally built this
community herself and that to not offer them any support and to not talk about it behind closed doors
and to not offer, you know, I don't expect, I don't want to be in the middle of that and like run
that for her, but they run support groups like monthly from what I understand and they talk about
it on social media. Where is the support group for these people that were very close to her?
because you're not talking about one or two or three or four people.
You were talking about, honestly, probably thousands of people that knew her.
You know, there are hundreds of doctors that were trained by her.
Tens of thousands, according to Bethy Jackson.
Tens of thousands of people educated by Lisa McDaniel.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And you just can't.
It's just, you know, I tried really hard for the past few weeks when everything first started
coming out to give her the benefit of the doubt.
Because I understand, like at the end of the day,
Victoria as human, she probably had to really grapple with all of this in her own way.
And she deserved that time and that space.
But her community that she claims and her community that she, you know, talks about building,
they deserve some answers, you know?
If it were, if I knew that this woman had my personal medical records, I would, I would be
the side myself, you know, and much less, and not just like individuals.
You're not just talking about adults.
You're also talking about children.
You know, at the end of it all, this community deserves more.
And if it were my medical records in this woman's hand, and I knew that she had had a hand in them,
and I knew that, you know, again, she's still reaching out to patients.
You know, she, her personal life and her work life were very mesh.
She had her personal, her patients information on her personal cell phone.
They were not separated, you know, they were not behind some kind of lock and key.
Like she has these patients, cell phone numbers, like she has access to these patients.
even after being fired because they were already in her personal cell phone.
And there's just, there's no boundaries and there's no, you know, it feels like there's no
accountability. But I tried really hard to be understanding. And there were, there were two different
things that kind of like hit me in a way and I just haven't been able to get over them. And one was
the way she sort of kind of has this weird addressing it at patient day, but then
there's nothing substantial said um and you know just this kind of glaze over it she never mentions
my mother by name she says a former employee she never like talks about it and then she directly
looks at that crowd and says but you're not here to talk about a podcast as if she is kind of
telling them like hey guys that's not what we're here for let's not talk about it and so that one
I was like wow like I feel like she could have taken that moment and done so much more with it um because
I do know there are patients and there are people within the community that were hoping she would
address it at Patient Day that had kind of written me that. And then the second thing that I just
cannot get past is the way she mentions my mother by name in her book. And when you, when you
have that kind of confidence where you list this person by name in the book, you cannot go forward
and pretend like you didn't know them. That's not how this works. With the exception of the brief
mentioned that Lisa is no longer working for Guthey Jackson in their staffing announcement,
Lisa and Colin have disappeared from Guthey Jackson's online presence. But as Michelle points out,
Victoria includes Lisa and Colin's story in her book, The Power of Rare, where she also includes
a shout out to Lisa in the acknowledgments, saying, extra love to my favorite moms.
Collins' life and death are part of Guthey Jackson's story. And that doesn't stop being true
now that the story is more complicated. And this is all worth looking at.
Because of $80 million and access to near infinite resources
can't protect an organization from someone like Lisa, what can?
And how do the ways in which we look at disease and disability
open the door for people like Lisa and allow them to hide in plain sight?
It's a cure rather than extending life and making it more tolerable, right?
And I think that kind of attitude makes it an easy,
segue for Munchausen perpetrators. Because then the choices are death or a cure. It's kind of this
dichotomy instead of saying, how do we extend life and extend quality of life? Because the Munchausen
perpetrator often says, well, if we can't get a cure, then they're going to die. That's next time on
Nobody Should Believe Me.
Nobody Should Believe Me is written and hosted by me, Andrea Dunlop.
Our co-executive producer is Mariah Gossett, and our assistant editor is Greta Stromquist.
Fact-checking by Aaron Ajay, music provided by Blue Dot Sessions, and administrative support from Nola Karmouche.
Special thanks this week to Rob Rich.
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