
She was a person who clearly stated her job and what she does, saying that she wasn't a professional medical practitioner or the director (doctor), but just a businesswoman, lest people misunderstand her.
In other words, she wasn't someone who went around scamming people by pretending to be a medical professional. (There are lots of people at dermatology clinics or hospitals who aren't specialized medical staff, like coordinators, managers, CEOs, etc.)
If someone commits massive, planned fraud by pretending to be a doctor without a license for years, they’d want to keep that crime hidden. The fact that someone who committed such a crime would post on Instagram specifically so people *wouldn't* mistake her for a medical professional/doctor is completely contradictory.
The statement, 'I didn't know she wasn't a doctor for 10 years,' is a hard pill to swallow.
All the celebrities are playing dumb right now. I wonder if that woman will take all the heat, or if she'll counterattack to save herself by claiming she never pretended to be a doctor...
"The court of public opinion is side-eyeing the 'I didn't know' defense. If he was truly duped, commentators say he needs to stop playing dumb and sue the Injection Auntie ASAP."
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