Donald
Lee-Edwards was arrested this week and accused of impersonating a
clinical psychologist and medical doctor for three years and potentially
providing mental health services to over 100 patients, said the
Richmond County District Attorney's office.
He
is "a dangerous scam artist who never completed any medical school or
doctoral program. He merely bestowed upon himself the professional
titles of clinical psychologist and medical doctor," said Daniel Master
Jr., Richmond County district attorney.
According
to authorities, Lee-Edwards said he worked "extensively with family
members and victims of 9/11" and made himself available for home visits.
In June, the district attorney's office was notified of his practice
after skeptical patients complained of his unorthodox bedside manner and
his prescription methods.
CNN affiliate WCBS
spoke to one of Lee-Edwards' patients, Kim Broadie, outside his office.
Broadie showed them a bottle of anti-depressants he had been prescribed
with a different doctor's name; the district attorney's office said
Lee-Edwards would call in his prescriptions under the identity of a
different doctor with a similar sounding name.
Lee-Edwards
operated out of a basement apartment below a two-family residence in
State Island; he lived in the floor above his office with his parents,
officials said.
Photographs
released by the district attorney's office show a waiting room with
seating area, a kitchenette, a front desk and rooms for treatment. They
also show shelves of blood vials and urine samples and medical equipment
throughout the apartment.
Lee-Edwards'
letterhead advertised him as a clinical psychologist, Ph.D., M.D. and
L.P., and when CNN called Lee's business and cell phone numbers for
comment, his voice mail did the same. Lee-Edwards and his attorney,
Matthew Blum, could not be reached for comment.
The
district attorney's office said during Lee-Edwards' time practicing, he
saw "approximately 10 parolees through word-of mouth referrals" and he
would talk to their parole officers about session attendance. He also
prepared progress reports for parolee's files, officials said.
The
district attorney's office brought a 12-count indictment against
Lee-Edwards, including charges of criminal impersonation, identity
theft, unauthorized practice of medicine, criminal diversion of
prescription medications and prescriptions. Lee-Edwards is due back in
court in September and is being held on a $150,000 bond/$75,000 bail.
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