“I wasn’t lying exactly, just misrepresenting the facts.”

“Do not lie to one another, seeing you have put off the old self with its practices” (Colossians 3:9).

The current issue of Vanity Fair magazine (February 2016) carries a story to keep you thinking for a week or two. You read it and think, “What? How could this happen?”

One of the producers of Meredith Viera’s NBC program fell in love with the famous heart-transplant surgeon on whom they were doing a feature.  Paolo Macchiarini was amazingly accomplished, stunningly successful, and fabulously rich.  He was handsome, suave, and a charmer.

The producer, Benita Alexander, on her second marriage at the time, promptly forgot her altar vows and fell head over heels for this surgeon, who wined her and dined her. Soon, they were flying all over the world, living a life of luxury, and making plans for a wedding of their own.

Meredith Viera said about the surgeon, “He’s the doctor who does the seemingly impossible, going where no other has yet dared.”  The New York Times had done a front page feature on the man.  He was clearly somebody.

So you’ll know, the narrator talks about the conflict of a producer having a relationship with the subject of their feature, but I’ll leave that for other people. There was something else about the story more fascinating.

The surgeon’s vitae (aka, resume’) was a show stopper: medical degrees from a couple of schools, a PhD from another, and awards right and left.  He was a consultant to the pope, a private doctor to this celebrity and that one.  He was often called to the White House to confer with the president’s doctors.  On and on and on.

And then this: The pope was going to perform the wedding.

Yep, the pope himself. Even though both were divorced, Pope Francis wanted to show how open he was to change. The ceremony would even include a gay couple, friends of the bride and groom, and they were over the moon with excitement. Oh, and the Obamas and Clintons would be attending the wedding.  As would Vladimir Putin.

Certainly, the event of the year. Decade, even.

The bride, Benita Alexander, was goofy in love.  Head over heels.

Then, gradually, it all began to unravel.

The Vatican announced the pope would be making a trip to South America at the time the wedding was supposed to take place. The wedding was canceled, even though the invitations had gone out. Benita sent emails to friends in 17 countries with the sad news, even though many had already purchased flights and hotels.

Benita hired a private investigator and soon discovered that almost every aspect of Macchiarini’s story was a lie.  In fact, the  “surgeon” was still married to his wife of nearly 30 years. The Vatican assured investigators that no one there had ever heard of this doctor, and he certainly had never operated on any pope, as he claimed.

His credentials were as bogus as everything else. Schools where he claimed to have advanced degrees confirmed that even if he had studied there for a time, he left before completing the program.

Hospitals had been conned, patients had undergone his surgery (although many died soon after!), and his little scam had gone undetected.

Asked how she could have fallen for such a con man and why she was not suspicious from the first, Benita Alexander replied, “This was not some guy I picked up in a bar. This was a renowned, accomplished, established surgeon whom we had followed all over the world.” The idea of him making all this up, she said, was “too ridiculous to give it any credence.”

If it’s too good to be true, it probably is.

At this moment, there are people running around claiming to be war heroes, to have held high rank in the military, to possess medals and honors, to have been fighter pilots of great achievement, and they are lying.

Our military even has a team assigned to ferret out these impostors, and Congress has made this a crime.

In academia, we hear regular reports of distinguished professors and even college presidents who have padded their resumes with exaggerations and untruths. Coaches are sometimes revealed to claim degrees they never earned.

Occasionally, we read of pastors of large and well-known churches who are revealed as liars.  They claimed degrees and honors from seminaries and universities they never received, bragged of accomplishments that were bogus or grossly exaggerated, and allowed themselves to be recognized for something they were not.

When the facts are known and the man is revealed to be running a con on the Lord’s people, everyone looks at the Pastor Search Committee that brought the man to the church in the first place. “Didn’t you check his credentials?” they’re asked.

Their answers go something like this (let the pastor search committees read and beware)–

–“He was already pastoring a huge church and had great visibility.  You don’t want to question the resume of such a distinguished pastor.'”

–“We were so in love with that man, no one thought to question his record.  I mean, he was ‘anointed.’  God had His hand on the man.”

–“Surely, a preacher wouldn’t lie.  Would he?”

–“Some on our committee thought double-checking his record would be an insult to him.  Normally, we do a background check on people we bring to the church staff, but surely not someone of his stature.”

And so, the error gets perpetuated, and a con man gets passed along.

Let the pastor search committee take their time.

Let the pastor search committee skip no steps in verifying the integrity and record of the candidate.

Let the pastor search committee fall in love with no candidate too quickly.

Let the pastor search committee be willing to turn away from a candidate who can be clearly seen to have exaggerated his record and padded his resume’.  No “anointing” can compensate for a lack of integrity.

Let the pastor search committee agree up front that integrity and honesty are among the highest virtues and that no liar will be brought to their church. Any committee member who will not agree to this should resign now.

Let the pastor search committee so labor and pray and work that for generations to come, people will bless them for faithfully carrying out their duties.

 

 

27 thoughts on ““I wasn’t lying exactly, just misrepresenting the facts.”

  1. Pingback: “I wasn’t lying exactly, just misrepresenting the facts.” | METROLINA BAPTIST ASSOCIATION

  2. Interesting that in the program, He Lied About Everything, this was left out: “The producer, Benita Alexander, on her second marriage at the time, promptly forgot her altar vows.” The program did mention her first marriage and that she was divorced (from her daughter’s father at the time), but no mention was made about her 2nd husband and that she was also married when they hooked up, so to speak.

    I find that interesting. . . She supposedly kept the relationship a secret in the beginning because of a conflict of interest with her also producing a story on him. She should have really also mentioned that she kept the relationship a secret also because she was married at the time. I’m pretty sure her 2nd husband felt at least some of the same pain at being betrayed by her and she did at being betrayed by the Doctor. And, her daughter was in the middle of both of these betrayals/ break-ups too.

    I’m not saying that Ms. Alexander got what she deserved or what goes around, comes around, but I am saying that if you’re going to promote getting at the absolute truth, maybe you should include yourself in on that too.

    Ms. Alexander kept saying she still had feelings for this man. But, she should realize that she doesn’t still have feelings for the man. What she has feelings for is the idea of the man or ideal man, something she created in her head. This is what these search committees (and others) need to look out for as well–that they don’t fall in love with the ideas in their head about this person vs. the person him or herself.

    • Great points! I, also, caught that “promptly forgot her altar vows.” I’ve always wondered if people in these situations feel they are so worthy of such an outlandish life, that they actually believe the lies. “I’m so great that all the gloriousness of life shall be bestowed upon me.”

    • the man who wrote this article is wrong. ms Alexander was NOT on her second marriage. she was DIVORCED from her first husband, whom she was coparenting her daughter with, when she met the DR. she says multiple times how she was A SINGLE MOTHER when she met him and she only had had her FIRST husband, whom she was divorced to and who was now dying of cancer. “promptly forgot her alter vows”. wow. Shame on you for your judgements and for spreading outright lies designed hurt and smear. the man who wrote this “article” should have gotten his facts straight before smearing this woman name, and so should you. hypocrites you both. not that she cares about a silly little blog like this, but this is libel.

      • How can the article be wrong when there are multiple articles on-line that refer to: Benita Alexander being married (2012, Oct.) to ballroom dance instructor Edson Jeune? “When Alexander and Macchiarini found themselves together in Illinois for a period of weeks in the spring of 2013. . . they met frequently for quiet dinners.” This is what?—maybe six months after her marriage to Jeune?

        Hard for it to be libel when it is in print in Vanity Fair. “Alexander and Noel divorced in 2009, and in 2012 she married a ballroom dance instructor named Edson Jeune,” in Vanity Fair, Man of Her Dreams, Feb. 2016. At the very least, given multiple conflicting articles regarding Jeune, it should be addressed in any future documentaries. Was Alexander married to him or ___?

        We’d only be hypocrites if we were guilty of the same. Usually people aren’t considered hypocrites for going to a internationally known and respected resource and making personal comment on what they garner from that resource.

      • Even her IMDb bio, which she wrote herself, refers to her 2012 marriage to Edson Jeune (but, does not provide an end date). One would assume they were legally divorced by 2015, when she was set to remarry.

    • Just watched a 20/20 episode about the con artist doctor. The story seemed so unusual, especially with people dying because of the doctor’s falsifications about his credentials and in medical journal articles about his procedures, I did a bit more research. I was more concerned about the medical lies resulting in deaths (some of children) than the relationship integrity issues though I am concerned about those as well. I am not sure if Alexander was still in the marriage with Jeune when she met the doctor; certainly possible. But I am a little sad that more concern is expressed here in this comment about Alexander’s faithfulness than about the doctor’s. He had a wife of 29 years somewhere in the world along with a girlfriend/paramour and apparently 2 young children in Spain. In the US, Europe and around the world people too often throw away marriages and the people with whom they vowed to spend a lifetime. Sadly, sometimes broken people find each other and begin unhealthy relationships. But I think it is unfair to put more blame on Alexander than on the doctor here. Dr. Paulo Macchiarini was apparently a world-class charmer and con artist. People in responsible positions all over the world who had been duped by him were resigning left and right as his multiplicities came to light. It is not fair to always blame the woman.

      • I don’t think anyone is putting more blame on Alexander for something the con-artist doctor did. The above by Pastor McKeever was about an article in Vanity Fair, 2016, titled “The Man of her Dreams,” where the focus was on Alexander’s perspective and how she had been victimized. That is what people here are responding to–that maybe she wasn’t as much of a victim as she is trying to portray.

        Clearly, the con-artist doctor, overall, did far worse than Alexander.

  3. I find it hard to believe that Benita would believe all the stories being told to her. The stories of the pope, the guest list that included Presidents and famous entertainers is something a high school kid would tell a girl or the claims a big mouth would make at the local bar. The claims were so outrageous that I find it hard to believe that anyone would believe them. If the doctor was so wealthy, why would Benita use her own money to buy $30,000 worth of invitations and dresses?
    She also didn’t show much class with her filthy mouth. I’d be embarrassed to tell anyone I fell for all these lies.

  4. In other words, Paolo sounds like a politician on the stump where the promises are big and the returns after the election are always, with rare exceptions, minuscule with the exception of taxes.

  5. Wow guys, way to blame the victim! Of course no one was more of the victim than his patients. But Benita, is also a victim of this con artist. If there’s one woman alive that says she’s never been on the losing end of a manipulative relationship, she’s either lying or in denial. Or both.

  6. 1) He wasn’t a heart-transplant doctor, but dealed with trachea transplants.
    2) The published version is that Benita’s second husband was dying when she and Paolo met, and only after his death the romance with the doctor started.

    • Okay, let’s look at the sources and actually give the source, then, rather than just using conjecture. Regarding how many times has Benita Alexander-Noel been married?, here is what comes up:

      From The New York Times, Benita Alexander-Noel, Edson Jeune, October 21, 2012, “Benita Jane Alexander-Noel and Edson Ricardo Jeune were married Thursday on the Star of America, a 130-foot motor yacht, in the Hudson River. . ..” A nice picture of the couple is included in the article as well.

      From Benita Alexander Wiki: This Emmy-Winning Reporter is Surgeon-Turned-Conman Paolo Macchiarini’s Ex-Fiancee!, By: ETN Editorial Desk -Published: February 15, 2018 at 5:22 am: “. . . she met and got married to a fellow reporter John Noel. . . The couple divorced in 2009 and Alexander got married to ballroom dancer Edson Jeune in 2012.” So, it appears John Noel is Alexander’s first husband and Jeune her second.

      And, of course, the June 2016 Vanity Fair article, which states, “Alexander and Noel divorced in 2009, and in 2012 she married a ballroom dance instructor named Edson Jeune.” This article also states that Alexander would in time begin sharing details about her dissatisfaction with her second marriage with Macchiarini. And, “In June 2013, they flew to Venice for what Alexander called ‘an incredibly romantic weekend.’” Again, if you do simple math, being married to one man in Oct. 2012, and having a romantic weekend in June of 2013 with a different man, is a time difference of approx. eight months.

      Now, Alexander does disclose in her documentaries that Macchiarini was still married when they got together and was, according to him, waiting on a divorce, which he stated did eventually come through (it had not, however), and the rest is history.

      It is correct that in reference to the particulars of Dr. Macciarini’s research misconduct charges, those did specifically deal with trachea implants and not heart implants. Dr. Macciarini was head of the department of thoracic and vascular surgery at the Heidehaus Hanover hospital between 1999 and 2004.

      So, I don’t think anyone is casting stones here, nor are they hypocritical. No one should feel shame-on-you or that they are being judgmental for “spreading outright lies designed hurt and smear.” If they are indeed outright lies, then I’d suggest the bigger culprit would be The New York Times and Vanity Fair and the ETN Editorial Desk.

  7. I know we all focus on this surgeon but how about Benita ? How could you not be so smart enough to spend more than $30k on three wedding dresses of your own money and not let him pay for it up front ?!
    And then watching the documentary “everything is a lie” i observed in a way , she’s all about herself and she’s a victim , but she’s so dumb . Really ?! She really believed that Pope Francis would be attending her wedding ?! How special could you be . I think you used your profession to be investigate him further using all the people you know personally and professionally .

  8. Her own bio states she married her second husband in 2012. That would mean she was married and an adultress while trying to land a rich doctor. Rich scum.

  9. I believe at some level that she knew some things weren’t quite right. This isnt her first interview with men shall we say had a slanted view of life. She then crosszed the line of any journalist and then lied to her boss. She did an article to glorify him rather than investigate him as she was suppose to do.
    Further I a problem with NBC not closing it all down and calling her on it or just fire her. Its not just about not doing her job but hurts the entire profession. Seems she decided early on she wanted to be wine and dined and didn’t really care about any truth.

  10. As a woman only a few years older than Alexander, I’d have more empathy for her story or situation if she gave full disclose about her relationship with Jeune. (In the documentaries I’ve seen, he isn’t even mentioned, despite his name coming up as a ‘husband’ in multiple articles.) And, I would have liked to have seen Alexander’s attitude to have been more of, “Yes, I was royally betrayed by this man, but here is what I learned along the way, especially when I found that proverbial shoe on the other foot” (if that indeed was the case). Women who play the scorned victim are very common. However, women who play the victimizer/ later scorned victim, and learned from it, are far and few in-between. That would have been a better story.

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