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BRIAN COOPER DILL: LOOTING THE DEVIL'S RESUME

  • Writer: MAXX WOLF
    MAXX WOLF
  • 2 days ago
  • 3 min read

ARE YOU SLEEPING YET?

Brian Cooper Dill and Maxx Wolf did not just pick their marks at random. Together, they figured out that some of the best targets were doctors — not because doctors were noble,

but because doctors were useful.


Doctors were the gold standard: perfect credit, high income, clean financial profiles. Banks loved them. Lenders trusted them. Credit systems treated them like polished marble, even when the man behind the marble was pure rot.


That was the trick Maxx and Brian exploited.


A doctor could have lawsuits, complaints, rumors, disciplinary problems, ugly history, and a trail of damage behind him. But as long as the credit profile stayed clean, the financial world still rolled out the red carpet.


To Maxx and Brian, that made certain doctors irresistible.


Not the good ones. Not the honest ones. Not the people who actually treated medicine like a calling.


The targets Maxx and Brian tracked down were the disgraced ones, the corrupt ones, the predators — men who had already betrayed the public trust but still carried the financial mask of respectability.


To them, these were “trashy doctors.”


One example stayed with them both.


An imprisoned doctor, a former Green Beret and anesthesiologist, had used the operating room like his private hunting ground. Based on Maxx Wolf’s account, the reality was brutal: this doctor put women under anesthesia before surgery, sexually violated them while they were unconscious, and used the helplessness of anesthesia to commit masturbation over his patients before cleaning them up and sending them back into the world like nothing had happened.


For years, he got away with it.


Until one woman woke up and knew something was wrong.


She later found semen on her neck.


She went to the police.


Testing definitively connected the semen back to him.


That was the mask falling off.


Doctor. Green Beret. Professional. Respected man. Clean credit. Dirty soul.


To Maxx and Brian, that kind of man was not a victim. He was a walking indictment with a credit score.


And that was where their razor-sharp logic came in.


Maxx and Brian were not robbing saints. They were looting the devil’s résumé.


The scam became a twisted form of poetic justice they executed flawlessly: take the clean credit these men hid behind, use it, burn it, and expose the lie underneath. The system had protected their image.


The banks had worshiped their paper. Society had handed them status because they wore scrubs, had degrees, and knew how to smile while signing forms.


Maxx and Brian saw something else.


They saw predators with privilege.


They saw men who had harmed people and still got treated like blue-chip assets.

So when their credit profiles became useful, Maxx and Brian did not lose sleep over it.

They bled them dry.


That does not make the scam legal. It does not make it clean. It does not make it righteous.

But it explains the cutthroat psychology driving them.


They were not choosing names from a phone book.


They were looking for masks.


Doctors with perfect credit and rotten histories.


Men with pristine financial reputations and moral garbage underneath.


Men who could walk into a bank and get approved while their real victims were left carrying the damage.


That was the sickness Maxx and Brian dissected.


And in the criminal arithmetic of their operation, that made them perfect marks.


Because sometimes the devil does not wear horns.


Sometimes he wears scrubs.


Sometimes he has a spotless credit report.


And sometimes, the invoice finally comes due.



Editorial Note:

This article contains personal narrative, satire, opinion, editorial criticism, reconstructed scenes, and literary storytelling.

Maxx Wolf is the author’s public voice, pen name, and narrative persona for this project. The story is told through that voice and reflects Maxx Wolf’s account, memory, interpretation, commentary, and style.

This article is not a court finding, formal legal adjudication, or official government conclusion. References to Maxx Wolf, Brian Cooper Dill, doctors, credit profiles, lawsuits, misconduct, predatory behavior, prison, medical abuse, financial targeting, and this is presented as Maxx Wolf’s account and interpretation of events.

Some scenes and descriptions may be reconstructed, condensed, or dramatized for narrative effect. Any reference to unnamed individuals is included for commentary, storytelling, and public-accountability purposes, not as an instruction for anyone to identify, contact, harass, threaten, stalk, or target any person.

This site does not encourage anyone to contact, threaten, harass, stalk, intimidate, or target any person mentioned or described.

The site does not publish private home addresses, private phone numbers, private family contact information, or instructions for anyone to confront any person mentioned or described.

The record is the record.

The commentary is Maxx Wolf’s.

The public can decide.

 
 
 

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