DANNY : DE HEKIf you’ve spent any time researching shady MLM schemes, you know the faces tend to blur — confident smiles, flashy Zoom calls, and buzzwords like detox, residual income, and natural healing.

But every now and then, a fresh set of familiar grifters rise to the surface again. This time, the red flags point straight to Vital Health and the trio of Keith Williams, Eric J. Carter, and Stephanie Y. Scott.

Vital Health is yet another supplement-based multilevel marketing scam peddling unverified “wellness” products with exaggerated claims and predatory sales tactics. Their product line includes items such as V-GLUTATION, V-DAILY, V-NRGY, and GLUTATION+ PLUS — each of them packaged in flashy containers, promising miracles without a shred of clinical backing. And who’s pushing this “miracle medicine”? None other than Keith, Eric, and Stephanie — suited up and selling hard.

You may recognize Keith Williams from CannaGlobe, another MLM scheme marketing THC edibles and vapes under the false pretence of curing cancer. Stephanie Y. Scott poses as a motivational health guru. And Eric J. Carter — often mistaken for Keith due to similar flashy Zoom promotions — is right there beside them. All three have been spotted promoting Vital Health on social media and inside private Zoom meetings, where gaslighting, emotional manipulation, and bogus testimonials run rampant.

This trio doesn’t operate independently — they are clearly working in tandem to prop up each other’s reputations and maximise their downline exploitation. In fact, many of the same victims loop from one scheme to the next: CannaGlobe, Vital Health, and who knows what’s next. These are serial MLM bottom feeders, and the Vital Health hustle is their latest coordinated cash grab.

Let’s be clear: Vital Health’s products are not medicine. But you wouldn’t know that from listening to these three. In recorded Zoom meetings, they hype up their supplements with outrageous claims — suggesting that V-GLUTATION reverses chronic illness, V-NRGY boosts immunity and heals the body from within, and GLUTATION+ PLUS fights cancer. No disclaimers. No scientific evidence. Just bold lies wrapped in sales psychology.

Here’s what you’ll see in their meetings:

  • Charts showing fake “healing timelines.”
  • Before-and-after photos of people who allegedly “beat diabetes.”
  • References to natural cures, alkaline health, and cleansing the body of parasites.
  • Constant pressure to “get in early” and “build your team.”

It’s not about health. It’s about recruitment, autoship, and fake credibility.

Now let’s rewind for a moment: CannaGlobe, the cannabis-based MLM where many of these players first crossed paths, was launched in 2018 by serial MLM operator Marty Hale. It marketed delta-9 THC edibles, vapes, supplements, and even hallucinogenic mushroom capsules labeled “Not for Consumption.” The red flags included:

  • Unverified medical claims, including cancer cures.
  • Lack of regulatory oversight.
  • Association with known scammers like Bitcoin Rodney (Rodney Burton).
  • Expensive buy-ins and monthly fees that benefited uplines more than customers.

Keith Williams was an early pusher. Eric J. Carter followed. And Stephanie Y. Scott — always ready to package herself as a wellness lifestyle coach — joined the mix. From there, Vital Health was the logical evolution.

The scam just got more medical-looking. White lab coats. Pseudo-science posters. And supplements repackaged to look like prescriptions.

Meanwhile, behind the curtain are no doctors, no pharmacists, and no researchers — just salespeople exploiting hope. Elderly individuals and sick patients have been targeted, lured into meetings with promises of natural recovery, only to be upsold into monthly autoship packages they’ll never financially recover from.

In a powerful satirical image we’ve created, we expose this scene visually — Danny de Hek, The Crypto Ponzi Scheme Avenger, standing front and centre, arms crossed in disgust, while the trio pushes their fake meds in front of visibly ill patients clinging to hope.

This is not harmless side hustle culture. This is life-and-death exploitation disguised as health advocacy.

If you see Keith Williams, Eric J. Carter, or Stephanie Y. Scott pitching Vital Health, know that you are not hearing from wellness professionals — you are witnessing the same well-rehearsed con used in dozens of failed MLMs. And it’s your job to say NO SCAM.

Stay vigilant. Expose the predators. And always question anyone who sells miracle cures out of Zoom calls and Telegram groups.

About the Author Danny de Hek, also known as The Crypto Ponzi Scheme Avenger, is a New Zealand-based investigative journalist specializing in exposing crypto fraud, Ponzi schemes, and MLM scams. His work has been featured by Bloomberg, The New York Times, The Guardian Australia, ABC News Australia, and other international outlets.

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