MEDICUS GLOBAL REVIEW: PHARMA CARD & CHAIN-RECRUITMENT

A company selling a $29.95 monthly health subscription service operates from a Florida post office box and hides its leadership from public view.

Medicus Global LLC registered in Florida on June 26, 2015, listing Stephen Rossiter and Lisa Harrison as sole managers. On LinkedIn, Rossiter claims to be president and touts his background: 13 years at CBS Radio, 10 years as Special Events Director for Plant City, then four years in telemedicine starting at CallTheDoc before moving to Medicus Global. He writes about seeing "the need for telemedicine world wide" and declares "The future of health care is here!!!"

Yet Rossiter's name doesn't appear anywhere on the Medicus Global website.

The company's supposed corporate office sits at a USPS post office address in Florida. When you dig deeper, Medicus Global appears to exist in the state in name only. The website lacks any clear information about who actually owns or runs the operation. An "about us" page exists solely to market the company rather than explain its leadership.

The domain mymedicus.com was registered October 28, 2012, under private registration. Someone put it up for sale in 2013. The current owners bought it in February of this year.

The Medicus Global website runs on a private server shared with CoMingl's app site. CoMingl is a failed MLM social network launched last year. Alexa statistics show the opportunity collapsed shortly after launch. Panache International LLC owns CoMingl, with Vishaal S. Shah listed as managing director. No clear connection between Shah's company or Panache International and Medicus Global could be independently verified.

Medicus Global markets a card-based subscription service at $29.95 monthly for family coverage. According to the website, this fee covers diagnostic and informational consultations by phone, video, and email. The package promises a "prescription policy," cloud-based medical records, lab panel tests, and a "prescription and diagnostics plan" plus discount prescriptions.

The structure mirrors typical MLM operations: customers pay monthly fees while also recruiting others into the scheme. Red flags pile up quickly. A legitimate healthcare company doesn't hide its leadership. It doesn't operate from a mail drop. It doesn't share server space with a failed MLM network while refusing to acknowledge the connection.

Rossiter's extensive background in events and marketing, not medicine, raises questions about who designed this medical service. His LinkedIn bio reads like a company pitch rather than a professional summary. The gap between his public profile and his absence from company materials suggests someone wanted distance between the man and the operation.

The private domain registration, the post office address, the hidden ownership structure—these aren't quirks of a small startup. They're hallmarks of operations designed to obscure accountability. When a health services company can't tell you who runs it or where it operates from, ask yourself why.


🤖 Quick Answer

What is Medicus Global LLC and its business model?
Medicus Global LLC, registered in Florida in June 2015, operates a $29.95 monthly health subscription service. The company lists Stephen Rossiter and Lisa Harrison as sole managers, though leadership remains largely obscured from public visibility on official channels despite Rossiter's detailed LinkedIn professional background.

Who are the managers of Medicus Global and what are their backgrounds?
Stephen Rossiter and Lisa Harrison serve as sole managers of Medicus Global LLC. Rossiter claims extensive experience including thirteen years at CBS Radio, ten years as Special Events Director for Plant City, and four years in telemedicine, initially with CallTheDoc before joining Medicus Global to promote worldwide telemedicine services.

Why does Medicus Global's website lack transparency regarding leadership?
Despite Stephen Rossiter's prominent role as registered manager and company president, his name does


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