Lisa T. Miller doesn’t want you to know she sued my friend Parker Nathans.
She especially doesn’t want you to hear it on YouTube.
That’s what triggered this latest privacy complaint from her—or someone working on her behalf. It came after I uploaded a short video that said, in the first three seconds:
“My friend Parker Nathans got sued by Lisa T. Miller.”
That’s it. No doxxing. No private information. Just a fact from a public federal lawsuit—Case No. 9:25-cv-80391 in the Southern District of Florida, filed by Lisa T. Miller herself.
You can still watch the video here:
And here’s the original blog post where we broke down exactly what happened:
How Lisa T. Miller Stole $10,000 From Our Team
Now she’s trying to use privacy rules to erase the record.
Why Is Lisa T. Miller Trying to Hide This?
Because the truth hurts her personal brand. Lisa presents herself as a seasoned healthcare executive and consultant. What she doesn’t tell you is that she:
- Got a $10,000 refund through a disputed chargeback.
- Demanded 1-on-1 services she didn’t pay for.
- Threatened legal action when we wouldn’t bend.
- Filed a lawsuit packed with exaggerated and misleading claims.
She’s not acting like someone confident in the facts. She’s acting like someone trying to scrub Google search results and silence criticism—by any means necessary.
That includes bogus privacy complaints to YouTube.
It includes DMCA takedown threats over a photo she publicly shared.
And it includes trying to drag my name through federal court to scare me into silence.
It won’t work.
This Is the Pattern
We’ve documented everything. Here are more pieces that show how Lisa T. Miller operates:
- Lisa T. Miller and the $10K Chargeback She Won… Then Denied
- Is Lisa T. Miller a Thought Leader or Just Buying PR Links?
- Why Lisa T. Miller’s “Executive Selling” Advice Should Come With a Warning Label
Each of these contains screenshots, emails, and verifiable evidence. And she knows it—which is why she’s trying to take them down instead of addressing the facts.
What She’s Really Afraid Of
Lisa isn’t afraid of lies. She’s afraid of people seeing the truth when they search her name.
She’s afraid of prospects and partners reading what she did before working with her.
She’s afraid that other people in healthcare and executive coaching will start to ask:
“Is this someone we want to trust?”
And she should be.
Because if you try to silence people with legal threats, takedowns, and lawsuits—especially after already winning a refund—you’re not trying to resolve a disagreement. You’re trying to bully people into silence.
The Internet Doesn’t Forget
Lisa can file complaints.
She can tweak her personal branding.
She can even pay for PR firms to pump out fluff articles about leadership and innovation.
But the truth is out there. And we’re making sure it stays that way.
More whistleblowers, educators, and entrepreneurs are standing up to reputation hit jobs like this. And if you’re dealing with something similar, don’t back down.
Document everything. Publish it. Link to the public court records. Tell your story with receipts.
Because truth, linked and cited, is what wins on the internet.