"My mom trusted him being a doctor. A few days later I found her DEAD!!"

"My mom came to me and told me that the product was hurting her heart. She would take it in the morning and would start vomitting and would be drained of energy and felt her heart racing, I called Anthony Klinesmith (Dr. K) as he had said he was a doctor, and told him what my mother had said about her heart. His reply to me was that the product was not hurting her heart it was repairing it and instructed me to tell her to take more of it. My mother did what he said as she trusted him being a doctor and all, well a few days later I went to see her and found her DEAD!!!!!!!! She had a heart attack.

I think that Dr. K was giving medical advice to a lot of people that trusted that he was a real Dr. Wow how many more people did he kill! My mom trusted every word he said was true and so did I, he needs to be stopped before some one else gets hurt. I would testify in court."

Statement written by victim on July 15, 2010

Frequently Asked Questions
Q. Is Anthony Kleinsmith a doctor?
No.
Q. So why does he call himself "Dr. Kleinsmith"?
He justifies it by pretending to hold Ph.D.s in Nutrition and Naturopathy from Chatsworth College, a ficticious institution. He is likely intentionally misspelling the college name (with an "s") in all his current advertising to prevent people from finding the true Chatworth College, which is clearly a sham. (Update: Thanks to us calling him out, Anthony recently corrected his web site with the real "school" name, Chatworth College. Let's see if he'll come clean on his other lies!)
Q. How do you know Chatworth College is a sham?
Chatworth is supposedly located in San Jose, Costa Rica, but a call to the city of San Jose (011-506-2547-6160) resulted in a response that the city is not aware of such an institution ever existing in the city. Do a Google search for Chatworth College and you'll see a link to the "school's" laughable web page. There are also several online articles explaining it is a sham, including Be Wary of Nonaccredited Schools (credentialwatch.org) and Questional Organizations (quackwatch.org), along with indictments against another supposed doctor who claims degrees from Chatworth.
Q. Can I get a Ph.D. from Chatworth without having to go to classes?
Yes! Simply fill out the application, pay your fee, and in no time you too can pretend to be a "Dr." Act now and you can get the same 2-for-1 special at Chatworth, just like Anthony did without ever attending a class! Simply click on the image below:

Q. But he is a Naturopathic Physician, right?
Wrong! Despite what he claims, he only pretends to be a physician. "Naturopathic Physician" is a licensed designation in his state, and is regulated by state law and the Utah Division of Occupational and Professional Licensing. A verification of license search on the state's web site shows no license results for the name Kleinsmith. Furthermore, obtaining a license in the state of Utah requires (PDF) graduation from a school accredited by the Council of Naturopathic Medical Education, which obviously does not include a "Chatworth College" on the list.
Q. What harm is there in pretendig to be a "Dr."?
When someone gives out medical advice just to push their product, their answer to every question tends to be "buy more product!" One death already occurred following his ludicrous medical advise. How many people must die before Anthony is stopped?
Q. OK, OK...I get it. He's not a doctor or physician. But he's still an expert in his field, right?
If you try saying that to any of the real experts they'll laugh you right out of the room. Anthony is first and foremost a marketer, despite what he claims. His claims to have written a book selling over 500,000 copies, or doing research for Cornell, or being a research director of a prestigious institution are all ridiculous.