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A woman’s quest for cosmetic enhancement spiraled into a harrowing ordeal when she was left with “permanent scarring” at the hands of an individual allegedly posing as a medical professional.
According to the Suffolk County District Attorney, Kevin R. Hayden, Dingrui Wang, 34, from Newton, Massachusetts, is accused of conducting a double eyelid blepharoplasty on a 22-year-old woman in Allston in January 2020. Wang reportedly misrepresented herself as a licensed physician, despite lacking a valid medical license in Massachusetts.
The district attorney’s office asserts that Wang administered a local anesthetic along with non-FDA-approved dermal fillers into the patient’s eyelids during the procedure, resulting in lasting scars.

A middle-aged woman with correction marks preparing for plastic surgery. (iStock)
The DA’s office alleges that Wang injected a local anesthetic and non-FDA-approved dermal fillers into the victim’s eyelids during the surgical procedure, causing permanent scarring.
After Wang completed surgery on the first eyelid, the 22-year-old woman was in “extreme pain” and attempted to leave, the DA’s office said. Wang, authorities said, pushed her back onto the table and prevented her from leaving.
Wang also misrepresented herself as holding current aesthetician, massage therapist and hair salon licenses on a loan application to the American Lending Center, the DA’s office said.

A Massachusetts woman is charged with unauthorized medical practice after allegedly performing dangerous eyelid surgery without proper license or training. (Karl-Josef Hildenbrand/picture alliance via Getty Images)
She has been charged with four counts of assault and battery with a dangerous weapon, one count of assault and battery with a dangerous weapon causing serious injury, one count of kidnapping and two counts of larceny over $1,200 by false pretense.
She has also been charged with unauthorized practice of medicine and improper use of the title of physician and receiving payment for a surgical procedure based on that misrepresentation, Hayden’s office said.

Botox injection in Regensburg, Germany. (Isa Foltin/Getty Images)
She was indicted by a Suffolk grand jury on Thursday, Jan. 29 and will be arraigned on Thursday, Feb. 5.
“Physicians are licensed for very good reasons, primary among them the assurance that patients are going to be treated by someone trained and certified to deliver safe, effective medical procedures. When misrepresentations are made the results can be devastating,” Hayden said.
Fox News Digital has reached out to Suffolk County’s District Attorney’s Office for additional comment.Â