When we last checked in with Dr. Harold Bornstein—who declared in writing in 2015 that Big Mac devotee and exercise truther Donald Trump would be “the healthiest individual ever elected to the presidency”—he was telling The New York Times that his most famous patient takes Propecia, a drug used to treat male-pattern baldness. Bornstein, whose own shoulder-length locks flap in the wind, seemingly believed such a disclosure would help the president, whom the public has long assumed affixes animals Eric and Donny Jr. shoot on their hunting trips atop his head and attempts to pass them off as his own hair. “He has all his hair,” Dr. Bornstein told the Times, adding “I have all my hair.” And while we can’t say for sure if it was the Propecia reveal, or the complaints about the lack of inauguration seating, or the strange asides about medical schools dumping cadavers in the East River, something about the interview clearly set the president off. Because, according to new reporting by NBC News, shortly after Dr. Bornstein’s little chat with the Times, this happened:

In February 2017, a top White House aide who was Trump’s longtime personal bodyguard, along with the top lawyer at the Trump Organization and a third man, showed up at the office of Trump’s New York doctor without notice and took all the president’s medical records.

The incident, which Dr. Harold Bornstein described as a “raid,” took place two days after Bornstein told a newspaper that he had prescribed a hair-growth medicine for the president for years.

According to Bornstein, Trump’s former bodyguard Keith Schiller, Trump Organization lawyer Alan Garten, and another “large man” appeared at his office on February 3, 2017, and not only took the medical records but—and this part feels deeply cruel—directed Bornstein to take down a framed photo of him with Trump. Bornstein, who is apparently still scarred by the experience, told NBC that he felt “raped, frightened, and sad” during and after the incident. He also noted that he was not given a form authorizing the release of the records, which is presumably a HIPAA violation.

When asked about the episode on Tuesday, White House Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders told reporters that taking medical records is “standard operating procedure for a new president” and that to describe it as a “raid” would be a mischaracterization. “Those records were being transferred over to the White House Medical Unit, as requested,” Sanders added. She did not say whether or not the files were seized in reaction to Bornstein telling the paper of record that the president would be bald if not for the aid of antiandrogen medication, though the doc clearly believes the two events are linked, noting that Trump cut ties with him after the story was published. Bornstein, for his part, still can’t understand why a certain someone is being so damn sensitive about the whole thing. “I couldn’t believe anybody was making a big deal out of a drug to grow his hair that seemed to be so important,” he told NBC. “And it certainly was not a breach of medical trust to tell somebody they take Propecia to grow their hair. What’s the matter with that?”

For all the sadness that has befallen Bornstein in the last year, there is one thing that’s managed to make him smile: l’affaire du Ronny Jackson, Trump’s former (current?) White House doctor, who had to withdraw his nomination for V.A. secretary after allegations that he regularly played fast and loose with prescription meds earned him the nickname “Candy Man.” “This is like a celebration for me,” he said.