The mysterious man who follows Hillary Clinton at public events and drew scrutiny when he was photographed carrying a diazepam syringe, first reported by REGATED in August, has been revealed to allegedly be a neurologist named Dr. Oladotun A. Okunola, M.D.

Okunola has been consistently mistaken by media outlets as a member of the Secret Service. Okunola appears to wear a badge on his lapel, and in the August 4 incident in which Clinton became flustered onstage by protesters in her small crowd, Okunola quickly ran onstage to comfort her. While patting her on the back and telling her softly, “We’re OK, we’re OK, keep talking,” Okunola appears to be directing Secret Service members around the stage. This would appear to be an intentional cover for the alleged accredited doctor, who is a diplomate of the American Board of Neurology.

Okunola is a supposedly a member of the prestigious Neurology group of the Neuroscience Center of Northern New Jersey. According to the Center’s webpage, Okunola may be specializing in epilepsy, clinical neurophysiology, and sleep medicine. He supposedly completed medical school at the Howard University College of Medicine, and completed his internship at Howard University Hospital in Washington D.C. He received fellowship training in the aforementioned categories at Georgetown University Hospital, also in Washington D.C. He is board-certified in both adult neurology and clinical neurophysiology.

At yesterday’s 9/11 Memorial event, Hillary Clinton collapsed when trying to enter her transport during a sudden unexpected departure. Clinton later emerged from her daughter Chelsea’s apartment in a bizarre scene in which a little girl somehow penetrated the Secret Service’s security bubble and gave the purportedly pneumonia-stricken Clinton a hug.

A flurry of media attention has been directed at the Clinton campaign since the incident. NPR Senior Political Analyst and unabashed progressive Cokie Roberts has said that Democrats are considering the possibility of Clinton being forced to step aside. There are multiple holes in Clinton’s two explanations for the incident, the first being the campaign’s statement that she was “overheated” on a cloudy day in the mid-70s Fahrenheit, and the second which stated she had pneumonia, a serious illness in people at Clinton’s age – the campaign says Clinton has been diagnosed for two days, raising the questions of why she did not disclose the purported illness when she was diagnosed and why she hugged a child knowing of her diagnosis (pneumonia can be deadly in the elderly and children who are most susceptible to catching the contagious pathogen).

The presence of a neurologist at Clinton’s side raises serious implications for campaign. A source which Infowars claimed was linked to the Secret Service told the website that Clinton has Parkinson’s disease, which can cause a plethora of symptoms extremely similar to what Clinton has displayed publicly in the past year. Her traumatic brain injury while serving as Secretary of State left her hospitalized for a portion of her tenure, and speculations she may be suffering severe complications of that injury are not without merit. In August, Dr Drew Pinsky was fired from his popular HLN show for raising concerns about Clinton’s health and the care she was receiving.