A 41-year-old man has confessed to surgically removing the reproductive organs of at least sixteen victims in an elaborate fertility scam. The suspect, Pery “Merdantes” Alnes, posed as a licensed transplant specialist, claiming he could restore his clients’ ability to conceive children.
There is no known drug or procedure that reverses infertility.
Alnes reportedly targeted the affluent and desperate, using fresh organs harvested from prior victims as visual aids to build credibility. He performed consultations in rented surgical spaces, presenting the organs as evidence of his ongoing “successes.”
“He was incredibly convincing,” said one victim, who asked to remain anonymous. “He spoke with precision, used medical terms. We thought we were finally getting our future back.”
On the streets, scammers like Alnes are known as turf surgeons—a term used for unlicensed operators who peddle black-market procedures in backrooms and unregulated clinics.
“He was incredibly convincing.”
Medical authorities were quick to denounce the deception. Daector Henrick Wydbern, a physician educated at Amberdal, dismissed the claims outright.
“There is no cure for infertility. Not now. Not yet. The smartest minds we have are still untangling the aftermath of the Turmocet catastrophe. We’re no closer to reversing it than we were eight years ago.”
The Turmocet vaccine, originally designed to suppress disease transmission, remains infamous for its unintended sterilizing effect—an outcome some still argue was more catastrophic than the plague it was meant to prevent.
“It’s a miracle his victims didn’t die on the table,” Wydbern added. “My suspicion is he wasn’t working alone. Someone with real surgical training may have been involved.”
As of now, no accomplices have been named. Authorities are urging citizens not to fall prey to miracle-cure claims, especially involving fertility.
Alnes is expected to face multiple counts of aggravated medical fraud, surgical assault, and bodily theft.






