Armando Alejandro Montalvo—the man long known as the “OG Performance Center stalker”—is once at it once again, this time for secretly recording his own court-ordered psychological evaluation and posting the footage to Facebook. But what’s even more jaw-dropping is what he said during the session.
In the video, Montalvo unloaded on the mental health system, blaming it for what he called medical abuse following his 2015 shooting by Orange County deputies outside WWE’s Orlando facility. According to Montalvo, his treatment after the incident wasn’t just overkill—it was a pharmaceutical nightmare.
“They put me on polypharmacy, they put me on Haldol, lithium, Cogentin, Depakote, and Seroquel, all in one cocktail.”
That wasn’t even the most chilling part. He claimed one of the psychologists who later reviewed his records was stunned he was still alive. Montalvo didn’t stop there. He called the whole situation a gross violation of his rights:
“And when I notified Dr. Olander... she was shocked to know that I was still breathing after they manipulated my mental health through polypharmacy.”
“I didn’t deserve that kind of mental health abuse on a mental health unit.”
This outburst came as the court-appointed psychologist pressed him to disclose current medications. Montalvo flatly refused, citing HIPAA, OSHA, and Florida’s Chapter 394 protections. In his view, disclosing any current treatment details would open the door to repeating what he considers the darkest time in his life—being misdiagnosed, overmedicated, and publicly humiliated.
His recording of the session—now public—may carry legal consequences. Florida is an all-party consent state, meaning recording someone without their permission in a private setting can lead to serious charges. And considering this was part of an official court process? Things could get even messier.
With a felony aggravated assault charge still pending and a competency hearing scheduled for March 2026, Montalvo’s latest stunt raises new questions about how the legal system will handle a man who refuses to play by its rules.
Do you think Armando’s refusal to name his meds is about protecting his rights—or dodging accountability? Drop your thoughts below.