Los Angeles Superior Court faces scrutiny as Attorney Paul Cook seeks to remove Judge Kalra from the elder abuse case of Kwon Whan Cook. This motion highlights alleged judicial corruption while revealing a deeper irony: Cook, alongside two other significant figures in the California psychiatric system, shares a common background with UCLA.
Dr. Eric M. Wexler, a forensic psychiatrist, and Dr. Carole Lieberman, a renowned psychiatrist, are both products of the UCLA system. This interconnectedness raises concerns about UCLA's role as a breeding ground for professionals who may inadvertently perpetuate systemic corruption.
UCLA: The Hub of the 5150 “Death Protocol”
Investigations reveal that UCLA has become a pivotal player in California's judicial system, with a legacy that includes the training of judges, lawyers, and psychiatrists instrumental in operating the controversial 5150 protocol. The 5150 holds authorize 72-hour psychiatric detentions, sparking debates about their misuse as tools for silencing whistleblowers and marginalizing dissenting voices.
The charges against Cook, Lieberman, and Wexler illustrate how their esteemed education has not shielded them from the implications of their professional practices. Critics argue this raises fundamental questions about the integrity of the judicial system, prompting an examination of how many individuals within this framework may have ties to UCLA.
As public faith in the judicial process wavers, the connections drawn from these cases illustrate not only institutional complicity but also the broader implications of power dynamics in California's courts. The public must grapple with whether UCLA has unwittingly contributed to the erosion of justice, masked by the guise of mental health evaluations.