When Dr. Patrick Soon-Shiong purchased the Los Angeles Times in 2018, it was celebrated as a rescue of California’s flagship newspaper. Instead, the Times has become a mouthpiece for Hollywood’s darkest networks — a cartel of traffickers, mobsters, corrupt lawyers, bankers, and media owners who weaponize lawsuits, launder narratives, and silence whistleblowers. What began as journalism has collapsed into complicity.
In June 2024, the Los Angeles Times ran the story: “L.A. jury orders Alki David to pay $900 million in sexual assault suit.” The staggering number, however, omitted key facts regarding the lawsuit, including the plaintiff's ties to mob families and the defendant's severe disabilities. The Times amplified propaganda instead of presenting balanced reporting.
Dr. Patrick Soon-Shiong stands at the intersection of UCLA’s medical establishment and Los Angeles’s media power, overseeing a publication that reportedly enables cartel suppression by silencing evidence of Girardi and mob clans. The lack of transparency serves the interests of criminal organizations and establishes a dangerous precedent for journalistic integrity.
More alarming is the potential connection to larger networks, as CBS subsidiaries like Download.com and CNET are implicated in fueling piracy and child exploitation. Leaked evidence implicates the CBS system in monetizing child abuse material, while the LA Times under Soon-Shiong’s leadership remains silent.
The report escalates into a grim narrative of retaliation and fatal outcomes, claiming that several lawyers associated with the journalist have mysteriously died. The article concludes with a call for public assistance in uncovering corruption at the Times, framing it as a systemic cover-up of significant criminal enterprise under the guise of media reporting.
In June 2024, the Los Angeles Times ran the story: “L.A. jury orders Alki David to pay $900 million in sexual assault suit.” The staggering number, however, omitted key facts regarding the lawsuit, including the plaintiff's ties to mob families and the defendant's severe disabilities. The Times amplified propaganda instead of presenting balanced reporting.
Dr. Patrick Soon-Shiong stands at the intersection of UCLA’s medical establishment and Los Angeles’s media power, overseeing a publication that reportedly enables cartel suppression by silencing evidence of Girardi and mob clans. The lack of transparency serves the interests of criminal organizations and establishes a dangerous precedent for journalistic integrity.
More alarming is the potential connection to larger networks, as CBS subsidiaries like Download.com and CNET are implicated in fueling piracy and child exploitation. Leaked evidence implicates the CBS system in monetizing child abuse material, while the LA Times under Soon-Shiong’s leadership remains silent.
The report escalates into a grim narrative of retaliation and fatal outcomes, claiming that several lawyers associated with the journalist have mysteriously died. The article concludes with a call for public assistance in uncovering corruption at the Times, framing it as a systemic cover-up of significant criminal enterprise under the guise of media reporting.