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Dr. Uwaydah And Frontline Medical Throw A Real Cog In The Wheel Of Kelly Soo Park's Defense. Proceedings Now Further Delayed.
By Lonce LaMon - July 6, 2011

Kelly Soo Park, slender and elegant, appearing half-Korean and half-White Caucasian in her beauty and manner, stands accused as the scapegoat of Dr. Munir Uwaydah in the 2008 Santa Monica murder of Juliana Redding, one of Uwaydah's girlfriends in his life of serial conquests.  As of her latest court appearance, last Thursday, June 30th, she is still looking for a new attorney to defend her against charges of murder after Frontline Medical ruined her relationship with Kay Rackauckas and Jennifer Keller, her now former defense counsels.  Frontline sent Kay and Jennifer a check for $100,000 on a Frontline bank account back before the hearing on May 20th and destroyed Kelly’s current defense. 

Even though Kay Rackauckas didn’t respond to this writer’s correspondence requesting to know exactly why she won’t take the money from Frontline, I will conjecture that she does not want to be working for and controlled by Frontline, a medical firm owned by the notorious Dr. Uwaydah which is under heavy investigation for workers’ compensation insurance fraud in the mega-millions of dollars concomitant with Uwaydah being strongly suspected of masterminding and manipulating the Redding murder. 
 
Rackauckas and her partner, Jennifer Keller, defy the derogatory slurs about attorneys who are just whores who will take money from any source.  They act like lawyers who believe all accused are entitled to a defense, and they will do the work as long as the money comes from a legitimate source, as did the bond money for Kelly Soo’s bail to the tune of 3.5 million dollars.  
 
Kelly Soo Park, right, leaves the Clara Shortridge Foltz court house with her now former defense attorney, Kay Rackauckas, on February 8th 2011
 
But Rackauckas and Keller won’t take Uwaydah’s money, which speaks to their credit like a sonic boom.  During the May 20th court session, Kay Rackauckas spoke urbanely, “We don’t want the money.”
 
The latest hearing last Thursday at the downtown Los Angeles Clara Shortridge Foltz Criminal Justice Center, got going two hours late.  Kelly Soo Park, her family and friends, and her constant companion now identified as Deborah Vancleave, waited around in the corridor sitting on the benches as they drank canned beverages out of the vending machines and Kelly showed photos on her I-Phone.   Kelly wore a graceful light weight shawl with green Oriental patterns with a fringe on both ends of the long cloth.  Deborah Vancleave wore a brown pants outfit with a lace patterned white long-sleeved stretch top under a tank top.  She appeared with her usual, attractive, reddish-brown hair. 
 
It has recently been told to this writer that Vancleave worked for Frontline Medical at one time but was evidently fired from Frontline.  That might have been the best thing that ever happened to her.  Not to fit in at Frontline is a compliment to one’s character.  Possibly to Vancleave’s credit, she couldn’t be controlled or manipulated.  For what Uwaydah and Frontline demand is to have power and control and to have everyone in thrall to them.  So, Deborah got lucky and got out…
 
I remember staring at Kelly Soo’s wrists as they peered out from her long sleeved white shirt.  They are the most delicate, slender wrists, about two-thirds the width of mine.  I have an Amazon woman’s skeleton which is about the size and weight of a small man’s skeleton.  But, not so Kelly Soo Park. 
 
I kept trying to imagine her strangling Juliana Redding and snatching the phone out of the victim’s hand who was trying to call 911. This is what Kelly is accused of having done.  I played the film in my mind as I watched her wrists and hands.  My psyche scrambled as if hit by a tornado trying to envision it.  I must weigh fifty pounds more than Kelly does.  If Kelly actually physically killed that lovely 21-year-old model, there had to have been a demonic force behind her.  Otherwise, none of us can envision it.  I don’t think my perceptions are unique. 
 
Finally, as the time reached 11 am last Thursday, Kay Rackauckas appeared in the corridor approaching Dept 109 looking very serious in her grey suit.  Alan Jackson, the deputy district attorney appeared, as well.  He had not appeared in this case for months since the case left the L.A. airport court location.  Also, Samer Hathout appeared in a peach jacket and a long black and floral skirt.  She was the prosecutor for the case against the Ramirez family, the clan of three sets of husbands and wives which included parents and two young brothers who embezzled about a cool million out of the L.A. County workers’ compensation claims department run by Tristar Risk Management.  They were arrested in September 2010.   All of the Ramirezes pled guilty. 
 
The court room door was about to open when I heard some man in the corridor introduce himself to Alan Jackson as being from the Secret Service.  Then the door opened and a lot of people entered quickly.  Judge Kathleen Kennedy didn’t even wait for everyone to sit down before she called Kelly Soo Park forward.   Kelly stood up and walked into the judge’s bench area, and I took her former seat at the end of the center audience bench. 
 
The Honorable Kathleen Kennedy:  Has Ms. Park secured new counsel?
 
Defense Counsel Jennifer Keller:  Ms. Park has not secured new counsel.  She needs three more weeks. 
 
Then Jennifer Keller explained to the Court that she and Rackauckas had just received a document filed by The People about 10 minutes prior.  I had seen them both reading a stack of several papers stapled together at the corner while sitting on the bench outside the entrance closest to Dept. 109. 
 
Jennifer Keller:  My request is to put all of this in abeyance.  I think new counsel should have time to review. 
 
Then there came the discussion about the $100,000 from Frontline.  It’s still sitting in Kay and Jennifer’s client trust account.  They are not going to do anything, for the time being, with the money.  Alan Jackson spoke about the federal investigators versus the state government investigators.  He’s dealing with both agencies.  And I remembered there was the Secret Service man who was there.  I’d seen him sitting on a bench outside the court room.
 
So, there are the Feds, the State, the Secret Service.   Certainly not all just for Kelly Soo.  Kelly Soo moves as a pawn and a tool in Uwaydah’s game called murder-for-hire and massive insurance fraud.
 
The court agreed to resume on July 21st at either 9 am or 11 am.   It got a bit confusing with all the discussion about Eric Harmon, the other deputy district attorney on this case, being hung up in another trial. 
 
Court adjourned and I left swiftly.  I caught up with Kelly on the stairs and asked her how her search was going for new counsel.   She lifted her index finger and motioned for me to wait, and I waited while I listened to her speaking in Korean to someone on her cell phone. 
 
By this time I’d reached the sidewalk at the top of the stairs and was walking towards Broadway.  When she was done with her brief call, she politely replied to me, “I’d rather not say, if you don’t mind.”   Her reply was uncommonly polite and refined. She has a lovely, sweet voice.
 
It didn't add up. I needed time to process my inner turmoil.  Then I thought about Jim Jones, Warren Jeffs, Charles Manson, Adolf Hitler, finally Munir Uwaydah.   I tried to recount in my mind all our world’s charismatic manipulators who swallowed up otherwise normally good people into evil.  It was adding up.  This case is about evil, and evil indulging in scapegoating.
 
 
This is about Munir Uwaydah and Frontline Medical.   Kelly Soo Park should not stand alone accused in court.  She is a pawn on a chess board with much more powerful pieces in a game of murder, greed, fraud, and human destruction.  The court room is missing the procuring cause to this case.  To rescue her very soul, Kelly Soo should cut all ties to Frontline.  Forever.  She should not allow them to send money to any counsel for her defense.  She should slam the door on her Frontline past and never take another dime from them.  
 
She has to start moving forward with serving the rest of her time on this Earth under God in penance.  She needs to confess.  And with her confession she will finally be free. 
 
 
 

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