From: moe zarella on
All Dr. Jerroll Dolphin wanted was to bring doctors and medical care
to the poor, sick and dying of Liberia, an African country in the
throes of violent chaos and civil war. Against all odds he nearly
succeeded, opening St. Luke School of Medicine, obtaining government
accreditation, and even graduating medical doctors who achieved an
excellent 88% pass rate on national medical board exams.


Thanks to Dr. Dolphin’s efforts, for the first time in ten years
doctors brought medicine to hundreds suffering in refugee camps.
Twenty-five new doctors were licensed, many of whom paid nothing at
all in tuition for their education.


All leftist college professor George Gollin (George D. Gollin, George
Dana Gollin) wanted was another line to add to his 29 page resume.
Gollin, employed as a physics teacher at the University of Illinois,
desperately craved recognition as an “expert” in higher education
accreditation, despite having no education or experience in the
subject. Stuck in a dead end career, and with his wife earning 60%
more money than he did at the same school, Gollin urgently needed a
trophy to establish his credibility.


His opportunity came when the rebels controlling the education system
in Liberia began demanding a $6,000 a month bribe from Dr. Dolphin and
St. Luke. When the school refused to pay, George Gollin saw his
opportunity. Acting as a “consultant” to the corrupt Liberian regime,
court documents allege that George Gollin began a campaign to slander
St. Luke as an illegal “diploma mill” operation.


As a result of George Gollin’s alleged treachery, St. Luke School of
Medicine could not provide the doctors and medical care that the
African people so desperately needed. And without such care, untold
numbers of African men, women and children suffered needlessly and
died cruelly. George Gollin got that extra line on his resume,
written in the blood of dead African babies.


Now Dr. Dolphin and St. Luke School of Medicine are suing George
Gollin and the University of Illinois in a California federal court.
Dolphin already has obtained a $120 million judgment in the country of
Ghana against some of the defendants. But how much are dead babies
worth to George Gollin?