Never mind that the issue at the center of the David-versus-Goliath fight was a parking ticket that he could afford to pay. Never mind that if he was the David, then the Goliath was the Los Angeles Department of Transportation's parking division, notoriously difficult to challenge. Never mind that even his friends told him fighting would be a waste of time.
"People are just, like, 'You can't win against them,'" Cook said. "For me, it's just — it's wrong."
So drawing on Gandhi's teachings about the unwavering power of righteous "soul strength" to overcome the greatest obstacles, Cook set forth on a journey through L.A.'s byzantine parking dispute process that would last some 16 months.
Cook's story starts on Dec. 19, 2024, in Chinatown, when he returned to his car to find a yellow envelope tucked under his windshield wiper. Recalling the day in a recent interview with The Times, Cook quickly turns indignant about the bureaucratic odyssey that yellow slip launched. He's mad not just because he feels his time was wasted, but also because he knows that many others without his legal background, perseverance or media savvy would simply pay the fine.
"The city of Los Angeles is unreasonable," Cook told The Times. "You get a parking ticket, they want their pound of flesh."
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