Scientology: A History of Terror and Abuse
by Craig Branch
The following article is part three in Watchman Fellowship's series
on Scientology. Part 1 (Volume 13, No. 2) disclosed Scientology's early
history and development, its decision to cloak itself in religious garb,
and gave a description of its practices and beliefs, both secret and public,
especially its hostility and incompatibility with Christianity.
Part 2 (Volume 13, No. 5) examined the myths generated by Scientology
regarding its founder L. Ron Hubbard, separating fact from fiction. Comments
from the May 6, 1991 cover story of Time magazine, "The Cult of Greed,"
were quoted, describing Scientology as "a hugely profitable, global racket
that survives by intimidating members and critics in a Mafia-like manner..
Scientology is quite likely the most ruthless, the most classically terroristic,
the most litigious, and the most lucrative cult the country has ever seen"
(pp. 32-33).
In the same Time piece, Vicki Aznaran, formerly "one of Scientology's
six key leaders," is quoted saying "This is a criminal organization day
in and day out" (p. 33). Time magazine was unsuccessfully sued by Scientology
over this quite revealing story. The judge, after extensive review and
many pleadings, threw out their case against Time.
This article, Part 3 in the series, will examine the question of whether
Scientology is a terroristic, criminal cult or merely an aggressive religion
As noted above, Scientology has been called a terroristic, criminal
cult. Much evidence exists to demonstrate the validity of these charges
made against Scientology. There are "immutable," internal, policy letters
or "scriptures" of Scientology. There are numerous civil and criminal convictions
of the Church itself and various leaders and members, in the United States
and other nations. All the above combine with testimonials of many people
abused by Scientology, to establish a history of institutionalized harassment
and suppression of its critics. These charges are best summarized by two
men who incurred the wrath of Scientology after daring to expose it.
One of its critics was senior editor for Reader's Digest, Eugene
Methvin. After researching and publishing two articles in his magazine
highly critical of Scientology and detailing the harassment which followed,
he wrote, "Scientology is far more than a mere religion. An analysis of
sworn testimony and the findings of official tribunals in 12 nations, plus
independent investigation, reveals it to be a multinational racket masquerading
as a religion" (The Santa Rosa News Herald, June 22, 1982, p. 1).
Boston attorney Michael Flynn and six other colleagues wrote, "There
is substantial, perhaps overwhelming evidence to support the conclusion
that, despite Scientology's attempted religious front, it is in reality
a criminal, fraud-ridden, commercial, profit-motivated enterprise engaged
in the practice of psychotherapy with a military structure and operational
methods designed to accumulate money, information, and power" (Ibid.).
Scientology typically responds that it is being persecuted by bigots,
that critics are themselves criminals and have some insidious ulterior
motives. Indeed there has been sustained turbulence surrounding Scientology,
but it is largely self-induced, perpetuated, and driven by the policies
and practices of Scientology itself.
Apart from Scientology's counter-tactics of fear, propaganda campaigns,
and cover-ups, one obstacle to reaching Scientologists with the truth is
that their organization is tightly compartmentalized. It can be a long
and expensive process before members are exposed to all of the policies
and mind control techniques of Scientology. Thus, individual Scientologists
are at different levels of indoctrination and understanding of the totalitarian
nature of Scientology.
By the time Gitta (true name withheld by request), a former Scientologist
in Germany and mother of three, understood the true nature of Scientology,
she had lost her husband and over $315,000 to the organization. She states
that she joined Scientology believing that "it was a warm-hearted organization,
out to save the world and its economy, that it wanted to build a world
without criminality and drugs" (Chicago Tribune, February 10, 1997
p. 19). Now she believes much differently.
Three current events help to illustrate the concern over the beliefs
and practices of Scientology:
The death of 36 year old Lisa McPherson while in the "care" of fellow
Scientologists at the Clearwater headquarters has led to an ongoing investigation
by Clearwater police and has been the focus of numerous stories in the
Tampa Tribune, St. Petersburg Times, The New York Times, local media, NBC
Nightly News, and episodes on Inside Edition. For the full story of her
tragic case see "Scientologist
Lisa McPherson's Tragic Death" in this issue.
There is a history of conflict between Scientology and the governments
of several European countries. Europe is more conservative than America
concerning its understanding of freedom of religion. Governments and courts
are more willing to scrutinize and restrict groups that identify themselves
as religions, yet have a history of abuse or subterfuge. In Germany, which
is understandably sensitive to totalitarian, anti-democratic organizations
and movements because of its recent past (Nazism and communist East Germany),
Scientology is viewed by many as an actual, and potentially serious, threat
to the state.
Ursula Caberta, head of the government's task force investigating Scientology
"cites many of the usual complaints heard practically anywhere they [Scientology]
have established their church" (Los Angeles Times, February 6, 1997, p.
A6). The complaints involve "brainwashing members into thinking it was
'ethical' to commit tax evasion, fraud and other crimes" and manipulating
people into giving up huge sums of money for personal growth seminars (Ibid.).
German officials also cite the many civil and criminal convictions of
Scientology and Scientologists around the world and Scientology's written
policies or "Scriptures" which institutionalize these abuses.
One such document is Hubbard's HCO Policy Letter of August 15,
1960, titled "Department of Government Affairs." The policy states "The
object of the Department is to broaden the impact of Scientology upon governments
and other organizations and is to conduct itself so as to make the name
and reputation of Scientology better and more forceful. Therefore, defensive
tactics are frowned upon..only attacks resolve threats."
Hubbard continued, "In the face of danger from governments or courts
there are only two errors one can make: (a) do nothing and (b) defend."
The policy directs Scientologists to "Make enough threat or clamor to cause
the enemy to quail..Make every attack by us also sell Scientology..win.
If attacked on some vulnerable point by anyone or anything or any organizations,
always find or manufacture enough threat against them to cause them to
sue for peace..Always attack" (p. 484, emphasis added).
The policy includes a totalitarian statement that should cause any government
concern: "The goal of the Department is to bring the government and hostile
philosophies or societies into a state of complete compliance with the
goals of Scientology. This is done by high level ability to control..to
overwhelm. Introvert such agencies. Control such agencies. Scientology
is the only game on earth where everybody wins" (Ibid.; emphasis added).
A chain of events resulted in the German government's decision "to
put the Church of Scientology under nationwide surveillance by counterintelligence
agents because it contends that the church is a threat to democracy" (AP
report, June 6, 1997). Monitoring by "federal and state anti-extremist
watchdogs" is justified, said Women and Family Affairs Minister Claudia
Nolte, because "our citizens must be protected against the unscrupulous
profiteering of Scientology" (Reuters report, June 6, 1997).
A key link in the chain of events was a German Supreme Federal Labor
Court decision stating that Scientology's "claim to be a religious community
was 'only a pretext for pursuing business interests'..it is insufficient
for a group to proclaim itself a religious community. The spiritual content
and appearance of the community should reflect its religious nature..With
the Church of Scientology, this is not the case. In reality it is engaged
in trade..heavily commercialized" (AP report, March 22, 1995).
Scientology lost at least three more court decisions dealing with engaging
public advertising and personality test distribution in Hannover and Dusseldorf
(The Stars and Stripes, November 16, 1995; Chicago Tribune, January 24,
1996, Section 1). A German court also ruled that the political parties
were within their rights to exclude Scientologists from party membership
(Reuters report, July 9, 1997).
True to their "always attack" policy, Scientology began to retaliate.
They took out large full page ads in major U.S. and international newspapers.
The ads accused the German government of returning to its Nazi past, paralleling
the Nazi treatment of Jews with the current persecution of Scientology.
Scientology celebrities John Travolta and Tom Cruise, and others, were
used to send a highly publicized celebrity letter from the U.S. entertainment
industry to the German government with the same sort of charges. The letter
included the names of Dustin Hoffman, Goldie Hawn, Oliver Stone, Larry
King, Gore Vidal, and 29 others (Washington Post, January 14, 1997,
A11).
Scientology also used its entertainment celebrities and others to move
the U.S. State Department to pressure the German government in its annual
Human Rights Report. Scientology even filed a suit with the European Commission
of Human Rights claiming persecution and discrimination. Most recently,
Scientologists were in the news again after they organized a public demonstration
against German government policies, which drew an estimated 3,000 Scientologists,
who marched in Bonn. (Akron Beacon Journal, October 28, 1997).
Most of their efforts have backfired. The European Commission on Human
Rights threw out the discrimination case. Their comparisons of the treatment
of Scientologists with the Jewish holocaust drew angry and loud protests
from Jews in the U.S. and Germany.
While Secretary of State Madeline Albright and the State Department
rightly did issue a mild rebuke to the German government for its actions
against some individual members of Scientology, they also issued a strong
denunciation of Scientology's ads, calling them "historically inaccurate
and totally distasteful" (AP report, February 17, 1997).
While Scientologists seek to find refuge and support among Americans
by contrasting the more liberal U.S. freedom of religion views with those
of Germany and Europe, Americans should be aware that their own government
also did not grant tax-exempt religious status to the Church of Scientology
for 26 years, from 1967 to 1993.
The sudden and secret 1993 capitulation to Scientology by the IRS provoked
bewildered suspicion for many, especially in view of the history of litigation
between the two parties. After a legal challenge by Scientology, a 1984
U.S. tax court decision upheld the IRS. The court found that Scientology's
continued operation was "for a substantial commercial purpose," and it
was "founded for the primary purpose of gaining tax-exempt status to serve
the financial goals of other, non-exempt entities." It thus ruled that
the Church of Scientology was not to be allowed tax exemption (Wall
Street Journal, March 25, 1997, A18; Case No. 581-88T Church of Spiritual
Technology vs. The United States).
The decision was upheld by the U.S. Appeals Court, and the U.S. Supreme
Court refused to consider it only one year before the IRS reversal. The
U.S. Supreme Court had also found for the IRS in 1989 in another suit where
a Scientologist wanted to be able to deduct charges for his Scientology
counseling (auditing) (Wall Street Journal, March 25, 1997, A18).
The tax court utilized the records captured during an FBI raid on Scientology
headquarters in 1977. Those records demonstrated that the church had for
the previous eight years "perpetrated a conspiracy involving 'manufacturing
and falsifying records to present to the IRS, burglarizing IRS offices
and stealing government documents, and subverting Government processes
for unlawful purposes'" (Wall Street Journal, March 25, 1997, A18).
In the same raid, the FBI procured much documentation which revealed
the covert, criminal, and terroristic nature of Scientology, particularly
in the operations of its Guardian Office, now renamed the Office of Special
Affairs. This was a special arm of Scientology, which carried out Hubbard's
watchdog and preservation policies. It was directed by none other than
Hubbard's wife, Mary Sue.
The raid uncovered numerous plots and covert activities designed to
intimidate and silence, by one means or another, any opposition to the
advance of Scientology.
Scientology had planted spies in the IRS and the Justice Department.
They had planted bugging devices and stolen many confidential documents
and plans. Other evidence was discovered detailing countless smear campaigns
and operations against church "enemies" (Los Angeles Times, June
24, 1990, p. A39).
In court cases stemming from the 1977 FBI raid, eleven of the church's
leaders, including Mary Sue Hubbard, were convicted of conspiracy and burglary
and received 5 years in prison (Ibid.).
Scientology now claims that the Guardian Office was a renegade group
within Scientology, people who were acting on their own against standard
policy. The continued history of litigation and many testimonials of former
members indicate otherwise. This defense is especially laughable when one
considers that Hubbard's written policies, as well as a secret program
code named "Snow White," actually instruct Scientology members to use just
such tactics as the Guardian Office had employed, in order to make Scientology
win.
The 1993 IRS decision to grant Scientology tax exempt status in spite
of all this evidence of criminal activity by the church remains a mystery
- a mystery deepened by its decision to seal the negotiation and any record
of the agreement. The IRS cited taxpayer privacy laws as justification
for the sealing.
But Tax Analysts, a taxpayer lobby, notes that the privacy laws pertain
only to individuals under Section 6103, not to tax-exempt organizations,
Section 6104, which provides public disclosure.
Tax Analysts filed a lawsuit to force disclosure and won the first round.
The court has ordered the documents released to the court to review and
determine their status. A year and a half later, however, Judge Thomas
Hogan has yet to release or rule on the status of those documents.
Through the legal discovery process, Tax Analysts have surfaced some
amazing information. This information should cause the legislature to demand
a special review of the IRS reversal.
The New York Times investigated and printed a long front page exposé
of the details leading up to the IRS surrender. Some of the specifics are
as follows:
Consistent with its official policy of intimidation, Scientology had
over 100 costly lawsuits in progress against the IRS. Supposedly most of
these were actions by individuals, but they were all dropped after the
IRS/Scientology agreement.
Also consistent with Scientology policy and tactics, "Scientology's
lawyers hired private investigators to dig into the private lives of IRS
officials and to conduct surveillance operations to uncover potential vulnerabilities."
Scientology took out many large ads in USA Today and distributed
thousands of its own magazine, Freedom, ruthlessly attacking the
IRS, comparing it with the KGB and Nazism.
Then, according to Scientology leader David Miscavage, he and fellow
Scientologist Marty Rathburn, just dropped in at the IRS headquarters,
with no appointment, and were allowed to see the head of the IRS, Commissioner
Fred Goldberg. After that meeting "Mr. Goldberg created a special committee
to negotiate a settlement with Scientology outside normal agency procedures"
(March 9, 1997, pp. 1, 20).
Later, Miscavage, addressing 10,000 cheering Scientologists at their
victory celebration in Los Angeles, bragged about their incursion into
the IRS and smugly recalled that while he and Rathburn were taking a break
from a Washington court, they set out to "create a little mischief" with
the IRS.
Miscavage said that he told the IRS building security that he didn't
have an appointment but if Goldberg was informed they were from the Church
of Scientology, then, "I'm sure he'd love to see us. Apparently I was right.
We did see the commissioner and the rest is history" (video tape on file).
Scientology is now trying to deny this account of the impromptu meeting
(New York Times, March 19, 1997).
Also, uncovered in the Tax Analyst case was information that many unexplained
irregularities took place in the IRS/Scientology negotiations. Goldberg's
appointed negotiation committee bypassed the agency's normal exempt organizations
division.
According to Tax Analysts, the tax law specialists who were to review
Scientology's new application for tax exemption were instructed by the
negotiations committee they "were not to evaluate the Scientology applications
for issues of inurement or 'any other substantive issues,' including issues
of private benefit and commerciality." The processing was "strictly procedural,
not substantive" (Tax Notes, June 26, 1995, p. 1699).
In other words they were to verify only that the correct forms were
all completed properly. They were not to evaluate whether the information
submitted on the forms actually qualified Scientology to tax exemption
as a religious organization under section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue
Code. It appears that decision had already been made by the negotiating
committee before the final forms were ever submitted (Ibid., p. 1702).
So many questions need answering. How can the IRS grant privacy to
the Church of Scientology when it required both the Jimmy Swaggart Ministries
and Jerry Falwell's Old Time Gospel Hour to disclose the financial details
of their tax settlements?
German governmental policy on Scientology is based largely on court
decisions that found Scientology to be a business rather than a religion.
For twenty-five years a U.S. government agency, the IRS, likewise viewed
Scientology as a business and not a church. Its refusal to grant Scientology
tax-exempt status as a church was upheld by U.S. courts at all levels,
the Supreme Court refusing even to hear their appeal. It would be bitter
irony then, for Germans, if the U.S. were to yield to Scientology pressure
to condemn Germany. This is especially true given the dubious manner in
which the IRS position was reversed.
Many of the scandals, investigations and convictions that have plagued
Scientology have resulted from actions taken under the authority of Hubbard's
personal directives contained in HCO Policy Letters. These are regarded
as "scripture" by Scientology (L. Ron Hubbard, Founder of Dianetics
and Scientology, p.1). They were given to direct Scientology policy,
and were not to be changed or abrogated except by Hubbard himself (SCN
Policy Directive 19,.July 7, 1982).
In addition to the "Department of Government Affairs" policy described
earlier, Scientology has a policy defining an enemy or critic of the church
as a "Suppressive Person" or "SP." Hubbard wrote, "A Suppressive Person
or Group is one that actively seeks to suppress or damage Scientology or
a Scientologist by Suppressive Acts..A Suppressive Person or Group becomes
'fair game'" (HCO Policy Letter, December 23, 1965).
As noted earlier, Scientology's official position on documented abuse
of its perceived enemies is that the abuse was carried on by individual
Scientologists acting without authorization. This is pure subterfuge. Scientology's
official policies regarding so-called "Suppressive" Acts, Persons (SPs),
and Organizations, and its "fair game" policy authorize the abuses of which
Scientologists have been convicted. According to the "fair game" policy,
anyone so regarded "May be deprived of property or injured by any means
by any Scientologist without any discipline of the Scientologist. May be
tricked, lied to or destroyed" (HCO Policy Letter, October 18, 1967).
When this "fair game" policy became public it caused, and is causing,
many problems for Scientology. Scientology attempts to deny its continuation
by claiming Hubbard canceled this order one year later. But HCO Policy
Letter of October 21, 1968, only says that "the practice of declaring people
fair game will cease..It causes bad public relations" (emphasis added).
It specifically "does not cancel any policy on the treatment or handling
of an SP."
Obviously the concern of this so-called cancellation was not about abuses
committed, but over public image. And it only means that formal declarations
naming people as "fair game" will cease. However, one may still be condemned
as a Suppressive Person. And as all Suppressive Persons are, ipso facto,
fair game, no formal statement of their being fair game is needed. A number
of subsequent court cases and other documents in Watchman's possession
indicate this terroristic policy continues.
In the HCO Bulletin of August 27, 1987, Scientology reprinted an earlier
Hubbard article which dealt with "Critics of Scientology." In typical totalistic
language Hubbard wrote, "We do more good in any ten minutes..than the combined
efforts of all social ministries on Earth to better mankind..It is totally
hopeless and fatal not to be a Scientologist."
The policy continues, "We do not find critics of Scientology who do
not have criminal pasts. Over and over we prove this.. Never discuss Scientology
with a critic. Just discuss his or her crimes.."
In a similar policy, "Attacks on Scientology," Hubbard wrote, "Never
agree to an investigation of Scientology. Only agree to an investigation
of the attackers..Start feeding lurid, blood, sex, crime, actual evidence
on the attacker to the press..make it rough, rough, on attackers all the
way" (HCO Policy Letter, February 25, 1966).
The Washington Post printed a story, "Scientology Fiction: The Church's
War Against It's Critics - and Truth." In it they quoted several other
Scientology governing policy directives such as "Harass these persons in
any possible way..They are declared enemies of mankind, the planet and
all life. They are fair game [according to a 1968 "Ethics Order" on SPs]..Never
treat a war like a skirmish. Treat all skirmishes like wars" (December
25, 1994, C1, 4).
Destructive mind-control groups vary in the scope and intensity of their
attempts to control. Scientology is totalistic and goes "all out." In every
bound Scientology technical bulletin volume is found printed the order
"Keeping Scientology Working." It exhorts the Scientologist to be totally
sold out to the cause, to "win or die in the attempt.. only the tigers
survive.. It's a tough universe..We'd rather have you dead than incapable."
In this same order Hubbard presses, "The whole agonized future of this
planet, every man, woman and child on it, and your own destiny for the
next endless trillions of years depend on what you do here and now in Scientology.
This is a deadly serious activity."
This type of fanaticism produces an "end justifies the means" mindset.
It feeds a "we versus you" and a "dispensing of existence" mentality which
are key components in the classic mind-control model of cult indoctrination.
Consider some of Hubbard's requirements in the "Code of Honor" for
Scientologists: Never withdraw an allegiance once granted; Never fear to
hurt another in a just cause" (The Creator of Human Ability: A Handbook
for Scientologists, pp. 4, 5).
Hubbard even wrote a training routine that, in typical cult fashion,
justified lying to those who would impede Scientology. He called lying,
"to outflow negative data effectively" (Intelligence Specialist Training
Routine - TR L).
Scientology denigrates non-Scientologists as "WOGS" or "raw meat." In
fact, describing many non-Scientologists, Hubbard writes ".any person from
2.0 down on the tone scale should not have, in any thinking society, any
civil rights of any kind" (Science of Survival, part 1, p. 131).
The "tone scale" is Hubbard's rating or classification of emotions.
Hubbard assigned level 2.0 to "antagonism." Emotions rated still lower
include, but are not limited to, Pain (1.8), Anxiety (1.02), Sympathy (0.9),
Propitiation (0.8), Grief (0.5), Making Amends (0.375) (What Is Scientology,
p. 150). Hubbard, who Scientologists repeatedly assure us was "mankind's
greatest friend," (e.g., L. Ron Hubbard, A Profile, p. 100) would
deny "any civil rights of any kind" to persons experiencing the emotions
named above.
Watchman Fellowship has experienced some of Scientology's harassing
tactics, but we will not be deterred from exercising our freedom of speech
and religious practice. Scripture requires us to expose the "unfruitful
works of darkness" (Ephesians 5:11-13).
Scientology continues to add to its legacy of abuse through the implementation
of its policies. More articles revealing many examples of civil and criminal
convictions and abuse are planned for future issues of the Expositor,
so be sure to order your
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