SCIENTOLOGY'S WAR AGAINST JUDGES
BY JAMES B. STEWART, JR.
On September 5, 1980, as U.S. District Court Judge Charles
Richey was recuperating from two pulmonary embolisms and
exhaustion, lawyers for the Church of Scientology and the
Justice Department gathered before Judge Aubrey Robinson,
Richey's successor in the two-year-old conspiracy case against
11 members of the Church of Scientology. Judge Richey had
already convicted and sentenced nine of the original 11
defendants, but the remaining two, recently extradited from
England, were about to go on trial. "Particularly from the
standpoint of your Honor's feelings about these defendants who
are members of the Church of Scientology..." began John
Shorter, Jr., a lawyer for one of the defendants. He was
interrupted by Judge Robinson. "You want to raise a motion to
recuse?" the judge asked. He knew what Shorter's remark
foreshadowed, having witnessed the Scientologists campaign to
drive Judge Richey off the case. "Is this a fishing expedition?"
Robinson is the fourth D.C. district court judge to preside
over the Scientology case and the latest target of the
Scientologists' self-proclaimed "attack" litigation strategy.
Their strategy amounts to an all-out war against the D.C.
district court judges, a war much more sophisticated, better
financed and more successful than the bizarre tactics used by
some other groups against their courtroom adversaries, such as
Synanon's attempt to murder an opposing counsel by putting a
rattlesnake in his mailbox.
Unlike Synanon, the Church of Scientology has long sought to
distinguish itself as a legitimate religion. Founded in 1954 by
L. Ron Hubbard, a Science fiction writer, "philosopher" and
author of the "bestselling" book Dianetics: The Modern Science of
Mental Health, the church claims five million adherents to its
selfhelp philosophy. The Church of Scientology has called
itself the spiritual heir of Buddhism in the western world, and
focuses on what it calls "pastoral counseling" to increase its
members abilities and awareness. But in the past few years, the
church has been accused of brainwashing and harassing its
members, and it has become embroiled in dozens of lawsuits
(see sidebar, page 32), including the 1978 criminal conspiracy
charges against 11 of its members. Such setbacks have triggered
increasingly militant responses, which focused, in the
conspiracy case, on the federal judiciary. The Scientologists
legal strategy has been to force the recusal of Judges lie at
the root of the pending criminal charges against the
Scientologists. In 1976. D.C. District Court Justice George
Hart, Jr., casually proposed a deposition of Hubbard in
conjunction with one of many Freedom Of Information Act suits
filed by the church. Hart's remark (no deposition ever proved
necessary) caused Scientology officials to believe that the
government knew something incriminating about Hubbard. As a
result the church intensified its efforts to learn what
information the government might possess.
At the same time the church was issuing "Guardian Programme
Orders" (directives to church members telling them to use
"standard overt sources" and "any suitable guise interviews" to
monitor the activities of all district court judges presiding
in the FOIA suits. In 1977 that directive was extended to all
15 active judges in the D.C. federal district court.
Posing in some instances as students and journalists,
Scientologists interviewed the judges, researched their careers
and backgrounds, followed them and prepared dossiers. According
to Scientology documents, their goal was to determine "tone
level" and "buttons on" --indicia of personal vulnerability. in
the parlance of Scientology. But the church's operation went
far beyond legal surveillance. Members of the church were
caught breaking into the offices of the IRS and the Justice
Department, stealing and copying documents and eavesdropping.
On August 15. 1978. l1 Scientologists were indicted on charges
of electronically intercepting oral IRS communications, forging
government passes, illegally entering government buildings,
recruiting Scientologists to infiltrate the government,
stealing records belonging to the IRS, Justice Department and
the U.S. Attorney and conspiring to illegally obtain documents
in the possession of the United States and to obstruct justice.
The Scientologist defendants hired some well-known defense
counsel. Mary Sue Hubbard, the wife of church leader L. Ron
Hubbard and the highest ranking defendant on trial, retained
Leonard Boudin of Rabinowitz, Boudin & Standard and Michael
Hertzberg, a solo practitioner, both activist lawyers now
practicing law in New York City. Two other defendants, Henning
Heldt and Duke Snider, retained Alexandria, Virginia, lawyer
Philip Hirschkop, who had been counsel for the "DC. Nine."
antiwar protesters arrested in 1970. In all, 12 lawyers were
hired to defend nine defendants (two others had fled to England
where they faced extradition proceedings). Boudin and Hirschkop
soon assumed the leading roles in the defense.
Boudin and Hirschkop won't discuss why they were selected, but
their public identification with radical and unpopular causes
was undoubtedly attractive to church members, This was Boudin's
first association with the church, but Hirschkop had handled a
search and seizure matter for the church in 1977.
One lawyer who represents Scientologists and has worked with
Boudin and Hirschkop offers this ideological defense for their
taking the case: "It is a simple case of government
overreaching." he says. "The government just can't tolerate an
organization with nonconforming beliefs. The Scientologists
stand up for their rights -- aggressively." Another lawyer who
has worked on the case adds a financial motive for their taking
such a case: "These people pay their bills -- top dollar and on
time -which is more than I can say for most of my unpopular
clients. This case will finance a lot of pro bono work."
Hirschkop won't say what he has received in legal fees from the
Scientologists, but the church is a prosperous client In one
instance a member paid the church $30,000 for the required
series of counseling sessions.
Whatever their reasons for taking the case, high-minded
principles have not characterized the campaign of the
Scientologists' lawyers against the District of Columbia
judges. In August 1978 the cases were assigned to Judge Hart,.
the judge whose comment had originally intensified the
intelligence operation and who, like all of his fellow D.C.
district court judges, had been investigated. He became the
first victim of the Scientologists' recusal strategy.
Boudin filed the first recusal motion in January 1979. His
theory was a novel one: by telling Judge Hart that the judge
himself was a target of the Scientologists' own possibly
illegal activities, he would cause the judge to be biased, or
appear to be biased, against them. In his motion, Boudin quoted
a Scientology document ordering an "overt" and "covert" data
collection operation against Judge Hart, which, in Boudin's
words, "possibly [included] the use of methods violative of the
judge's privacy and other rights and possibly violative of the
criminal laws." Boudin concluded that "the sitting judge is
revealed to the jury and the public as a victim of possibly
illegal actions," and "the judge has an obvious interest which
may be affected by the outcome of the case." Notwithstanding
documents to which government and defense counsel had access
ordering similar operations on all the District of (Columbia
district court judges, Boudin declared that he knew of no other
such campaigns.
Although government lawyers, led by chief prosecutor Raymond
Banoun, protested vigorously, arguing that the Scientologists
were using their own possibly illegal activities to disqualify
the judge, Hart granted the recusal motion and stepped down.
Hart denied that he was biased, but he agreed that the
appearance of impartiality had been tainted by the
Scientologists' surveillance operation against him. "I was
afraid a jury would be prejudiced against the defendants
because of their alleged threats against me." Hart said
recently. The case was assigned next to Judge Louis Oberdorfer,
who in light of Judge Hart's recent experience asked for
memoranda and oral arguments from both sides at the outset
indicating potential grounds for disqualification. Government
lawyers pointed out in their memo that Oberdorfer was formerly
an assistant attorney general in charge of the tax division of
the Justice Department, which had prosecuted a case that ended
the tax- exempt status for the founding Church of Scientology
in Los Angeles in 1969. Oberdorfer concluded that he had
"personal knowledge of disputed evidentiary facts," and on
February 5. 1979. he too stepped down. Shortly afterward the
case fell to Richey, 57, a 1971 Nixon appointee whose liberal
record -- especially in the area of defendants rights --
surprised early critics. The assignment initially pleased the
Scientology defendants. In a pamphlet called "The Trial of the
Scientology Nine," prepared by the Scientologists, Judge Richey
was described as having "a very fatherly visage . . though
crippled with a congenital defect in his hip, one does not
notice either his limp or his shortness. His glasses glinting
from the lights of the courtroom add to the picture of a man of
deep intelligence and sympathy." And when Richey, too, asked at
the outset for a recusal motion if one were planned, Boudin and
Hirschkop said they were satisfied with his assignment to the
case. That attitude was soon belied by a campaign of harassment
that took place in and out of the courtroom.
During the summer of 1979, court sessions were held for about
three weeks in Los Angeles, where Richey scheduled testimony on
the Scientologists' motion to suppress evidence seized by the
FBI in its 1977 raids of the church's headquarters. The
thousands of documents seized in those raids constituted the
core of the evidence against the alleged conspirators. The
hearings had been moved to Los Angeles to accommodate the
Scientologists' witnesses.
Prior to his departure for Los Angeles, Richey received several
death threats. The judge has never publicly alleged that those
threats came from Scientologists and has said they were
unrelated to the case, but he flew to California escorted by
two federal marshals, and elaborate security precautions were
implemented at the federal courthouse in downtown Los Angeles.
During the hearings, defense lawyers repeatedly interrupted the
proceedings with objections, motions and audible commentary,
including insults to the judge. For example, Hirschkop and
other counsel repeatedly and loudly ordered co-counsel to place
adverse evidentiary rulings in a mythical "error bad." On
several occasions, Hirschkop accused Richey of lying. At times,
Richey left the bench and walked out rather than hold defense
counsel in contempt. Only once, at a later hearing, did the
judge seem to boil over: speaking to Hirschkop, Richey said, "I
want to tell you right here and now, I resent it because I have
done nothing to hurt you or your clients. And this record is
replete with insults and everything else, when I have not done
it to you and don't intend to." Banoun, the prosecutor, says
Richey was too accommodating. "He should never have tolerated
such behavior, " Banoun says.
Hirschkop claims that he was the one who was insulted. "Richey
showed contempt for me," Hirschkop says, recalling the time
when, he claims, Richey tried to "force-feed" him French fries
in court. (Banoun says the judge simply offered all the counsel
some French fries he had not finished at lunch.) "I called
Banoun a liar," Hirschkop continues, "and the judge admonished
me. But Banoun could insult me with impunity." Banoun denies
that this was true. Hirschkop concedes that he frequently
became "heated" in his dealings with Judge Richey but says, "I
never called him dirty names."
In September 1979, after the Los Angeles hearings, Richey
denied the Scientologists' motion to suppress the evidence
seized by the FBI. The defendants eventually entered into a
stipulation of facts, which amounted to an admission of the
principal charges against them, and waived a jury trial. In
return, the government agreed to drop 23 of its 24 criminal
counts.
Judge Richey explicitly warned the Scientologists that the
stipulation was likely to result in their conviction: he
subsequently conducted his own review of the evidence, which he
said was "overwhelming evidence of guilt," and on October 26,
he convicted all nine. On December 6, two days before they were
to be sentenced, a recusal motion against Richey was filed.
In this recusal motion, Boudin and Hirschkop again took the
extraordinary position that Richey's response to their
courtroom tactics and to the threats showed that Richey was
prejudiced against Scientologists. For example, without saying
that the death threats were made by Scientologists, Hirschkop
said that "upon information and belief, the security in Los
Angeles was related to the court's apprehension with regard to
the defendants in this case or their church," adding that "it
is impossible to imagine a stronger --or more clearly
'extra-judicial' --source of bias than fear for one's life or
wellbeing."
Whatever its merits, the recusal motion was patently defective
in at least two technical respects. The judicial recusal
statute requires a "timely" motion supported by an affidavit
signed by a "party." This motion was filed four months after
the events complained of-- and after nearly 120 defense motions
had been resolved against the Scientologists --and was
supported by Hirschkop's affidavit, not one of the defendants.
("I should have filed it much sooner," Hirschkop concedes.
"Richey was grossly prejudiced from the start.") In response to
the motion, Judge Richey defended his security precautions,
noting that "the court may accept reasonable security
precautions without risk of tainting its rulings in the case."
He denied the motion and that same day sentenced the nine
defendants to prison terms of from six months to four to five
years. Eight pulled out checks for $10,000 the day of their
sentencing, and all nine are now free on bail pending appeal.
The denial of their first recusal motion and the sentences,
which the Scientologists regarded as unconscionably harsh, led
to a redoubling of defense efforts to drive Richey from the
case. Six months later, in June 1980, defense counsel were
ready with another recusal motion, more damaging and
threatening to Judge Richey than the first. The groundwork for
that motion had been laid nearly a year before, shortly after
the Los Angeles hearings.
That summer, Thomas Dourian, Judge Richey's official court
reporter who accompanied him to Los Angeles, was approached by
Hirschkop soon after their return to Washington. In a sworn
affidavit filed in response to the second recusal motion,
Dourian says Hirschkop wanted to know if the security
precautions in Los Angeles resulted from Richey's fear of
Scientologists. In the affidavit Dourian swore he denied that
the judge was afraid but confirmed that before leaving
Washington, the judge and his wife and two sons had received
two death threats.
Soon after this encounter, in December 1979, a Scientology
lawyer hired Richard Bast, a private detective who had worked
for Hirschkop several years before, to investigate Judge
Richey's security precautions. Bast's fee: $321,000 plus
expenses. One of Bast's first steps was to infiltrate Richey's
inner circle at the courthouse. In the spring of 1980, a few
months after the Scientologists' sentencing, Fred Cain, a Bast
employee and retired police officer, approached James Perry,
one of two U.S. marshals who had accompanied Richey to Los
Angeles. Cain explained to Perry that he had been retained by a
European industrialist whose daughter had committed suicide,
allegedly as a result of her involvement with the Church of
Scientology, and that his assignment was to uncover information
that could be damaging to the church. According to Bast, Perry
told Cain that he wanted to write a book on the Scientology
case, and Bast offered him a $2,000 advance. Bast says that
Perry took the money, and they agreed to work together.
The evening of May 23, Perry and Cain met Dourian, the court
reporter, at his home in Washington. According to Dourian's
affidavit, Cain introduced himself as a private investigator
for International Investigations, Inc., Bast's detective
agency, and told him the same story about the European
industrialist.
Dourian says in his affidavit that he found the story
improbable but that because his home had been burglarized and
he had received threatening phone calls, which he suspected
came from Scientologists, he was curious about what Cain and
Perry were doing. According to the affidavit, Dourian met with
Cain three more times, and each time he was questioned about
Judge Richey. At a meeting at his home on May 31, 1980, Dourian
says he realized that the conversation was being recorded. Cain
had been drinking heavily, Dourian says, and as a result, the
court reporter was able to slip a small tape recorder and three
cassettes out of Cain's pocket. Dourian's last meeting with
Cain was on June 19, when they met with Bast and then dined at
a nearby Pizza Hut. Again, Dourian was asked about Richey, and
the conversation was recorded.
The recordings of Dourian, along with tape-recorded statements
made by Hirschkop -- all collected by Bast -- formed the basis
for the next recusal motion against Judge Richey. The motion,
largely incorporating an earlier recusal motion filed by
Hirschkop, was filed on June 20, 1980, as proceedings were
beginning against the two defendants recently extradited from
Great Britain. For some of the Scientologists' counsel,
however, the recusal strategy had gone too far. There was
apparently opposition within the ranks to these motions and the
way they were prepared. One lawyer, Michael Nussbaum, who
represented two of the defendants, didn't sign the papers and
withdrew as trial counsel.
The affidavit in support of this motion was filed by Morris
Budlong, one of the extradited defendants, after he listened to
various tapes and spoke to Hirschkop. Among the prejudicial
remarks that Budlong attributed to Judge Richey were: that
Richey's death threats emanated from Scientologists; that Jim
Jones and Scientologists were "all the same"; that it would be
a "feather in his hat" to convict the Scientologists; and that
Richey had told another judge that Scientologists were
spreading rumors about him as part of a "plot" to discredit
him. A cryptic footnote to the affidavit declined to provide
details of the alleged rumors about Richey, citing "respect for
the court as an institution." But Hirschkop and other defense
counsel knew the details of the plot Richey alluded to. They
had gotten them from Bast, who says he had combed the Los
Angeles area for information about Judge Richey's personal
habits, interviewing motel and restaurant employees and making
videotapes and recordings. The information not revealed in the
motion was taken by Bast to political columnist Jack Anderson.
The central figure in bast's story was a self-professed Los
Angeles prostitute who worked the Brentwood Holiday Inn, the
motel where Richey stayed during the Los Angeles hearings. In a
video recording shown to Gary Cohn, a reporter for Anderson,
the prostitute recalled "in titillating detail," according to
Cohn, an encounter with Judge Richey at the motel and his
procurement of her services. According to Cohn, Bast also
showed results of lie detector tests conducted by Cain to
demonstrate that the prostitute was telling the truth; a tape
recording of Perry, the U.S. marshal, claiming Judge Richey
said, "Let's go get a woman"; and a tape recording of Dourian,
the court reporter, saying Richey "was always picking up girls."
Cohn says that he was initially skeptical of the story because
he was aware that Bast was employed by the Scientologists. But
he says he had often worked with Bast and trusted him. He says
he considered but rejected the possibility that the prostitute
was herself a Scientologist, planted to entrap the Judge. Bast
says only that his discovery of the prostitute was
"accidental," that he paid her $1,200, that she is not a
Scientologist and that she is no longer streetwalking.
Cohn wrote the column, which later appeared under Anderson's
by-line, focusing on Bast's investigation and Richey's
procurement of a prostitute. Cohn adds that he is now "not
happy" with the way the column was written. In his affidavit,
Dourian, the court reporter, who has heard the tapes he stole
from Cain's pocket, denies the remarks attributed to him.
Newspapers that subscribe to Anderson's column received the
Judge Richey story around July 11, a week before its release
date of July 18. Some of them balked at running it -- the New
York Daily News decided not to publish it -- and The Washington
Post used it only after extensive conversations with Cohn. Cohn
says he never reached Richey for comment, and although Post
editor Ben Bradlee says he is sure "we did call (Richey) about
the column," no comment from Richey appeared in the Post's
version, either.
On July 16, Richey issued his opinion. Evidently referring to
the upcoming Anderson column, which Richey might have known
about from reporters' calls and messages, Richey characterized
the recusal motion as "this latest effort in the escalating
attack on the court" and found the grounds for the motion to be
"insufficient as a matter of law," resting only on "hearsay,
rumor and gossip."
But, the judge continued, "defendants and their counsel have
engaged in groundless and relentless attacks on this court.
Their motive is transparent. It is an attempt to transform the
trial ... into a trial of this judge." Though he labeled the
attempts to remove him a "classic example" of abuse of the
recusal statutes, he wrote that "the time has come for the
proceedings in this case to proceed on the merits with the
attention of all directed at the real issues in this case." As
a result, Richey withdrew from the case in a state of
exhaustion and near-collapse, according to associates.
On July 18, Jack Anderson's column appeared in newspapers
throughout the country. Five days later, Judge Richey was
hospitalized with exhaustion and pulmonary embolisms. He has
since declined all comment on the case, citing the code of
judicial conduct.
Judge Richey's ordeal may not be over. Hirschkop vows that his
campaign against the judge will continue, and he claims that
the prostitute affair is "only the tip of the iceberg."
Although Hirschkop declines to disclose details, he says if
necessary he will expose additional damaging information
uncovered by Bast.
Apart from the delays, the campaign against Judge Richey has
had negligible legal impact on the proceedings against the
Scientologist defendants. Though an appeal is pending on a
conventional search and seizure question, the convictions of
the first nine stand. Trials of the remaining two defendants
started in late October under Judge Robinson and are still in
progress.
The activities of the Scientologists and their counsel in this
case seem destined only to satisfy a commandment L. Ron Hubbard
once wrote:
"The DEFENSE of anything is UNTENABLE. The only way to defend
anything is to ATTACK, and if you ever forget that, then you
will lose every battle you are ever engaged in, whether it is
in terms of personal conversation, public debate, or a court of
law. NEVER BE INTERESTED IN CHARGES. DO, yourself, much MORE
CHARGING, and you will WIN."
In its July 1980 issue the American Lawyer named Judge Charles
Richey runner-up to the worst District of Columbia federal
district court judge. The lawyer who most vehemently denounced
Richey was one of the Scientologists' defense counsel, and this
same lawyer also referred our reporter to other lawyers who
have represented Church of Scientology defendants. The
reporter, who has since left our staff, says he was unaware of
Scientologists' efforts to discredit and recuse Judge Richey.
Without the lawyer's vehemently derogatory remarks and his
referrals to other "sources," our reporter says he would not
have named Richey in the survey.
BATTLES ON OTHER FRONTS
The Church of Scientology has been involved in almost constant
litigation since its founding nearly 30 years ago. Besides
periodic clashes with the government, the church has filed
scores of suits against the media to inhibit the news coverage
of its activities.
Among the more recent cases involving the church and the media:
Fourteen libel suits have been filed against Paulette Cooper,
New York freelance writer and author of the 1971 book, The
Scandal of Scientology, and her publisher. Church documents
seized in the 1977 Los Angeles raid and made public last year
revealed "Operation Freakout," a campaign of harassment
directed against cooper that included death threats, obscene
phone calls, phony letters about her sexual behavior and a
forged bomb threat against the church that resulted in Cooper's
indictment in 1973. The charges against Cooper were dropped in
1975. Cooper has now retaliated with a $55-million suit against
the church.
A 1977 suit against the San Diego Union asked $10,000 in
damages for invasion of privacy from a reporter who had
registered for a Scientology course in order to write a story
about the church. The church offered to drop the suit if plans
to publish the story were dropped, but after the story ran, the
church increased its damage claim to $??,000 and added charges
of fraud and deceit against the paper. The case was dismissed
on summary judgment.
In 1976 the church sued the Clearwater Sun in Florida for $1
million and threatened to sue the St. Petersburg Times for a
series of stories on the church. Scientologists spread rumors
linking Times officials to the CIA, the FBI and the Communist
Party, and harassed reporters. The Sun countersued the church
for abuse of process, and the Times sued for an injunction
barring the church's harassment of its reporters. The church
subsequently dropped its suit against the Sun and never
followed through on its threat to sue the Times. In March 1979
the church sued two New York writers, Jim Siegelman and Flo
Conway, after they criticized Scientology on the "David
Susskind Show" while discussing their book, Snapping. After the
Scientologists' suit against them was dismissed, the pair
countersued, charging the church with malicious prosecution.
The church has lately found itself on the defensive in a flurry
of suits filed against it by disgruntled former church members
and recruits. Currently pending against the church are:
a suit filed October 21 by Lawrence Stifler, a Boston
marathon runner, asking 41.25 million for damages sustained
after he was allegedly physically attacked by a Scientology
recruiter. Stifler says that due to the injury, he may never
run again;
a $16-million suit filed in April by Tonja Burden, a
20-year-old former church member who claims she was deceived
and forced to remain in the church, used as slave labor and
kidnapped after she escaped;
a $21-million suit brought by jazz guitarist Gabor Szabo in
February, accusing the church of embezzlement, kidnapping and
forcing him to undergo a "life repair course";
a class action filed last December by former church staff
member Lavenda Van Schack, seeking $200 million on behalf of
church dropouts. Her suit accuses the church of mind control,
unlawful electronic surveillance and leaking details of her
private life to the media.
Last year, Julie Titchbourne, a former Church of Scientology
member, was awarded 42 million by a Portland, Oregon, jury,
which found that the church's promises of a better life were
fraudulent. The church as subsequently sued four
"deprogrammers" for $2 million collectively, claiming that they
induced Titchbourne to turn against the church.
-- J.B.S.