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Re: Paper for upcoming conference of Society for the Scientific Study of
Religion: "CAN, We Hardly Knew Ye: Sex, Drugs, Deprogrammers' Kickbacks, and
Corporate Crime in the (Old) Cult Awareness Network." Anson Shupe,
Indiana-Purdue University, Fort Wayne, Kendrick Moxon, and Susan E. Darnell
shupe@ipfw.edu
Apparently still fearing the reputation of the original CAN and desiring to
divert researchers from the legal record that points to Scientology's
illegal use of the court system to destroy CAN and attack its leaders,
Scientologist Kendrick Moxon, working with cult apologist Ansun Shupe is now
driven to further justify Scientology's conduct in regard to that destruction.
Obviously, the original Cult Awareness Network is not now able to counter
this revisionist history writing, which Moxon, no doubt, hopes will find a
place in mainstream intellectual thought. Since exclusive control of CAN's
files and corporate records passed to Scientologist Gary Beeny a few years
back, CAN will likely not be able to dispute any misrepresentations and out
of context statements that Moxon and Shupe present as part of their paper.
Despite gleeful howls from Scientologists a few years back with the passage
of CAN's files to Beeny that criminal charges would likely be forthcoming
based on evidence that would be found in those files, no such event has, of
course, come to pass. Instead, Moxon et al are reduced to Scientology's
infamous dead agenting techniques such as the creation of the anti-CAN paper
scheduled to be presented under the auspices of the Society for the
Scientific Study of Religion.
Unfortunately defamation law in the United States give little support to
public figures who have debated issues in the media, as have CAN officials.
The public figure standard is much higher than the standard a private person
must meet to prevail for defamation, which is only that a statement is
false. Merely proving, for example, that a statement by Moxon or Shupe is
false does not permit successful action by the public figure injured by the
comment. False statements, though false, are not actionable if the
publisher of the false statements subjectively believes the statements are
true or can make a strong argument that he or she held that belief at the
time of publication. In practice, this subjective belief standard, rather
than a reasonable person standard, protects the wrongdoer who can
convincingly profess that the statements, even if false, were sincerely
held at the time made, even if based on hearsay or a questionable source.
It is indeed distressing that the Society for the Scientific Study of
Religion finds the presentation of a paper with such an inflammatory title
as the Moxon-Shupe paper (see below) as advancing any scholarly and academic
aims, and is willing to let itself be used as a forum for a personal
vendetta against an organization against whom no criminal charges were ever
brought concerning the corporation or its officers as fiduciaries of that
corporation. One would think the Society could make better use of its
program than to support attacks on an organization that is engaged in no
activities related to the topic of new religions, and has not been so
engaged for over half a decade. For example, a scholarly paper on the
tragic events surrounding the deaths of approximately a thousand cult
members in Uganda would surely seem more timely and a more significant a
contribution to scholarly literature. Or, perhaps, a discussion of the
variety of approaches among European governments toward cults and new
religions. Or, a paper on whether the State of Florida infringed on
constitutional rights involving religion in bringing criminal charges,
ultimately dropped, against the Church of Scientology regarding the death of
Lisa McPherson, who died under Scientology control after religious
treatment at the hands of Scientology agents.
Cyntha Kisser
Former Director
Friday, 8:30-10:00 Ballroom B
New Religious Movements, Cults, and Anti-Cults
"CAN, We Hardly Knew Ye: Sex, Drugs, Deprogrammers' Kickbacks, and
Corporate Crime in the (Old) Cult Awareness Network." Anson Shupe,
Indiana-Purdue University, Fort Wayne, Kendrick Moxon, and Susan E. Darnell
shupe@ipfw.edu
"Personality and Religiousness in Youth Members of 'The Family': A New
Religious Movement." Douglas M. Sell, University of Nebraska Medical
Center, dsell@unmc.edu
"Correlates of Adolescent Sexual Activity in 'The Family". Nancy R. Vogt
and H. Newton Malony, Fuller Theological Seminary malony@fuller.edu
From the desk of Steve Hassan, author of the critically acclaimed new
book, Releasing the Bonds: Empowering People to Think for Themselves
(Freedom of Mind Press, 2000) Permission is granted to post this Freedom
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