From: Xenu <Xenu_member@newsguy.com>
Date: 29 Jun 2000 01:13:06 -0700
Message-ID: <8jf0ei$1nm7@drn.newsguy.com>
In the latest STERN it is described that Antje Victore, the
Scientologist who was granted asylum in the US was actually on
the run from the taxes (DM 13100,51) and was afraid to end in
jail like her former employer Karl-Erich Heilig. To get asylum,
she asked Scientologist companies to send her letters (in
english!) that they couldn't hire her "because she is a
Scientologist". (However she had never actually tried to get a
job there)
Two german former Scientologists who were involved in this
operation spilled the beans.
Xenu
From: German_Scn_News <german_scn_news@hotmail.com>
Subject: See Miscavige Run. Run, Miscavige, run.
Date: Thu, 29 Jun 2000 11:40:03 -0400
Message-ID: <Pine.LNX.3.96.1000629113647.120A-100000@darkstar.zippy>
German Scientologist woman surreptitiously obtained asylum in
the USA with counterfeit documents
Hamburg, Germany June 29, 2000
stern, G+J
Hamburg (ots) The Scientology sect organization obtained
asylum in the USA for one of its German members three
years ago using a deceptive bluff. That is being reported
upon by the Hamburg Stern magazine in its Thursday
morning edition. In 1997, Scientologist Antje Victore, 42
years old at the time, made the assertion before an
immigration court in Florida that she was being persecuted
because of her religion, and she received - the only German
to ever have done so - asylum in the United States. At the
time, Hollywood greats like Oliver Stone, Dustin Hoffman
and Goldie Hawn backed Victore and had protested
alleged religious persecution of Scientologists to the
German Federal Chancellor of the time, Helmut Kohl.
The fact of the matter, according to research by Stern, is
that unpaid back taxes in Germany were the background of
Victore's application for asylum. She was assisted by the
chief (at the time) of the OSA, which is the sect's internal
intelligence agency. Victore submitted to the U.S. court
letters of rejection from German company executives which
gave her membership in Scientology as the reason for her
rejection. The U.S. court was not told, however, that the
authors of the letters were Scientologists.
Two former Scientologists have verified in sworn testimony
for Stern magazine that they had been asked by Antje
Victore to write such letters, and as a favor to a fellow
Scientologist, had actually done so in Fall 1996 and then
sent the letters to her. In fact, Victore had never put in an
application to work with them. Five of these letters which
are bogus, according to the authors, have been viewed by
Stern magazine.
This advance announcement may be freely published if
"Stern" is given as the source
ots Originaltext: stern
Im Internet recherchierbar: http://recherche.newsaktuell.de
Direct inquiries to Stern editor Michael Stoessinger
From: German_Scn_News <german_scn_news@hotmail.com>
Subject: NEWS: Asylum Scam - the Stern article
Date: Thu, 29 Jun 2000 17:55:11 -0400
Message-ID: <Pine.LNX.3.96.1000629175316.114A-100000@darkstar.zippy>
[this article is also webbed at http://cisar.org/000629c.htm]
The Big Bluff
In 1997, Antje Victore was the first German to receive
asylum in the USA as a Scientologist. Stern research
proves: it was a fraud.
Hamburg, Germany
June 29, 2000
Stern magazine
First the retirees flocked to Clearwater. Then the
Scientologists. Since then the sunny, small city in Florida,
situated on the warm-watered Gulf of Mexico, has become
one of the most bizarre places in America.
Young people in uniform stream busily through the once
sleepy downtown, security guard patrol with video cameras
and earsets, surveillance cameras probe the
Scientology-owned buildings and the streets around them.
About 5,000 adherents of the "Church of Scientology,"
judged to be a profit-oriented corporation in Germany, live
here; daily, according to sect statements, up to 2,000 more
come from all over the world daily to obtain costly courses
in the Mecca of the "Thetans." "Here," said the German
Scientologist Antje Victore defiantly, "I can live like any
other person."
She said she could not do that in her homeland. The
45-year-old woman, who has earned her money by being,
among other things, a jockey, is the first and, so far, the
only German to enjoy political asylum in the United States.
In 1997, her case raised eyebrows around the world and
hampered German-American relations.
Shortly before the New York Times distributed the news
about the Victore affair, Federal Minister Klaus Kinkel was
still being blamed by Washington for alleged discrimination
against Scientologists in Germany. The Kohl administration
was completely astonished. "We implore you to put an end
to the shameful, organized persecution," wrote 34
American celebrities - among them Dustin Hoffman, Goldie
Hawn and producer Oliver Stone - in an open letter to the
CDU Chancellor.
The Scientologist woman was said to have submitted
"thousands of documents" to the immigration officials at the
time which supposedly proved that she had been
persecuted in Germany. They included "newspaper articles
and official forms which asked for religious affiliation," said
Victore over the telephone; she was not ready to meet for
an interview. Today she works for a car rental agency.
"Stern" research now shows that the spectacular
Scientology asylum case was staged. No trace of "religious
persecution." The lady simply had money problems, as her
letters show. "On April 1, I need - and it has to be certified
received in cash in Berlin - DM 13,100.51. Please tell me
what is wrong now and whether you will eventually know
who could invest (settle) the tax amounts for me," she faxed
on March 23, 1996 to a [Scientology] member. Six months
later she wrote to her female friend Dagmar H. (full name is
known to the editors), who was a Scientologist of the
highest trained rank at the time, an "Operating Thetan 8":
"Today I received a forfeiture notice from the Schoenberg
Revenue Office. The thing with the taxes is slowly getting
very hot. I don't know any more. Please help me Dagmar.
What should I do?"
Victore clung to the hope that she would still come up with
the money for her tax debts. She took part in capital
investment companies with nice-sounding names that
promised fabulous returns, like Jackson Services and
Lincoln Limited. What she didn't know yet: she was dealing
with a fraudulent business to which she had been referred
by Swiss Scientologist Erwin Dossenbach. She faxed him
repeatedly, demanding and pleading for her money back.
She was repeatedly consoled. The Swiss district attorney
has been investigating Dossenbach since the mid 1990s and
accused him of investment fraud. The amount of damage in
the dubious deals with lively Scientology participation: a
total of about ten million franks.
That also included the money on which Antje was waiting
in vain. Her tax debts in Germany bore down on her more
and more from month to month and her U.S. visa,
extended multiple times, was running out soon. In letters to
Dagmar H., Victore began to talk more about her asylum
application. She said she needed "urgently all available
entheta articles from this year." By that she meant press
reports which discussed Scientology in a critical manner
and in which the organization was accused of having
totalitarian strategies. "Whatever you can find, Dagmar. I
am supposed to provide more 'proof' that is is really so bad
in Germany. You've told me before that you could deliver
enough 'stuff' to me," she implored her friend.
The stuff was delivered - by the Scientology intelligence
agency, OSA, in the German center of the
psycho-corporation in Hamburg. But that was not enough
to convince Immigration Judge Rex J. Ford in Tampa,
Florida. Her first application was refused in Summer 1996.
"Solely and alone, what the government does is decisive.
Only those sort of things are useful. Unfortunately I have
too little of that, namely only an interview with Bluem in
Spiegel," she complained. I don't want to land in prison like
Karl-Erich. But that is exactly what is going to happen if I
can't pay!"
Karl-Erich is a member of Scientology who was convicted
by the state attorney's office for tax evasion. Antje Victore
had built up an advertising company with in Schwaan, near
Rostock, in the beginning of the 1990s. When the law
caught up with him and his partner, Victore took over
management of the company, but could not pay income,
business or sales tax for 1993: exactly the 13,100.51
marks which she later was asking other Scientologists for.
"OSA also had a very real interest in getting Antje's
application for asylum approved so she could stay in the
States," said Jens Billerbeck, who was in close contact with
Victore at the time, but has since then left Scientology.
"They were trying to prevent her from appearing as a
witness in the trial against her former company chief." The
boss, at the time, of the international Scientology
intelligence service, Kurt Weiland, was concerned that she
could spill delicate details about the psycho-business and
also about the German Scientology Center. "Antje knew a
lot."
All the more forcefully Weiland effected the "handling" of
the problem. Billerbeck: "Antje proudly reported to me that
Weiland and an OSA attorney worked on the method of
procedure personally in her asylum proceedings." The
strategy to convince the Immigration Judge, was as tricky
as it was effective: German Scientologist who have a
business, authored letters to Antje Victore in which it was
pretended that she had put in for a position with them. With
"deep regret" they rejected Victore because of her
membership in Scientology.
"Since the attacks of the press are also directed against
companies which employ Scientologists, it is anticipated
that the revelation of this membership in a religion would be
disadvantageous to a company," was in that letter. Other
"rejections" were similarly founded. The "restrictive politics"
of the state governments in Munich and Berlin were
repeatedly, whereby it was said that Scientologists were
not allowed to work in public institutions and were
excluded from all agreements and contracts. "Under these
conditions I cannot employ you; I would risk discrimination
and business loss," wrote one of the businesswomen.
The company chiefs glibly kept quiet about their
membership in Scientology. They were to let on to the U.S.
immigration judge only that "in Germany many
Scientologists are unemployed, and that it was very difficult
for practicing Scientologists in Germany to lead a normal
life." In her telephone discussion with the "Stern," Victore
dodged the question about these letters: she said it was
absolutely insignificant whether the letters were personally
directed to her - for the application for asylum the proof of
general persecution was decisive, "it was not about me."
Jens Billerbeck and Dagmar H., who have left the
[Scientology] organization since then, have verified for
"Stern" magazine in sworn testimony that they were asked
for such letters by Antje Victore and, as a favor to a fellow
Scientologist, they wrote and sent her the letters. Actually,
Victore had never put in an application with them. On
October 10, 1996, Victore faxed Billerbeck several such
letters which he was supposed to use as a model. She
would be super happy if he would be able to write her the
letter in English, she told him. She put the word "letter" in
quotation marks. "Stern" magazine has a copy of five such
faked company letters.
The deceptive bluff was a success. When the "asylum case"
was won the end of February 1997, Victore sent
Billerbeck a letter of praise typical for Scientology, of
which "Stern" has a copy: It said that "for the first time in
history" a German citizen had obtained political asylum in
the USA. Billerbeck: "On the telephone she explicitly asked
me not to tell anyone about the asylum decision. The
decision in court was to be published by Scientology itself
at an opportune moment. This was the express wish of
OSA." The sensation was printed in the New York Times
in early November. The woman was said to have "clearly
and convincingly" demonstrated that her fear of persecution
on account of her belief had been founded, announced
Weiland.
When Federal President Johannes Rau was in Washington
recently, he had to defend himself anew from harsh
criticism: the U.S. Trade Representative Charlene
Barshevsky accused Germany of discriminating against the
award of public contracts to companies who did not want
to sign a "sect filter" statement in which they distanced
themselves from the organization.
As if that were one of the "pieces of evidence" in the
Victore asylum case.
Christine Kruttschnitt
Rainer Nuebel
fsJeannette Schweitzer
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