KILLER: "SCIENTOLOGISTS TALKED ME OUT OF NEEDED HELP"
DRAPER -- Gary Don Beals says he might not have murdered his
father and tried to kill his mother if not for influence by
the Church[sic] of Scientology. Beals told the Utah Board of
Pardons Friday that church[sic] members talked him out of getting [help.]
"They didn't believe in therapy," Beals said.
The church[sic] was also allegedly bleeding Beals dry of cash.
Beals contributed heavily to the church[sic] and went "beyond
Scientology is a new-age religion[sic] founded by science-fiction
writer L. Ron Hubbard. The church[sic] believes in self-healing
and self-help via pseudo-psychological methods.
But by the time Beals killed his father -- he had been hearing
voices for about two years -- he probably needed the help of
a professional.
The crime occurred March 5, 1989 at the home of Beals' parents
in Taylorsville. While urging their 32-year-old son to seek
counseling, he went berserk.
Getting a butcher knife from the kitchen, he stabbed his mother,
Lawana Beals, 51, several times.
When Beal's father, Arthur Don Beals, 55, tried to intervene,
Beals stabbed him several times. His mother grabbed a baseball
bat and struck Gary in the head several times to no avail.
When the baseball bat failed to stop Beals, Mrs. Beals fled
the home to call police. Gary then shot his father to death
with a .38-caliber handgun.
Beals said he had been carrying the gun with him all day because
he believed ``people'' were after him.
"If I wouldn't have got involved with Scientology, I wouldn't
have committed this crime," Beals told the parole board.
Charged with first-degree murder and attempted murder, Beals
later pleaded "guilty but mentally ill" to manslaughter and
was sentenced to 1 to 15 years in prison.
Beals first spent a year at the Utah State Hospital. After receiving
the maximum benefit possible there, Beals was transferred to
the Utah State Prison, where he has been about four months.
Letters to the parole board indicate Beals' mother has forgiven
him, Mr. Haun said. She hopes he will come live with her when
he is paroled.
The state hospital believes Beals can function in the community
if he takes his medication and receives mental health therapy,
Mr. Haun said.
But he wants Beals to spend another couple of years in prison
to see how he adjusts. Beals will appear again before the board
in January 1994.
Go Back
to Shy David's Scientology Page.
Salt Lake Tribune
26.1.1992
By Stephen Hunt