On Fri, 07 Mar 2003 10:52:24 GMT, "Susan" <enlightened10056@attbi.com>
wrote:
>Keith Henson wrote:
snip
>> I should add, slitherin, that there is now no question in Tom
>> Klemesrud's mind that he was dosed with chloral hydrate that evening.
>> The drug produces a really specific kind of hangover and distinctive
>> after taste. Tom posted a few weeks ago that chloral hydrate was used
>> on him recently. He recognized the aftertaste and hangover from Jan.
>> 14, 1995 and (like the first time) it failed to put him to sleep.
>>
>> Dosing a person with a schedule 4 drug in the course of committing
>> another crime will (in theory) get you up to 40 years in the prison
>> under federal laws.
>>
>> But as Tom was told, and as I was told by agent Eric Pham, the FBI
>> won't investigate scientology because of some directive that prevent
>> them from investigating "religions."* The FBI has been almost totally
>> unresponsive to a number of reported major crimes in this business.
>>
>> Most of us have concluded the FBI is either useless, influenced by the
>> cult, or they just don't want to "lift the tail of a skunk"--much like
>> the effect the mafia had on the FBI during Hoover's long reign.
>>
>> You might also note that you can't get cops interested in this matter
>> now because it is beyond the statue of limitations.
>>
>> Keith Henson
>>
>> *This directive might have been changed after 9/11.
>Keith,
>
>Don't you think that the FDA would be obliged to follow up on the abuse
>of a schedule 4 drug?
I doubt they are obligated to do anything, and in my experience are in so much fear of scientology litigation they will not consider taking a complaint.
>Were they contacted?
No, they were not contacted. For one thing, until his recent exposure to chloral hydrate in a medical setting, Tom only had my speculation that he had been dosed with the cult's favorite sedative. (Read about the cult using chloral hydrate in the Lisa McPherson case.)
Now it is well beyond the statue of limitations even if some law enforcement agency had the balls.
The Ms Bloodybutt events were endlessly fascinating because while I had no doubt they had happened just as reported they made *no* sense.
It was only in the last two years or less, when there was a post about it, that the probable object of this bizarre business became understandable. Even then you have to embrace cult-think to analyze it.
Tom was a long term enemy of scientology. I have never fully understood what he did prior to 1995, but he had been involved in something related to the scieno cult that had him in contact with the FBI and IRS agents for a long time. In addition, he was Dennis Erlich's ISP and had defied cult lawyer Thomas Small when ordered to disconnect Dennis.
The apparent goal of the blood attack was to have Tom pass out from being dosed with chloral hydrate and wake up with an apartments full of cops with blood stains all over the place (5 feet up on the bathroom walls). Despite the fact there would have been no body to go with the blood, do any of my readers doubt Tom would have spent a considerable time in jail while the cops ripped out his plumbing trying to figure out what he had done with the body?
Support.com (where Dennis was posting) would have been off the net for ghod knows how long, and an old enemy would have been put in his place, a "big win" for the cult.
Scientology takes LRH's directives literally. When LRH said to make up "sex blood crimes" and even wrote about a blood attack in detail in one of the Mission Earth books, the cult leader(s) took this direction.
Worse, had Tom been more sensitive to the effects of chloral hydrate (as Lisa was) it would have worked. (Had he been really sensitive, he would have *died*.) But because Tom didn't pass out and did call 911 the operation went off the rails. If DM had not been involved from the start, he was involved in cleaning up the mess and locating -AB-, Thomas Rummelhart.
See the post here for the full story less the recent chloral hydrate details.
http://groups.google.ca/groups?selm=3cce73c4.254944505%40news2.lightlink.com&oe=UTF-8&output=gplain
Keith Henson
PS. There are indications a number of law enforcement people knew *exactly* what had gone down in the blood attack, including Tom being dosed with chloral hydrate. The law enforcement people didn't want to get involved with investigating scientology, and since they were the only ones who knew the full story, indications are they just hushed it up.
Where the cult is concerned, the government provides no protection at all.