THE POWER OF TWO
Los Angeles, Ca.
It was an unusual morning on August 31, 2000. The city was
shrouded with clouds. Over Hollywood and Downtown Los Angeles
was a stretch of bright white billowy clouds pierced by
brilliant beams of yellow tinged light. The day had begun on a
wonderful note with the receipt of a list of breath-taking
sanctions and other punitive orders against Samuel D. Rosen,
Esq., and Moxon & Kobrin. It is an excellent example of
"crim-mind" in the Church of Scientology: accuse others of what
you are engaging in yourself. By 8:30 a.m., Keith Henson was
appearing with my attorney in the scientology-OSA solicited,
sponsored and perjurious case of Hurtado v. Berry. Meanwhile, I
was appearing outside the scientology-OSA and RTC offices at
6331 Hollywood Boulevard. I was bearing glad tidings of joy
with a picket sign reading, " RTC Squirrels! Compare old and
new books. www.xenu.net" and on the reverse, "Scientology:
Makes the able into the addled. www.xenu.net." It was a day for
RTC and OSA to remember.
I was strolling the sidewalk outside the OSA and RTC offices.
Across the street, behind the new Sea Organization building, a
group of very young teenagers (aged approx. 12-15 years) were
doing hard construction labor under a woman's direction. Why
should enterprises with religious facades, or even legitimate
churches, be exempted from the child labor, minimum wage and
other laws? Why especially scientology where the words
"religious" and "volunteer" are mutually exclusive? Passers-by
were chatting with me and some were accepting Xenu flyers. OSA
responded by handing out a new and as defamatory as their
previous DA leaflet on me. When I received a copy I read it and
looked up and into the surveillance camera while I laughed
heartily. Its analysis and rebuttal will be the subject of a
separate letter for your reading pleasure, and by the same
token for scientology's displeasure. How and why OSA constantly
aggravates its potential liability to me, along with Moxon &
Kobrin, Paquette, Abelson, Wager, Ingram, Hurtado and others, I
shall never understand. A Wall Street Journal editorial
commented that Judge Whyte had, "stood copyright law on its
head," in the RTC v. Henson case. Scientology has the
para-legals directing the lawyers!
At about 10:00 a.m. Keith Henson arrived. He was armed with his
usual picket sign and a heavy supply of Xenu flyers. He was
going to carry his message to the growing audience. I, however,
drove off to "big blue" with another "tail" following me. Like
last night's two tails, before I reached my destination I had
managed to lose them. I entered L. Ron Hubbard Way from the
Sunset Boulevard end and I strolled down the American St. Hill
side of the street towards Fountain Avenue. In the two to three
minutes that I took to reach Fountain, Base Security had L. Ron
Hubbard Way "clear", at least of OTs, BTs and Clusters, but not
of SPs! They kept it that way for the next two hours. (God only
knows why! Well, perhaps DM too, although he certainly has
little or nothing in common with the Deity.)
I was principally stationed on the very southwest corner of
Fountain and L. Ron Hubbard Way, just down from the PAC Base
cafeteria. Eleven overt security personal kept me, my paper
sign and my flyers under constant scrutiny. The usual "coverts"
could occasionally be seen slipping back behind a pillar or
curtain with cameras in hand. None of them realized that I had
our new, and soon to be unveiled EV equipment with me. It will
be such a nightmare for the clams after it debuts in all of its
colorful splendor.
Despite the solitude of "Clear Street", the business of
scientology kept grinding down to 2 p.m. and "stats". Staffers
and Publics were kept off L.Ron Hubbard Way. They had to file
down the alleyway between AOLA and Bridge, when given the "all
clear" from security. Passers-by received Xenu flyers. Base
security quickly talked them off the recipients and substituted
the new DA flyer on me. Not smart, guys! By arrangement I
called Keith Henson at noon. There was no answer for twenty
minutes. "Oh Gaud," I thought. Maybe they have kidnapped Keith
now. After all, the goons had threatened to kidnap his
daughter. With that I wandered back up L. Ron Hubbard Way, my
own little honor patrol following along on both sides of the
street, and drove back to the L. Ron Hubbard Life Exhibition
Building, headquarters of the dreaded OSA. As my client, former
OSA lawyer Joe Yanny once put it. "What nice, peaceful and law
abiding church needs an intelligence organization anyway?"
Ironically, the L. Ron Hubbard Life Exhibition Building is
opposite the Museum of Death in Hollywood. It was on that
corner that I found Keith Henson. Immediately I saw why he had
not answered my cell phone calls. He was having far too much
fun surrounded by a throng of passers-by. A Spanish-language
radio station was interviewing him as he handed out Xenu flyers
and bantered with the good people. Keith's shadow, in the form
of Ed Richardson, was videotaping the busy little scene.
Initially, I carried the same picket sign as I had all morning.
Then I noticed the RTC/OSA surveillance cameras swiveling and
monitoring our every move. "Aha! Direct feed video. We are
Poodle Boy's afternoon soap opera, again. "He must be having
quite a giggle over our popularity. In contrast to the low
popularity of Scientology with its neighbours," I mused.
Wanting to give the security camera audience some variety, I
changed picket signs. Now I carried a sign which read on the
one side "Scientology: Church of Fair Game" and on the other
side "LRH died on Psych Drugs". In that regard, it amazes me
that every day at least several people come up and mention L.
Ron Hubbard's fascination with Alistair Crowley and his Black
Magic work with Jack Parsons in Pasadena in the late 1940s.
Today a passer-by even talked of Hubbard's plagiarism in his
writings.
Meanwhile, opposite our soap-box-corner stood the might of RTC
and OSA. One solitary SO staffer was posted on the corner. All
staffers were slinking through the Invar Street side door.
William Drescher, an OSA lawyer, wandered through the main
entrance. In 1992 he testified that scientology paid him over
$500,000 per year. Another one time rising OSA legal star,
Elliot Abelson, also walked by. He had foolishly just
associated into the Hurtado v. Berry case as co-counsel with
another fallen scientology legal star, Rick Moxon. Further up
Ivar Street was a SUV surveillance vehicle. Passers-by seemed
amused at The Power of Two to clear the scientology riff raff
off the streets of Hollywood. As we ran out of Xenu flyers we
called it a day, at 1:15 p.m. for Keith Henson to picket some
more at Hemet and for me to associate with more SPs and 1:1s.
Thus, RTC/OSA had another morning to remember, until the next
time.
To Be Continued..
ARC
Graham Berry