'Destroy him utterly' Keith Henson, American activist on the
run in Canada, thinks the controversial Church of
Scientology has made him fair game for dirty tricks M-J
Milloy
Looking back, maybe the joke about the "Tom Cruise Missile"
wasn't such a good idea.
That online jest, made last year by Keith Henson, a peaceful
if persistent critic of the controversial Church of
Scientology, has led to his being found guilty of
"intimidating a religion," and now on the run from the U.S.,
hiding out in plain sight in Oakville, a Toronto suburb,
where he plans on claiming political-refugee status.
His case has shone a light on Scientology, a vaguely
well-known organization founded by a middling
science-fiction writer that maintains humans are tainted
with the spirits of space aliens and that critics claim is
simply a global scam to separate the needy from their money.
Like Waco and Jonestown, this case raises issues of how far
freedom of religion goes and just how far a so-called
religion can go to protect itself and its members from its
dissidents.
"It's not that I care one way or the other about their
beliefs," said Henson this week just after news of his
flight hit the net. "If they want to believe in space
cooties, galactic overlords or virgin birth, that's their
problem. The problem is when they viciously violate my right
to free speech."
***
Keith Henson arrived at the place he calls Gold Base almost
by accident.
Last May, the fiftysomething computer engineer from Silicon
Valley was passing through the small village of Hemet,
California, east of Los Angeles, and decided to check out
Scientology's Golden Era film studios. "They acted so guilty
when I started picketing - papering over the windows, going
undercover, buying thousands of plants to block the view -
that I stayed."
For Henson, semiprofessional agitator and longtime
Scientology foe, July 8, 2000, unfolded like many others:
some picketing of Golden Era, then onto the internet to post
his activities.
For Henson and many anti-Scientologists, the internet is not
just a means to get their word out but a symbol and catalyst
of their fight. In 1995 when a Scientologist tried to shut
down the newsgroup alt.religion.scientology because it had
become a hangout for critics and ex-Scientologists who had a
nasty habit, to current Scientologists, of posting
top-secret - and, for Scientologists, very expensive to
obtain - internal documents.
"I had a 25-year history of being concerned with
human-rights problems, like civil rights and Vietnam," said
Henson. Trying to shut down the newsgroup "was the wake-up
call for all of us. Most of the people now involved came in
then. It was like they were a gang of thugs riding into town
and burning down the newspaper. It got the attention of a
lot of people."
But that day, Henson went a bit further than usual, taking
on a faux-Austin Powers tone, posting the GPS co-ordinates
for various landmarks on Gold Base, and ending up with the
now infamous threat: The Tom Cruise Missile that said the
only way to "get clear of the Scientology mess is to
'destroy them utterly.'"
***
Across the country, in the slightly seedy town of
Clearwater, Florida, none of this surprises Stacy Brooks.
Brooks, head of the anti-Scientologist group The Lisa
McPherson Trust, is sitting in a dingy office on the main
street of Clearwater, which is ground zero to Scientology's
push to grow and expand. In 1975, after a number of years at
sea battling the American IRS over tax matters, Scientology
founder L. Ron Hubbard came aground in Clearwater. Since
then, the group has bought up much of the private property
of the town, in the hopes of founding the first Scientology
community.
"Most people are very afraid of Scientology and what they're
doing," says Brooks. "Downtown Clearwater is a ghost town,
because no one wants to be here. The Scientologists are very
frightening."
As the head of the trust - named after a Scientologist who
died in controversial circumstances while under the care of
the organization - Brooks has seen both sides now. "I was in
Scientology myself and had been at a really high level," she
says, "and I know what a fraud it is."
She and her husband left the organization in 1989 - "or
should I say we escaped" - but didn't start speaking out
until 1993, after a 1991 Time magazine cover exposé shone a
harsh light on the workings of Scientology, calling it "the
cult of greed."
After Brooks met with two attorneys planning to sue
Scientology, she says she became a target.
Scientology "had parabolic mics on our windows, trying to
get us evicted. They poisoned one of my cats. They sent
people trying to commit us as insane. Scientology had us
under surveillance, monitoring our conversations, going
through our trash," she charges.
"I had no idea, even being in the church, what they were
capable of doing. We were fair game."
Brooks is not alone. In the past, Scientology has devoted
not a small percentage of its vast resources to silence its
critics; they use lawsuits, rumour and insult to harass or
bankrupt.
In 1995, Freedom, a Scientology publication, called the Cult
Awareness Network, a leading anti-Scientology group, "The
Serpent of Hatred, Intolerance, Violence and Death" and its
head, Cynthia Kisser, the "mother of the serpent." The
publication alleged she had previously been a stripper,
according to a 1999 article in the New Times L.A.
alt-weekly. In 1996, CAN went bankrupt from lawsuits filed
by Scientology, and is now controlled by the organization.
Richard Behar, the author of the Time story that blew the
lid off many of Scientology's practices, described in a
sidebar to that story the tricks he put up with. He alleges
Scientology got a hold of his credit record, financial
information and personal phone bill and had a watch on his
New York apartment, and that "at least ten attorneys and six
private detectives were unleashed by Scientology in an
effort to threaten, harass and discredit me."
Stacy Brooks believes these are not isolated incidents, but
the result of one of L. Ron Hubbard's earliest orders,
called "fair game."
In 1967, Hubbard issued the fair-game policy, which said
that opponents "may be deprived of property or injured by
any means, by any Scientologist. He may be tricked, sued,
lied to, or destroyed utterly." In essence, the policy can
be described as the best defense being a good offense.
Brooks says fair game is a way to defend the organization
from its critics by targeting those critics by any means
necessary. "Never agree to an investigation of Scientology,
only an investigation of the attackers," she says, reading
from a pile of Hubbard directives she keeps by her desk.
"Start feeding lurid blood, sex and crime tales to the
press."
One of the best examples of how Scientology defends itself
went down in Toronto in the mid 1980s.
In 1977, the Ontario Medical Association - the group that
governs the province's doctors - asked the College of
Physicians and Surgeons to investigate whether the
Scientologists' use of e-meters and personality tests - both
core Scientology so-called technologies used to recruit and
audit members - meant they were practicing medicine without
a license.
That kicked off a conflict that later saw the Toronto police
raid the organization's downtown headquarters, cart off
millions of pages of documents, and lay bare the
Scientologists' campaign to fight the OMA and the Ontario
government.
In March, 1983, three buses of cops raided the offices and,
from the pile of documents, Scientology and 18 people were
later charged with infiltrating two law firms, the College
of Physicians, the OMA, the Canadian Mental Health
Association, the Ontario Provincial Police, the Metro
Toronto Police, the Attorney General of Ontario and the
RCMP. Almost ten years later, Scientology and some of the
people were found guilty of some charges, and ordered to pay
$250,000.
After losing in court, Scientology then went after a court
officer.
Scientology sued Casey Hill, the prosecutor, claiming he
misled a judge and tampered with documents. The case was
dismissed, and Hill sued for libel; in 1991, he won
$2.1-million in damages, the largest libel award ever in
Canada. "Scientology decided that Casey Hill was the enemy
and it set out to destroy him," the court ruled. "It
levelled false charges against him. It persecuted him on
these charges. In summary, the evidence suggests that
Scientology set upon a persistent course of character
assassination over a period of seven years with the
intention of destroying Casey Hill."
From her office in Clearwater, Stacy Brooks said, dryly, "It
seems that Henson is in the process of being destroyed
utterly," echoing the words of the Ontario judges, Keith
Henson and L. Ron Hubbard.
***
After posting his Tom Cruise Missile Threat, Henson logged
off the net and picketed again the next day. His words would
soon be turned back on him.
Sources in Hemet speculate Scientology pressured the local
district attorney into moving against Henson and prosecuting
him because of his threat.
Two weeks later, a Scientologist tried a citizen's arrest on
Henson while he was picketing. Finally, in September, 2000,
he was arraigned on three charges, one of
"intimidation/threat/oppress because of
colour/religion/gender"; one of terrorist threats, and one
of attempt of a terrorist threat.
It was not the first time Henson's run-ins with the
organization landed in a courtroom. In mid-1995, Henson
posted six lines of Scientology text - one about how to
communicate with plants and animals, another from a secret
Scientology manual called NOTS 34 - and was later sued by
the organization for copyright infringement.
"I was successfully sued, at enormous cost to them," he
points out, almost gleefully, over the phone. "I didn't
spend hardly anything on it," he boasts, "I declared
bankruptcy."
But he couldn't wiggle this time. On April 26, after a
near-disaster of a defense - in which all of the passages
that would indicate Henson's threat was little more than a
sophomoric joke were barred - the jury found Henson guilty
of the first indictment - intimidation - and hung on the
other two counts. On May 15, Henson came north to the
Toronto suburban home of Gregg Hagglund, another
anti-Scientologist, to - what else - do some picketing.
Shortly thereafter, he decided to stay and skip out on
sentencing.
While the Hemet district attorney's office estimates that
the sentence for his misdemeanour crime may amount to five
years of parole, a fine, and maybe a year in the county
jail, Henson says he faces harassment, or worse, from
Scientology convicts in the system. Plus, he seems to relish
the idea of trying to turn his strange case into an
international incident.
"The point of this whole business is to expose Scientology
so they reform internally, or have reform forced on it, or
it is destroyed utterly. Not one stone left upon another and
salt in the fields," he declares, with Hagglund whispering
something unintelligible in his ear.
Since the verdict and the flight, pro-Scientology netizens -
none of whom responded to repeated email contacts - have
charged Henson with all manner of evil, from outright
cowardice at not staying for sentencing, to child
molestation, to homicide and driving around with the
victim's frozen head in the trunk of his car.
"Similar to the Tim McVeighs of the world, he's a man who
would blow himself up to make a point," said Ken Hoden,
general manager of Golden Era.
"It did come out during the trial that Henson has taught
kids how to make pipe bombs; has an extensive history of
setting off explosives similar to those that blew up the
Oklahoma building; that he stalked church buses; intimidated
church staff. And as a result of this, a jury of ten men and
women found him guilty of a hate crime."
Henson denies the charges, and says his explosives days were
years ago, when his family set off big bangs in the desert
for fun. Hoden curtly denied the organization has a policy
of "fair game," and says the church is the real victim of a
hateful madman.
"Just like there have been people who have attacked the Jews
and the blacks, I don't think you can get a logical answer
for his insanity."
You think he's crazy?
"Oh yes. And very dangerous, too."
[LOL!!!!!]
What is Scientology?
It all started when L. Ron Hubbard, Second World War vet,
pulp sci-fi writer, founder of Scientology, published
Dianetics in 1950. Sometimes subtitled a "user's manual for
the brain," Dianetics is a New-Agey type self-help manual
wrapped around the crude psychotherapeutic theory called
"auditing." Using a Hubbard-designed "e-meter" - a crude lie
detector that measures electrical resistance on the skin -
subjects talk about their intimate life. Hubbard claimed
that unhappiness was the result of "engrams" or mental
aberrations that could be cleared with the help of the
e-meter. In the early '60s, Hubbard declared that humans
contain "thetans," the spirits of space aliens brought to
earth about 75 million years ago by a galactic overlord
named Xenu. The drive to clear believers of thetans through
auditing - and thus improve them individually and humanity
in general - forms the basis of Scientology. To do that,
Scientologists pay for hours and hours of increasingly
expensive auditing and buy taped lectures from Hubbard,
books, and other Scientology paraphernalia all to progress
up the Hubbard-defined "bridge." Although Hubbard died a
virtual recluse in 1985, deemed a "pathological liar" by a
California judge, the organization he founded now spans the
globe, counts some of the world's biggest celebs as its
adherents and spokespeople, and has its hands in a number of
social and political pies. Scientology claims over eight
million members in over 65 different countries around the
globe, including famous faces like John Travolta - who, Time
Magazine reported in 1991, cannot leave the church for fear
of the information the church has on his sexual habits - Tom
Cruise, Beck, and even Nancy Cartwright, the voice of noted
iconoclast Bart Simpson. In addition to the church,
Scientology owns or controls publishing houses that churn
out the L. Ron oeuvre, organizations to reform and recruit
drug addicts and criminals - Criminon and Narconon, not to
be confused with Narcotics Anonymous - a multimillion-dollar
film studio, and even the Cult Awareness Network, once a
rabid critic of Hubbard's church, driven out of business by
the church through lawsuits, and bought at bankruptcy
auction by a Scientologist. The church has also bought much
of the private property in Clearwater, Florida, in the aim
of establishing the first all-Scientology city.