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Fleeing from Scientology
Source: Report Newsmagazine - Alberta Edition
Publication date: 2001-07-09
A man who 'interfered with a religion[sic]' in California wants to remain
in Canada permanently
It started out, Keith Henson says, as a joke. The American critic of
the Church of Scientology was in Toronto May 12 to help picket the
church's Canadian headquarters, along with others who believe the
religious sect is a rogue cult which has harassed opponents and
covered up suspicious deaths within its ranks. "Afterwards, a bunch
of us were trolling on the Net and someone joked that I should seek
status as a political refugee," he says. "The more we thought about
it, the more it seemed a good idea. I was going to go back that
Sunday, but I moved the return date on my plane ticket to
Monday." Keith Henson still has not used that plane ticket. He
remains in Toronto, a fugitive from the law in his home country.
Mr. Henson is wanted on an April 26 conviction for "interfering with
a religion" under an obscure section of the California Penal Code.
The jury had refused to convict him of terrorism for making jokes on
Internet newsgroups about hitting a Scientology compound with a
"cruise missile." Previously sued into bankruptcy for posting
copyrighted Scientology scriptures to the Net, Mr. Henson has
spent much time picketing Scientology installations across North
America. The prosecution in his case claimed that he had been
"taking down licence plate numbers" of cars at a Scientology
facility in California, sometimes following Scientologists home and
"yelling at them and doing other weird behaviour," in the words of
district attorney Robert Schwartz.
Mr. Henson was to appear for sentencing July 6, but he decided to
stay in Toronto and seek the advice of immigration lawyer Guidy
Mamann. Mr. Mamann studied the case and told Mr. Henson that
he could not advise him to flee from justice, but that he had a
"viable case" for refugee status. On May 28, while the paperwork
was being readied, Mr. Henson was arrested by a heavily armed
SWAT team in an Oakville shopping mall. Canadian immigration
authorities had been told that the affable grandfather was an
"explosives expert" (which he is) and that the charges against him
were related to threats involving explosives (although he professes
himself unable to construct a working cruise missile).
Mr. Henson was freed June 8 and is living with an old friend in
Toronto while he awaits an Immigration and Refugee Board hearing.
His case has attracted little attention in Canada, but critics of
Scientology from around the world are following his adventures. He
has the support of the influential Electronic Frontier Foundation,
whose legal director Cindy Cohn said June 22 that "He does not
appear to have made any credible threat of physical attack...Mr.
Henson has a legal right to express criticisms online without fearing
a prison term."
Mr. Henson's exile has already come at considerable personal
cost; he was unable to be present for the May 22 death of his father
in Arizona. But he is eager to challenge Scientology, which was
started in the 1950s by science fiction author L. Ron Hubbard and
is known for celebrity adherents such as John Travolta and Tom
Cruise. "The cult has managed to get way too much influence over
local government in certain parts of California and Florida," he says.
"The U.S. State Department will now be obliged to ascertain
whether I received a fair trial. They'll have the choice of either
backing Scientology or treating it the way General Sherman treated
Georgia."
Henson with a supporter: A "viable case."
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