From: Xenubat@primenet.com (Bat Child (Sue M.))
Date: Sat, 05 Feb 2000 08:18:37 GMT
Message-ID: <389bdbe0.57887747@news.primenet.com>
Description of video is in [brackets].
[monitor in background has the word "Scientology" in white letters on
blue background]
NEWS ANCHOR: It's not lines in, in the sand, but it is line in the
street, in the pavement marking the first clearly visible permanent
point of confrontation between the Church of Scientology and a wealthy
opponent. As Fox-13's Steve Nichols found out, this point of
confrontation, this line in the street has the potential of affecting
everybody.
[footage of Waterson Avenue, caption "Downtown Clearwater"]
STEVE NICHOLS (VOICE OF): Waterson Avenue in downtown Clearwater, a
narrow roadway buses travel to deliver hundreds of Scientologists to a
cafeteria.
[close-up of white lines]
STEVE NICHOLS (VOICE OF): A couple of weeks ago, a pair of strange
stripes slithered across Waterson and both its sidewalks, much to the
chagrin of some people.
WOMAN: They came into our office and they said, "Nobody is allowed to
use the sidewalks on either side of the street if there is a
Scientology vehicle loading or unloading."
[Scn building, another building with address, "33 North Building"]
STEVE NICHOLS (VOICE OF): This lady is with a group called The Lisa
McPherson Trust, avowed opponents of the Church of Scientology and its
newest neighbor.
BOB MINTON (talking to Steve Nichols): We're not here for a short
term, we're here for a long term and--
[Minton with Steve Nichols; Minton holding a page with some drawings
of a building and pointing to various drawings]
STEVE NICHOLS (VOICE OF): That's Bob Minton, the man with the money
to buy this building with plans to turn it into an anti-Scientology
headquarters--big plans.
BOB MINTON (caption--"Bob Minton, Scientology opponent"): Just the
steel and glass costs about $80,000, so--
[cops getting out of a car, cop outside with Flag bus nearby and what
looks like a Sea Org woman in background; two people walking, one
carrying a sign with what looks like a phone number on it]
STEVE NICHOLS (VOICE OF): Keeping the peace between Minton's group
and the church is a headache cops saw coming weeks ago. The lines in
the street are part of the solution, a way to keep some space between
protesters and parishioners on their way to dinner. I wanted to know,
"What about the rest of us? Do we all have to toe this line?"
STEVE NICHOLS (ON CAMERA, TALKING TO POLICE OFFICER): So, like, I
might innocently be walking down the street and there's a van parked
there that has nothing to do with my life, and you would arrest me.
POLICE OFFICER: We don't think, go down there and find out from the
office--it's all confusing to me, too.
WOMAN (off camera): Where were your workers--
POLICE OFFICER: There's a sergeant right there--
WOMAN (off camera): When you proposed--
[several cops standing on sidewalk; police car; Steve Nichols and
Wayne Shelor inside office; closeup of white line with somebody
standing on it]
STEVE NICHOLS (VOICE OF): Four patrolmen and a sergeant refused to
answer that simple question, preferring headquarters handle the
matter. Sergeant Wayne Shelor assures us nobody will be arrested for
just crossing the line. But...
STEVE NICHOLS (off camera, talking to Wayne Shelor): I realize that
just crossing the line is not a matter of arrest, but if somebody were
to say, "Sorry, officer, I feel I can cross that line" and crosses it,
then what happens?
WAYNE SHELOR (caption--"Wayne Shelor, Clearwater Police Department"):
Well, you'd have to--the circumstances would dictate what happens, but
you may be going from crossing a line to obstruction of justice and
that's a whole different animal.
[close-up of sign saying "It's safe to talk", camera pulls away to
show Bob Minton standing next to the sign; cop car with Flag bus and
another car pulling up]
STEVE NICHOLS (VOICE OF): The church blames Minton for this
restriction, its spokesman saying there were no such points of daily
confrontation before his arrival. Minton's folks claim they just want
to express their opinions freely. But for now, nobody gets to do
anything inside these lines except go to dinner. In Clearwater, Steve
Nichols, Fox-13 News.
NEWS ANCHOR: Well, the lines probably won't go away any time soon.
They're made out of the same rubbery paint used to stripe the roads.
Sue, SP4(:), listed on the Scieno Sitter list 5 times!
--
http://www.primenet.com/~xenubat
"It will take a *long* time to find another enemy
with the combination of evil and incompetence
you see in Scientology."--Keith Henson