On 12 Jan 2000 21:59:22 -0500, dst@cs.cmu.edu (Dave Touretzky) wrote in
message-ID <387d3f8a.0@news2.lightlink.com>:
>This is Florida State Attorney Bernie McCabe's 89 page response to
>Scientology's motion to have the Lisa McPherson criminal case against
>them dismissed on religious freedom grounds. GoonyBird on IRC
>converted the 16MB PDF file to text. There's some amazing stuff in
>here! Sorry about the odd linelengths; the formatting matches that of
>the original document.
>
>Executive summary: Bernie done real good! The clams are in trouble.
Thanks! Reformatted:
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR THE SIXTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
IN AND FOR PINELLAS COUNT', FLORIDA
STATE OF FLORIDA Case No.CRC98-20377CFANO-S
V.
CHURCH OF SCIENTOLOGY FLAG
SERVICE ORGANIZATION, INC.
SPN: 01980179
RESPONSE _TO DEFENSE MOTION TO DISMISS BASED
UPON THE RELIGIOUS FREEDOM RESTORATION ACT
Comes now, Bernie McCabe, State Attorney for the Sixth Judicial
Circuit of Florida, by and through his undersigned Assistant
State Attorney, and hereby files this his Response to Defense
Motion to Dismiss Based Upon the Religious Freedom Restoration
Act, and as grounds therefore would show:
I. FACTS OF THE OFFENSE.
A. LISA MCPHERSON.
Lisa McPherson was a thirty two year old Texas native who had
been involved in Scientology for many years and who worked for a
Clearwater business owned by other Scientologists. She had been
had been in Clearwater and associated with the Church of
Scientology Flag Service Organization, Inc. (CSFSO) since 1994.
Records indicate that Lisa had spent between 50,000 and 100,000
dollars on self improvement courses and auditing' in the two
years prior to her mental breakdown and death. She had a fear of
insanity; both her father and brother had committed suicide.
Despite 18 years as a Scientologist and expending large sums of
money for "spiritual treatment," McPherson struggled with
psychological problems throughout the last year of her life.
During that year, Lisa had paid $58,000 for Scientology
services, yet had allegedly suffered a partial "psychotic break"
during the summer. Her account was debited over $20,000 for
auditing services during July and
' Auditing is a Scientology procedure that is discussed at
page 40 herein.
August of 1995 alone. The defendant, nonetheless, confirmed at
her September of 1995 "graduation" that she had reached the
advanced state of "Clear." Clear is defined by Scientology
doctrine as being that:
"highly desirable state for the individual, achieved through
auditing, which was never attainable belotFe Dianetics. A Clear
is a person who no longer has his own reactive mind and therefore
suffers none of the ill effects that the reactive mind can
cause. The Clear has no engrams which, when restimulated, throw
out the correctness of his computations by entering hidden and
false data."Z
At the time of her death, Ms. McPherson's checking account
balance was $140 and she had approximately $11 remaining in her
savings account.
B. SCIENTOLOGY AS A RELIGION AND CSFSO AS A CHURCH.
The State acknowledges that although it originated as the secular
activity of Dianetics, Scientology philosophy contains precepts
such as reincarnation and the immortality of the spirit that are
both metaphysical and religious in nature. Based upon this and
other attributes of Scientology, Courts have found believers in
Scientology to qualify for religious protection under the First
Amendment. The State does not concede, however, that every
precept or assertion in the vast library of works created by the
prolific L. Ron Hubbard, Scientology's founder, to be religious
tenets, beliefs or practices within constitutional or statutory
protections.
Moreover, despite the inclusion of the word "church" in its
corporate name, the State does not concede that the corporate
defendant is coextensive with being the "Church of Scientology."
The term "church' usually denotes the physical structure where
religious worship occurs and has also come to refer to the body
of believers' It is clear that CSFSO equates with neither.
Z See, What is Scientology (attached as exhibit A to
defendant's Affidavit by Richard Reiss) at page 1019.
' See, First Independent Missionary Baptist Church of
Chosen v. McMillan, 153 So.2d 337 (Fla. 2d DCA 1963).
2
A multifaceted non-profit corporation owning numerous buildings
in the Clearwater area including a hotel, restaurant and
numerous housing facilities, the defendant engages in extensive
revenue generating activity by providing self-improvement
services for clients or adherents for substantial advance fees
which it refers to as donations. The courses and materials cover
a wide range of topics, many of which can be objectively
described as secular in nature. CSFSO facilities sell lodging,
food, publications, and assorted other items.
Under either its official corporate structure or the divisional
management scheme imposed on it by Hubbard's teachings, neither
the adherents nor clients who have participated in services
provided by the corporation have any authority in its
organization, employment decisions, or management and it is
unclear if individual Scientologists belong to or are registered
members of a specific "Church."' In both a legal and practical
sense then, CSFSO is an entity distinct from the body of
adherents who may attend courses or receive auditing there. The
defendant has itself indirectly acknowledged this dichotomy in
complaining that the negative media reports have repeatedly
failed to distinguish the local corporation from the religion
itself or its body of believers.'
C. OVERVIEW OF LISA MCPHERSONSS "TREATMENT" AT THE FORT
HARRISON.
Less than three months after achieving the Scientology status of
"Clear," McPherson undressed and walked down the street naked
after being involved in a minor accident in which she was not
injured. Her actions and mechanical speech, which was littered
with Scientology terminology, suggested the existence of
unresolved mental and emotional problems despite her eighteen
year use of Scientology "technology." Lisa told paramedics that
"Nobody knows this" but I'm an "OT" (an operating thetan, a
Scientology state beyond
See, page 413 of "what is Scientology" attached to defendant's
pleadings which indicate that membership in Scientology is
governed by membership in the International Association of
Scientologists rather than affiliation with an individual Church
or Mission.
This assertion, contained in the affidavit of Michael Rinder, is
urged by the defendant as a "substantial burden" imposed upon
it.
3
that of "Clear"). She indicated she wanted people to think she
was crazy because she wanted help. She referred to herself
variously as a bad person, having bad thoughts, who had taken
"her eyes off the object" and was tired and wanted help. She
agreed to go with paramedics to neArby. Morton Plant Hospital
for evaluation.
Within minutes of her arrival, a group of Church of Scientology
Flag Service Organization, Inc. (CSFSO) supervisors and
employees arrived at the hospital and attempted to intervene.
While at least one handed out anti-psychiatric literature,
others insisted on being present with Lisa in the emergency
room. With these CSFSO employees and other Scientologists waiting
nearby during the evaluation, hospital personnel determined that
Lisa did not meet the criteria for involuntary hospitalization
and that she did not wish to stay voluntarily at the hospital.
After corporate employees assured the hospital staff that they
would be responsible for her, Lisa agreed to leave with her
"friends from the congregation," and was discharged against
medical advice into their care.
After leaving Morton Plant Hospital in the custody of CSFSO
employees, Lisa was taken to the Fort Harrison Hotel, a
Clearwater facility less than a quarter mile from the hospital
which was owned and operated by the defendant. From minutes
after her arrival until seventeen days later when her dead body
was delivered to a New Port Richey emergency room, no one other
than officers or employees of the corporation saw her, touched
her or spoke to her. She had no contact with her family, had no
access to outsiders, had not been permitted to leave the hotel,
and had remained physically and mentally incapable of caring for
her own needs.
During that period, more than two dozen corporate employees, from
CSFSO's Security division, its Medical Liaison Office, and
numerous other corporate offices shared responsibility for her
care. Employees were assigned to watch her and made daily
reports on her condition to Alain Kartuzinski, who at the time
was the Senior Case Supervisor for CSFSO. As the Senior "C/S" he
was the highest ranking corporate employee responsible
4
overseeing the quality of spiritual technology or auditing - one
of the major functions of the Clearwater corporation. His job
included treating so-called "PTS, Type ill's. "6
Lisa's desqent from marginal competence to delirium occurred
rapidly during the corporation's attempts to diagnose and
"treat" her. The State believes that the evidence will show that
CSFSO employees attempted to diagnose Lisa's condition without
medical help and, without her consent or competent medical
authority, force-medicated her with substances to treat her
apparent insomnia and delirium, injected her with muscle
relaxants to induce sleep and fed her concoctions of herbal
remedies mixed with food, vitamins and prescription medication.
Despite the obvious deterioration of Lisa's mental and physical
health, she was never taken to or seen by a licensed medical
doctor from the time she arrived at the Fort Harrison until her
death 17 days later. She lost weight and became weak in the
corporation's exclusive care, losing 20-40 pounds. She grew too
weak to walk and eventually became so severely dehydrated that
she would have been virtually unresponsive for from one to three
or more days prior to her death. Her death was a result of her
severe dehydration and immobility which led to the development of
a pulmonary embolism. Despite clear warning signs of the
severity of Lisa's condition, CSFSO employees intentionally
bypassed readily available emergency care at nearby Morton Plant
Hospital (where doctors had warned CSFSO employees that they
would be held responsible for Lisa's welfare) and delayed for
hours before driving her to an emergency room in another County.
D. THE FORENSIC EVIDENCE.
Chief Medical Examiner Joan Wood determined based upon the
autopsy conducted by Dr. Robert Davis, the laboratory results
reflecting vitreous levels, and consultation with outside experts
that Lisa McPherson's death occurred as a result of severe
dehydration and
PTS stands for "potential trouble source" and is a Scientology
term for person exhibiting psychotic behavior. See pages 39-42.
5
immobility which resulted in a pulmonary embolism.' The five foot
eight McPherson, whose weight eighteen days earlier had been
estimated at 150 pounds by paramedics and 135 pounds' by one of
her caretakers, weighed approximately 108 pounds at the time of
autopsy. Her sunken eyes and cheeks and her dry skin reflected a
gaunt appearance consistent with her severe dehydration. Her
mouth, teeth and eyelids were crusted with dried, solid
material. She had bruises on her hand and back, as well as the
side of her left thigh and also had a series of smaller bruises
up and down the lower part of both legs. There were numerous
abrasions on her hands wrists and lower arms and on her feet and
lower legs, with some of these abrasions having the appearance
of insect bites. At the beginning of her stay Lisa had been
described as being in good health, with her legs unblemished,
having almost perfect "porcelain-like" skin.'
An embolism is the blockage of an artery or vein by a plug or
clot (in this case the latter) that has migrated from another
part of the body. In this case the embolus (clot) is believed to
have originated in a thrombus in the left poplitial vein,
located on the back of the leg behind the knee. A thrombus is a
blood clot inside a blood vessel, as opposed to a clot outside
the vessel in surrounding tissue. Because the embolism emanated
from a vein, it would travel toward the lungs (for the blood to
be oxygenated) after passing through the right side of the heart.
As the pulmonary artery branched and became smaller, the
embolism partially blocked the left pulmonary artery. The right
pulmonary artery was unobstructed, and the blood flow to that
lung was unblocked. There are a number of risk factors that will
predispose persons to a thrombus. Injury or surgery which causes
the immobilization of a limb or patient can be an important
factor. Dehydration is another common factor.
The visual evidence of Lisa's dehydration is well established.
The caretaker notes and testimony establish a continuing concern
with the amount of food and fluid Lisa was ' The autopsy
report is attached as exhibit 5. ' Statement of Leslie
Woodcraft at page 31. Statement of Alice VanGrondelle, April
1998, at page 19. 6
taking in. She was estimated to be 150 lbs. by paramedic Bonnie
Portolano at the time of the accident and weighed approximately
108 pounds at autopsy. Janis Johnson acknowledged that on the day
of her death Lisa looked very thin, as if she had lost weight
and appeared to be "majorly" or very dehydrated prior to being
taken to the hospital. Johnson described Lisa's skin and sunken
eyes as indicating the degree of her dehydration. Dr. Minkoff
also indicated she looked "horrific" when she arrived at the
Columbia NPR emergency room and appeared to be severely
dehydrated. Despite generic language in the autopsy report that
Lisa was of "average nutritional status" it is clear from Dr.
Davis' testimony that he felt she showed obvious physical
symptoms of dehydration. Davis describes a "Hippocratic Facies"
as being present. This term, normally used to denote the "face"
of death, is used (or misused) by Davis to describe the sunken
facial expressions, gaunt look and texture of the skin indicative
of significant dehydration. The autopsy photos confirm these
observations.
The tests run on the vitreous humor taken from the chambers of
the eyes at autopsy provide even more dramatic evidence of
dehydration. These samples are drawn from both eyes in a single
syringe, then refrigerated until removed for analysis. Forensic
research has confirmed that postmortem levels of such substances
as urea nitrogen, chloride, creatinine and sodium from the
vitreous fluid removed from the eye are accurate reflections of
the level of those substances in the blood at the time of death.
Lisa's levels were extremely elevated
and indicated extreme dehydration: Vitreous Urea Nitrogen
300 mg/dl Vitreous Creatinine 2.6 mb/dl Vitreous Chloride
161 mmol/1 Vitreous Sodium 180 mmol/1
All of these levels are significantly elevated. Sodium levels in
the blood normally range from 136 to 142 with readings over 145
being considered diagnostic of hypernatremia. to The 161
Chloride level is also significantly above the normal range of 95
to 113 for serum chloride. Creatinine is an end product
resulting from muscle activity.
1° Hyponatremia is a condition of excessive sodium levels in the
blood which can be fatal.
7
Normal levels are between .5 and 1.4. Levels of creatinine are
relatively unaffected by diet and it is therefore a useful
measure of kidney function. Urea Nitrogen is a substance created
as a result of protein metabolism and produced in the presence
of specific enzymes in the liver and is particularly stable in
vitreous fluid after death. Lisa's urea nitrogen level is
extraordinarily high. Urea nitrogen is normally present at a
ratio to creatinine of 10 to one; Lisa's urea nitrogen level is
almost 100 times her already elevated creatinine level.
Consultation by Dr. Wood with other medical examiners and
clinical specialists has confirmed that these test results are
consistent with McPherson's condition and Wood's conclusions. At
this level of dehydration, Lisa would have been severely and
obviously symptomatic for a considerable time and for at least
the last 24 hours would have been virtually unresponsive. These
experts further believe that the extreme dehydration, which
dramatically reduces blood volume and pressure, and the
immobility resulting from her condition, would have been the
logical cause of the thrombus that led to the embolism.
Dr. David Minkoff, the Scientologist and physician who pronounced
Lisa dead, has suggested in his testimony, however, that Lisa
may have been "septic" and that a massive infection may have
played a part in causing diarrhea and "acute" (i.e. quick onset)
dehydration. Minkoff based this speculation on a positive test
for bacteria in her blood and his interpretation that the
abrasions on her extremities were septic petechiae. The State's
experts discount the single blood test (two are normally drawn)
as being contaminated by skin bacteria. The autopsy results
clearly reflect that the lesions on Lisa's body are in fact
abrasions with no underlying hemorrhaging and therefore not
petechial hemorrhages caused by a systemic infection. It would be
impossible for the urea nitrogen levels reflected in Lisa's lab
tests to have occurred in such a brief period. Moreover, although
one caretaker suggests Lisa did have some diarrhea the night
before her death, there is no evidence or testimony suggestive
of the type of massive or continuous diarrhea which would be
symptomatic of sepsis or sufficient to cause severe but acute
dehydration.
8
E. THE INVESTIGATION.
Hospital authorities notified police of McPherson's death. An
autopsy was ordered and an investigation into the unusual and
suspicious circumstances of her death began. The following day
police attempted to view the room in which Lisa had been kept,
and were shown a room that had been completely cleaned and its
furniture changed. In a February, 1996 letter to police, CSFSO
corporate counsel and resident agent Robert Johnson claimed that
Ms. McPherson's stay at the Fort Harrison Religious Retreat was
intended to provide her with "rest and relaxation," indicating
further that "She had been involved in an automobile accident
and may have suffered some physical trauma and mental anguish.
The Church provided her with safe and familiar surroundings." The
letter reiterated that the Medical Liaison Office employees were
not licensed to perform medical functions and that their
function was only to help find a doctor or dentist for a
parishioner. Initial interviews continued to portray Lisa as a
parishioner voluntarily staying at the Ft. Harrison for "rest and
relaxation," who was not under full-time observation but rather
received some extra attention when requested. Public statements
and press releases by the defendant and Scientology spokespersons
confirmed this false view and denied responsibility, even though
internal investigations by CSFSO the night of Lisa's death
evidenced a ; t completely different picture.
Illustrative of the early statements are the May 29, 1996 and May
30, 1996 taped interviews of Janis Johnson and Alain Kartuzinski
by the Clearwater Police Department which were conducted in the
presence of CSFSO corporate counsel Robert Johnson." Janis
Johnson was a deputy in the Medical Liaison Office who was
responsible for handling staff employees in their dealings with
health related professionals. She had graduated medical school
and been a licensed as a practicing physician before problems
caused her
Attomey Johnson was allowed to make his own tape of the stater,
Kartuzinslti's taped statements to police are to be found as
attachments 2 and S
9
practice in 1993 and let her license lapse in 1994. She has never
been licensed in the State of Florida.
Alain Katcuzinski was the acting Senior Case Supervisor, the top
auditor and head technical person within CSFSO's corporate
organization. He had in the past been Lisa's personal auditor.
After being notified that Lisa had been in an accident and was
at the emergency room, he arrived at the emergency room and
remained near the entranceway during Nurse Joe Price's attempt to
interview Lisa. He drove Lisa to the Fort Harrison and had
others assist her in getting a room. Despite his denials of
involvement in the taped statement, it was later learned that
Kartuzinski briefed many of the caretakers, instructing them
that Lisa was a "Type III" and telling them to prevent her from
hurting herself or others.
During interviews with police Johnson portrayed Lisa as a
parishioner staying at the Hotel for rest and relaxation who was
to get extra care from the staff, but not as being a clearly
incompetent, severely disturbed woman who was actually unable to
speak coherently and oblivious to her own needs. Johnson stated
she first met Lisa about five days after the stay began. Johnson
had gone to see Lisa with Suzanne Green (Schnurenberg) to make
sure everything was okay because Suzanne had some concerns. 12
Janis repeatedly told detectives that "they" were not attempting
to treat her mental or physical problems ("That is not the point
of scientology: the Church does not do that.") because she had
been "checked" out at Morton Plant and found not to be a danger
to herself or others." She stated Lisa had not requested any
services and none would have been provided without her consent.
She also claimed Lisa was taking an herbal supplement on her
'Z Transcript at 18.
13 Transcript at 17, 57, 58.
10
own, insisting that the M.L.O. would not make recommendations
about over the counter sleep aids.''
During the interview Johnson repeatedly misstated or minimized
the symptoms and bizarre behavior which we now know that Lisa
exhibited. She said Lisa was "just upset" but "she was `with
it'"'5; that Lisa just needed a break to get away from
everything; if things weren't going well then (according to what
Suzanne allegedly told Johnson) she would probably just sit and
think about it and it would be hard for her to get to sleep. '6
She described Lisa as merely being "thin and real wound up" on
Johnson's first visit and claims that on a second visit Lisa was
better and made a coherent request for powdered vitamins." She
implied that it was Lisa who was taking the herbal remedy
valerian root. (In fact, Lisa would frequently refuse to swallow
these and caretakers would mix them with other substances to
induce her to swallow them.) She acknowledged a single episode in
which Lisa went into a rage stud had to be given a "big hug" for
about ten minutes till she calmed down" (she was actually
restrained for an hour on one occasion) but stated that was the
only problem that they had." On the day of Lisa's death, Johnson
indicated she had a coherent conversation with Lisa in which Lisa
overcame her own reluctance and agreed to go to the hospital.
Johnson was also evasive and intentionally misleading when
detectives repeatedly asked if anyone was assigned to look out
for Lisa on a continuing basis, indicating Lisa was merely a
"hotel guest"; it was true that they gave Lisa some extra
services as people
" Transcript at 14.
'° Transcript at 17.
'b Transcript at 15.
" Transcript at 28.
" Transcript at 31, 32.
19 Transcript at 63.
11
checking up on her but "nothing like that."2° She claimed she was
not sure what Lisa did or where she went during the day. (In
fact she never left the room except for venturing a few feet out
and being "guided" back in.) Johnson further indicated "The plan
was have the people around there in the hotel just give her some
extra attention. "t` Asked if anyone checked on her on a routine
basis, she responded that Suzanne would pop in to make sure
everything was fine.
Janis failed to mention the assignment of other staff members to
serve as Lisa's caretakers, failed to mention Lisa being force
medicated or her own involvement in giving Lisa medication and
shots, and did not mention her being removed from most of her
normal duties and being specifically assigned to Lisa. She did,
however, admit that except for Suzanne (who was a friend of Lisa)
she knew as much as anyone about Lisa's stay.' She admitted that
she not only talked to others about Lisa's condition and got
reports on her but on average went by about every other day to
check on her. She indicated she usually tried to go by around
four in the afternoon."
Johnson indicated that she had first toted bruises on Lisa the
week of Thanksgiving after Lisa had gone into a rage and was
kicking furniture?° The Friday after Thanksgiving week (an
apparent reference to Friday, December 1) she noticed that
Lisa's health was deteriorating; Lisa was noticeably thinner but
calmer and had been sleeping better' Johnson allegedly told Laura
Arrunada (an M.L.O. employee who had been to medical school in
Mexico City but had never been licensed) to take extra time to
get fluids and food
m Transcript at 26. 21 Transcript at 23. u
Transcript at 63. b Transcript at 25, 30, 31. u
Transcript at 31, 32. 25 Transcript at 34.
12
into Lisa over the weekend. Janis was to be involved in a project
over the weekend and knew she would not be able to check on
Lisa. When she got back into her normal routine on Monday she
went by to see Lisa on that night around eight p.m., and Lisa
was already asleep under the covers. Janis backed out of the
room and didn't wake her .26 According to Johnson, Laura
indicated she had some difficulty getting food and fluids down
Lisa but did not indicate that her condition had worsened. She
did not go by the next day until around seven p.m. when she was
beeped by Laura.n When she got there, Johnson claimed that Lisa
looked septic (with what appeared to be petechial hemorrhages)
and very, "majorly" dehydrated." She was allegedly talking
slowly, but not babbling nor not making sense. Lisa was
allegedly happy to see her and though expressing hesitation
agreed to go to the hospital for treatment?' Johnson stated she
called Dr. Minkoff, telling hint that Lisa needed to be seen
tonight and asking him to give them a room away from the "hoo
ha" of the normal emergency room '°
Similarly, Alain Kariuzinski's initial statements to police gave
no hint of Lisa's severe psychosis, his involvement in setting
up "caretakers" to watch her around the clock, or that he had
directed that he be updated by written reports on her day to day
condition. Kartuzinski indicated he knew Lisa in passing as he
did hundreds of other parishioners. He stated he was informed (he
believed through a phone call from David Slaughter, Lisa's
employer) that Lisa had been in an accident and was at Morton
Plant. When he couldn't find another minister to go, he went down
to the hospital himself. He was allowed back to the area where
Lisa's was being questioned by psychiatric nurse Joe Price.
26 Transcript at 36, 37.
z' Transcript at 38. Laura allegedly said she had been
having diarrhea for 24 hours. She did not say this in her
statement to the SAO. 29 Transcript at 39, 40. r'
Id.
30 Transcript at page 47. Minkoff does not confirm this, but
indicates he insisted on Lisa being seen before being given a
prescription for antibiotics.
13
According to Kartuzinski, Lisa answered Price's questions,
indicating she was oriented to time. Lisa wasn't crying but
seemed embarrassed. Price asked him to leave the room while he
continued to question her; Kartazinski walked to the corridor
where DeCuypere and another scientologist were, but remained
within earshot. Lisa trade it clear she did not want to stay at
the hospital, but wanted to go back to the Ft. Harrison with her
friends from the Church. Kartuzinski further stated that Price
decided there was no reason to keep Lisa and she was allowed to
check out.
Kartuzinski had the idea that she just wanted to go for rest and
relaxation and she gave no indication of seeking services. He
drove her to the Fort Harrison, dropping her off so she could
check into a room. He implied that Lisa checked into the room
herself in the ordinary course of events. About ten minutes
later, Kartuzinski went to the room and briefly checked on her;
she said she was okay. He claimed he did not see her again
throughout her stay .'t
His only follow up was calling the M.L.O. and talking to "whoever
answered the phone" and asking them to check on Lisa and see if
she needed anything. He was told she wasn't eating or sleeping
well the first two or three days but that it was better now.
He stated he was notified in the afternoon or evening the day of
her death that there was some sort of medical difficulty. He
called for someone to check it out. (He believed Lacy Spencer,
his assistant, had brought the problem to his attention.) He
said that later that evening Janis came by and said Lisa had
some infection and she was worried; she asked to use the phone to
call the doctor. She called Minkoff and Alain "guessed" that
Minkoff acknowledged that something needed to be done.
(Kartuzinski claimed not to have understood a lot of the
terminology). When asked what happened to Lisa's personal
effects and who cleaned the room, Kartuzinski said he had no
knowledge but the hotel did have maids. The
31 Kartuzinksi has under immunity acknowledged the falsity of
this statement. He did briefly visit Lisa's room later in her
"stay." Her condition was so distressing that he reorganized the
caretakers so that more than one person would be there at all
times.
14
detectives sum up saying "So... at Lisa's request she was pretty
much you say left alone during this period of time?" Kartuzinski
responds "I imagine."
As the police investigation progressed into 1997, actual
caretakers were identified and interviewed under oath (after
insisting on immunity) and their written records of caring for
Lisa were subpoenaed. A different picture emerged.
It became clear that Lisa was delusional and combative throughout
her stay, was watched on a 24 hour basis by CSFSO employees
because of the severity of her illness, had repeatedly resisted
her "caretakers," and was subjected to forced medication and
injections. It was learned that written daily records were kept
of Lisa's condition, but that crucial records, including all
written reports relating her condition on the last two days of
her life, had mysteriously and without adequate explanation
disappeared. As these facts came to light and the falsity of the
initial interviews of CSFSO employees became obvious, additional
CSFSO witnesses also refused to testify on Fifth Amendment
grounds unless given use immunity.
The inaccuracy of the initial statements, however, would have
been known to the defendant at the time (hey were made. Almost
immediately after Lisa's death, the Office of Special Affairs
(OSA), which handles legal and public relations problems for the
corporation, began an investigation. All personnel who had
contact with Lisa were directed immediately to "Flag" and ordered
to write down their observations and contact with Lisa. These
first hand accounts by the witnesses were then "summarized" in a
typewritten memo by OSA employee Marcus Quirino1 Corporation Vice
President Brian Anderson also wrote a summary of a conversation
with David Minkoff. Anderson shared this latter summary with
CSFSO attorney Robert_ Johnson the next day, but stated did not
provide Johnson a0y. of the Quirino memo! Anderson later
destroyed all the original notes which had been written for
Quirino by the caretakers. At least one of the persons who
accompanied Lisa to the
" See Attachment 8.
15
hospital (Paul Greenwood) was ordered to write a report to CSFSO
security offic. officials also secured Lisa's confidential "PC"
folder where the original caretaker's were kept and in which
Kartuzinski testified he had made notes during Lisa's stay con,
his plan for Lisa's treatment.
Despite the corporation's knowledge of the inaccuracy of the
statements to police, it continued to affirm the reliability of
the information given to officers. In a December 1996 press
release castigating the Clearwater Police Department, the
"Church," listing CSFSO counsel Robert Johnson and CSFSO Vice
President Brian Anderson as contact persons, urged in part:
....The facts are as follows. Lisa McPherson had been staying at
the Fort Harrison hotel after a traumatic car accident. During
her stay, she suddenly took ill. After her initial reluctance was
overcome, she was driven to see the physician of her choice, but
died enroute. Investigation by the Clearwater Police concluded in
early 1996 with a determination that the cause of death was a
pulmonary embolism exacerbated by a severe staphylococcus
infection. [Sgt.] Andrews is quoted [referring to a newspaper
article] as saying there is no indication what occurred during
McPherson's two week stay at the Fort Harrison. That is a bald
faced lie. There are hours and hours of interviews with Church
members detailing exactly what occurred during Lisa's stay at the
hotel. Nothing in those interviews is the least bit sinister or
mysterious, despite Andrews attempts to imply otherwise.
Eventually, CSFSO supplied approximately thirty pages of notes in
response to State subpoenas. The notes were written by eleven
separate caretakers covering nineteen shifts on eleven separate
days." CSFSO also supplied the internal reports generated by
Brian Anderson and Marcus Quirino. The notes detail the severity
of Lisa's psychosis and her refusal to eat and drink normally on
any regular basis. They also describe instances where Lisa was
violent and restrained, where she attempted to leave and rejected
attempts to medicate her with prescription medications, herbal
remedies, vitamins, over the counter substances and even
magnesium injections. The notes stand in stark contrast to the
taped statements of Johnson and Kartuzinski and expose their
concerted initial attempt to mislead the police at the beginning
of the investigation.
33 These notes are included as attachment 1.
16
One of the notes is entitled M.L.O. Report, is in Johnson's
handwriting and is signed by her as "Jams Johnson, M.O. "'° It
is a directive dated the Friday before Lisa's death and
indicates: MLO Report 1/12/95 I 1°° Lisa McPherson Given 2gm
MgCh Im at 1030 + 2- 500 mg Chloral Hydrate (capsule pierced and
as much possible sqitted into her mouth). She swallowed and fell
asleep in the middle of a sentence. Reap rate 18-24.
Extremities still cool but not cold. S.D.L.V.'$ needs relief
now; I will stay until replacement comes.
Plan: (1) Valerie or watch personnel W/ medical training for
Next 8 hrs. (2) Needs 2L fluids when awake and attempt to feed
(3) Call if any ?'s prob's.
ML, J. Johnson M.O.
This note corresponds with caretaker notes by Boykin indicating
Johnson was present and gave Lisa Magnesium shots; it is also
consistent with other testimony about Sylvia DeLaVega suffering
a "burn out" after caring for Lisa. This note signed by Johnson
as M.O. ( a apparent reference to "Medical Office" or "Medical
Officer") reflects her diagnosis that McPherson was suffering
from dehydration and her prescription of treatment by trained
personnel.
Concerted but unsuccessful efforts were trade to locate the
missing records, particularly those relating to the last two
days before Lisa's death. The chain of custody on the existing
records is hopelessly confused and is complicated by the fact
that the records
3° While this abbreviation presumably stands for Medical
Office(r), there is no such office or position. Johnson is
referred to as doctor in the caretaker notes.
ss Ile abbreviation S.D.L.V. is an apparent reference to
Sylvia DeLaVega.
17
were in "PC" folders which may not be reviewed by Scientologists
of a lesser level than Lisa. It appears that all the records
were in Kartuzinski's office before Lisa's death. After Lisa's
death they were gathered up from Kartuzinski's office by Annie
Mora and sent to California. The files were searched for
relevant documents by Lynn Farney who apparently then sent
documents to the attorneys for the Church in Clearwater. Despite
extensive and time consuming efforts many records remain missing
with no explanation. The report written by Paul Greenwood, all
caretaker notes by Heather Petzold, all caretaker notes for the
final two days of Lisa's life and all contemporaneous notes of
the incident by Kartuzinski have been removed from Lisa's "PC"
folder and lost or destroyed.
The details from these remaining records acrd the sworn
statements of CSFSO employees indicate that from the outset of
her stay and continuously until the evening of her death, Lisa
was viewed by her caretakers as deeply psychotic and unable to
care for herself, talk coherently or make logical decisions. She
was watched initially by Emma Schamerhorn, an elderly lady
working in the Medical Liaison Office (M.L.O.). Because of
Emma's age and the importance of having continuity in Lisa's
care, Alain Kartuzinksi approached Andrea Sprecher and got
permission to have Janis Johnson of the M.L.O. assigned full
time to the task. Under Kartuzinski's direction, other employees
organized a schedule where caretakers were assigned to watch
Lisa for her twenty-four hours a day. Only one of the caretakers
knew Lisa to any extent. They were asked to make written reports
to Kartuzinksi. Lisa's behavior as described in these notes
indicated she was hyperactive, delusional and hallucinating. She
tried to harm herself and others early in the stay, struck
caretakers, engaged in repeated self-destructive behavior and
had to be forcibly restrained on several occasions to prevent
injury to herself or her caretakers.
After the first week, Lisa routinely urinated and defecated on
herself and rarely slept. She had conversations with people who
were not there, claimed to be people she was not, sang and danced
around the room as if giving a performance, crawled around on the
floor, stood in the toilet, got in the shower fully clothed,
tried to walk out of the room in a state of
18
undress, "humped" the floor as if having sex with an imaginary
person, drank her own urine and on at least one occasion placed
her head in the toilet.
It is impossible to reconstruct the actual amounts of fluid and
food ingested because the caretaker notes are erratic and
imprecise in their notations and they were written by untrained
CSFSO employees rather than health care professionals. We also do
not have notes or accurate testimony for every shift. It is
clear, however, that after the first several days Lisa never
completed a normal meal and her only real sustenance was an
occasional protein shake and mixtures of fruit and protein
powder. She sometimes would ingest an entire shake and on other
occasions would spit out everything that she was fed. Her fluid
intake was also limited, although again no precise amounts can
be reconstructed from the available documents and caretaker
testimony.
The combativeness that exemplified the early portion of her stay
seemed to subside and guards were no longer posted at the doors
for the last four or five days of her life. At one point Sylvia
DeLaVega could no longer handle her caretaker responsibilities
and they were undertaken by more emotionally stable staff
members. By Saturday, December 2`d, both Heather Petzold (in her
oral testimony) and Rita Boykin (in written notes to
Kartuzinski) indicated that Lisa had grown so weak she could no
longer stand or walk. They have since said, however, that Lisa
made a "partial" recovery gaining back strength before her
sudden demise on Tuesday December 5`°. The State's testimony will
indicate that Lisa's dehydration was so severe that she would
have been extremely and obviously symptomatic for at least a day
and probably several days before her death. These symptoms would
not only include mental confusion, but during the last few days
lethargy increasing to almost complete unresponsiveness.
When Lisa was allowed to leave Morton Plant on Saturday November
18, 1995, CSFSO employee Judy Goldsberry-Weber, a subordinate of
Johnson's in the Medical Liaison Office, had promised Dr. Lovett
(whom she knew from prior dealings) that Lisa would
19
receive necessary care." Weber later learned that Johnson was
involved in Lisa's care and asked Johnson how Lisa was doing.
Johnson gruffly told Weber to not to talk to anyone about it that
she (Johnson) had been placed in charge and Weber was no longer
involved. Some days later,. Weber was asked to pick up a
prescription for Lisa from a Largo pharmacy (she believes it was
valium, but detectives have been unable to locate this
prescription). She again asked Janis how Lisa was doing in case
she ran into Dr. Lovett and he asked. According to Weber, they
wound up getting in a screaming match after Janis said "You
don't have to worry about him, I'm in charge. Butt out."
David Houghton testified that he overheard Janis talking on the
phone about getting Lisa to take medication." Houghton, a
dentist who was preparing to seek licensure in Florida, indicated
he believed he could get Lisa to swallow. Later, probably on the
21", he and Janis had a conversation with Dr. Minkoff about
prescribing medication to help Lisa sleep. Houghton testified
that there was an initial discussion of liquid chloral hydrate
but they were unable to find that at any pharmacy. Dr. Minkoff
then prescribed injectable valium under Houghton's name for Lisa
after a second phone conversation involving Minkoff, Houghton
and Johnson." Houghton picked up the valium from the pharmacy
and returned it to Johnson the next day. During these
conversations with Minkoff, Houghton and Janis described Lisa as
a Type HI (a psychotic person) who was having difficulty
sleeping. Hougton did not believe that Lisa was ever given the
valium, because in a follow up conversation with Alain
Kartuzinski he overruled using this drug on the premise that it
may be too strong and affect later attempts at auditing.
Houghton then, on three occasions with Kartuzinski's approval,
medicated Lisa with a mixture of Benadryl (an over the counter
antihistamine generically known as diphenhydramine which is used
in non-prescription sleep aids) and aspirin. The aspirin was
36 A copy of Weber's statement is attached as exhibit 9. " A
copy of Houghton's two statements are included as exhibits 10 and
11. '° Minkoff's recollection is imprecise as to who was on the
phone during these conversations. 20
suggested by Kartuzinski after looking up Hubbard writings that
suggested that aspirin may serve to block some of Lisa's visual
delusions. Houghton did this by filling an irrigating syringe
with a crushed aspirin and Benadryl (a syrup) mixture then
injecting it down the back of Lisa's throat. while she was held
onto by others. lie never discussed with Lisa what he was giving
her or why, as she was not capable in his estimation of coherent
conversation or consent. Houghton was relatively sure he told
Janis about this after the first incident and before the next
two.
Weber recalled overhearing Houghton and Laura discussing the
procedure and became very upset; Weber has a nursing background
and knew patients could only be force medicated with physician
authorization. According to Weber, Houghton and Laura closed the
door so that Weber could no longer hear what they were talking
about."' Weber then confronted Janis about this, asking what
doctor had approved such a procedure. Janis said to "butt out."
When Weber indicated she thought something was wrong, Johnson
said that it was not Weber's concern. Weber indicated to Johnson
that she had never known Lisa to be violent and Janis responded
"Well, you know psychotic breaks." Weber was so upset about this
unauthorized use of forced medication that she called the CSFSO
legal office and asked Judy Fontana to "check it out." Fontana's
status in the corporation is indicated by her elevation to an
officer of the corporation in early 1996. Her husband Humberto
Fontana was in the Office of Special Affairs and had been present
at Morton Plant when Lisa was released.
It appears from caretaker notes, witness interviews and Johnson's
taped admissions that prior to December 5'°, Johnson was at
Lisa's room on at least six dates - on November 23rd, November
24"', November 29'", November 30'", December 1", and December 4"
- and that she talked with the caretakers or others about Lisa
on November 26'", 27'° and December 3`°, 1995. Documents and
testimony concerning these dates provide relevant detail
concerning Lisa's treatment and Johnson's involvement:
3° Houghton denied any recollection of such an incident.
21
11/23/95 Security trainee Sam Ghiora who was posted at Lisa's
room door from approximately eleven a.m, till 9 p.m for 8-10
days in the middle of Lisa's stay remembered Johnson being at the
room on only one occasion, Thanksgiving November 23, for about
four hours. While Janis was there Lisa tried to exit the front
door and Ghiora "guided" her back inside. Lisa said she doesn't
know what's happening and asked Gltiora if he could help her.
Ghiora described a number of bizarre behaviors by Lisa,
including her "not making any sense," repeating "E. T. phone
home," rattling off colors and numbers, and simply not being
aware of what was going on around her.
11/23/95 Sylvia DelaVega testified that she began her shift at 3
4 p.m, and stayed until approximately three a.m. the next
morning. Heather Petzold was there when she began her shift.
During the shift Lisa was saying she was an artist and singing
and dancing. Janis arrived around two a.m. Lisa was walking
around the room, had hit the lamp and started taking off her
clothes. DelaVega was present when Johnson gave Lisa a shot in
the buttocks. Initially she stated she didn't know the date,
(i.e., the 26'", 27', etc.) but later in statement indicated it
was the first day she was on watch, which would be the 23`'.
(This witness is a Mexican citizen and is currently residing in
Mexico.) Petzold also indicated she was present when Janis gave
Lisa a shot in the buttocks but doesn't recall the date. Janis
said the shot was to help her sleep but Petzold did not remember
if she was told what the substance was.
11/23/95 Leslie Woodcraft testified that she replaced Sylvia
DelaVega on the 231 who apparently got burnt out before her
shift was over. (She recalled this began around 12 midnight to 2
a.m.) Johnson was there when Woodcraft arrived. Lisa was acting
crazy the entire time, calling Janis "mommy," then walking
backwards and talking to herself and then talking to Janis again
as if she was someone else. Lisa went into the bathroom and
turned on all the spigots. Janis gave her a small pill that was
supposed to calm her.
11/24/95 After being briefed by Kartuzinski at around 10:30 p.m.
(he told them about Lisa's condition and that she had been given
medication so that she would go to sleep), Stracener and
Pendizini began a watch with Lisa around midnight. Stracener
testified that when she first arrived Lisa was asleep. She woke
up and began engaging in bizarre behavior, saying she was Michael
Jackson, singing, sucking her thumb and licking the wall. She
vomited up a dark substance that looked like blood; Ghiora and
Kellerhaus came and checked her out and didn't believe that the
substance was actually blood. Janis showed up later for about a
half-hour and checked out Lisa's mouth. She directed them to
give Lisa vitamins and water. Pendenzini confirmed that about two
hours after she began watch with Stracener, Johnson showed up at
the motel room and helped them change Lisa's clothes. Janis gave
her vitamins and orange juice, but did not give her a shot.
11125/95 Houghton administered first dose of Benadryl and aspirin
to Lisa using a syringe while others held her. He successfully
got her to swallow the concoction and later (he believes)
mentioned it to Johnson. He did not ask for consent or explain
the procedure to Lisa because he did not believe her capable of
understanding.
22
1
11/26/95 Sylvia DelaVega testified that on this Sunday she saw
Janis Johnson twice; Johnson indicated that Lisa was refusing to
take water or food and was refusing protein shakes and sleeping
more. (The witness identified this not by date but as second
Sunday of watch.)
1/27/95 Houghton, presumably in the early evening, administered a
second dose of the aspirin/Benadryl mixture. Houghton believed
that Rita and Heather were watching Lisa at the time; she was
"gently" restrained during the process. Lisa looked sweaty and
red in the face and was talking in non sequiturs. She seemed
more agitated than she had on the first occasion of forced
medication.
11/27/95 In her caretaker notes Rita Boykin indicates that Lisa
had slept only forty five minutes from eight thirty to 12:30 and
that she called the M.L.O. to get some instructions. The notes
indicate she spoke with "Dr. Johnson" re no real sleep at 4:00.
11/28/95 Houghton testified that he administered the final dose
of the aspirin/Benadryi concoction before he leaves for
Gainesville later in the day to take dental boards.
11/29/95 Valerie Demange testified that she believes it was on
this date that she saw Johnson give a Magnesium shot to Lisa.
There was some ambiguity as to the substance injected but at page
43 she indicates that Johnson told her it was Magnesium in the
shot to relax her muscles and get some sleep; at 75 she says it
was her "impression" that the shot was Magnesium and that Johnson
measured Lisa's respiration after the shot and at page 92 she
indicates that Johnson told her the shot was Magnesium to relax
the muscles. Demange indicates Janice called someone who she
asstuned to be Dr. Minkoff for approval prior to the injections'
11/29/95 Chloralhydrate prescription by Minkoff was filled.
11/30/95 is the approximate date of Sam Ghiora's last watch as
security in front of Lisa's room. He had been told by Baxter she
was not being violent anymore.
11/30/95 Rita Boykin's caretaker notes indicate at lam (which
would actually be Friday December 1": "Dr. Johnson just visited,
Not possible for her to have any more chloral hydrate. I need to
get four more valerian root capsules into her and a quart of
fluid."
12/1/95 Johnson issued a note in her handwriting indicating Lisa
was given "2 mg of MgCl2 IM" at 10:30 and two 500 mg chloral
hydrates. The note indicated Lisa fell asleep in midsentence
after getting medication. Johnson noted that respiration is IS
24 and that Lisa's extremities were cool but not cold and that
Sylvia (DelaVega) needs relief and Johnson will wait for
replacement. The note directs that the "plan" for the next 8
hours is: needs two liters of fluids when awake and attempt to
feed. Call if any questions or problems. Johnson has acknowledged
in her taped statement of May 1996 that she
Minkoff has adamantly denied that he authorized such injections
or provided injectable Magnesium.
23
noticed Lisa's health deteriorating when she saw Lisa on this
date; Lisa looked noticeably thinner.
12/2/95 According to her testimony, Arrunada gives Lisa chloral
hydrate on at Janis's instructions to help her sleep. This was
because Lisa was too active.
12/2/95 Both Heather Petzold's testimony (her reports are
missing) and Rita Boykin's caretaker reports indicate that as of
this Saturday, Lisa was considerably weakened and unable to walk.
We have no direct evidence that they communicated this
deterioration in Lisa's condition to Johnson. Kartuzinski
acknowledged this information in his immunized statement.
12/3/95 Although it is not documented in any of the caretaker
notes both Rita Boykin and Heather Petzold's current testimony
now indicate that Lisa began to improve and regain strength from
Saturday. (Petzold did not indicate this in her intitial sworn
testimony.) Sylvia DelaVega testified that she saw Janis on this
date in the M.L.O. office (she refers to it as the third Sunday
rather than by date) and asked he if she had seen Lisa. Janis
responded that Lisa was doing better and sleeping better. In
Johnson's statement, however, she indicated she was going to be
busy over the weekend and asked Laura to watch over Lisa.
Houghton testified that he had heard Janis was with Dr. Megan
Shields of California over the weekend who was giving physical
exams to a number of high level auditors. Other witnesses,
including Kartuzinski have confirmed this.
12/4/95 Johnson admits in her statement that when she got back to
her regular schedule, she stopped by Lisa's room at about eight
on this Monday night to see her. Lisa was already asleep and
under the covers, so Johnson alleges she backed out of the room
without waking her.
12/5/95 The chronology of events on Lisa's last day is confusing
and witnesses conflict on a number of material matters. There
appears to be a significant period of time between making the
decision to take Lisa to the hospital and actually leaving in a
van for New Port Richey. Emma Schamerhom testified in her last
sworn statement that she talked with Janis Johnson on either
Monday night or Tuesday morning and that she looked concerned.
Johnson explained that Lisa looked "septic". Schamerhorn does
not believe this was Tuesday night and did not think she had any
contact with Janis on the evening of Lisa's death. None of the
caretakers, however, remembered seeing Janis at all on Tuesday
until Laura paged her on the evening of the Fifth and Johnson
indicated in her statement that she did have contact with Emma
the night of Lisa's death. Johnson did not know how to get to
the hospital in NPR and Emma had come over with a hand drawn
map. Similarly, Janet Herring initially testified that she saw
Johnson on Tuesday, December 5'° and talked to her about Lisa.
Janis had a strange look on her face and looked white, which she
interpreted as Janis being distraught. Johnson said she was
worried about Lisa and that Lisa was doing worse and she was
going to take her to the hospital. Her impression was that there
was some urgency and she was going to do it right away. Herring
believed this conversation occurred during a break period in the
internship
24
training area which would place it (according to Herring's belief
of when the breaks take place) at about 3:45 - 4:00 p.m. In a
subsequent October 1998 interview, she testified that she has no
idea of the time when this statement took place. The conflicting
versions of the timing of Lisa's deterioration and trip to New
Port Richey are difficult to reconcile. Heather Petzold and Rita
Boykin had the afternoon shift taking care_of Lisa. Laura had
left at eight in the morning and was to return around five to
relieve Rita. Rita initially testified that she was present when
Lisa was given a bath around five o'clock and that Lisa was
walking on her own and talking at the time. In her last statement
however she insisted that she left before Lisa was given a bath.
Laura testified that she returned at five o'clock to replace
Rita. Lisa seemed weaker and her eyes were fixed during the bath
and she "shit" on herself. Laura believed this was the result of
her anal sphincter relaxing - something she considered a sign of
possible neurological trouble. She also noticed dark circles
around Lisa's eyes. Laura said she left at six o'clock to tell
Janis then returned to the room. Heather was with her at this
time. Janis came over at approximately seven o'clock and
indicated they were going to take her to Dr. Minkoff. Heather
testified that after Lisa's bath she left for 45 minutes to an
hour at a "normal time" for dinner; she believed it could have
been 5:15 toto 6:00 or 5:45 to 6:30. When she returned room was
empty and Lisa was gone. She had not seen Janis at all that day
or the day before. She recalled in her first statement that Lisa
was unable to assist them during the bath, but didn't seem to
recall her defecating during the bath or her rectal muscles being
dilated. She did indicate, when told of Arrunada's testimony
that Lisa's eyes were "fixed," that "that gels." Johnson stated
in her taped statement in May of 1996 that at about 7 p.m. she
got a page from Laura; it took her about ten minutes to get over
there. She was told by Laura that Lisa had diarrhea for almost
24 hours. (Neither Laura nor Heather testified to this; Rita
indicated Lisa had some diarrhea but not constant or
continuous.) She said Lisa was friendly and said Hi. Lisa was
clean and neat, but looked septic; looked very, "majorly"
dehydrated with dry membranes and sunken eyes She had
hemorrhaging similar to petechiae. She could carry on a
conversation, and made sense, but was slow to respond. She
agreed to go see Minkoff. Janis said she called Minkoff and
allegedly told him Lisa needed to be seen tonight that it
wouldn't wait till tomorrow and that she wanted a separate room
away from the hoo ha of the emergency room. Johnson realized she
didn't know how to get to the hospital and called Emma who ran
over a map. She thought it was about a forty minute drive, but it
took about an hour. Minkoff testified that he was on duty at the
emergency room and received a call from Janis shhortly before
seven (it could have been slightly earlier, but he is pretty sure
of time frame)." Janis said she was calling about the girl he
had issued the prescription for arid thought she had an
infection, possibly strep throat. She had had some diarrhea and
Janis wanted a prescription for penicillin. Minkoff responded
that if she needs a prescription she needs to be seen by a
doctor. If she was really sick, she should be taken to Morton
Plant.' Janis said she was not and said she would bring her to
NPR.
41 Minkoff is quoted in an earlier interview as indicating
the call was between 7:00 and 7:45 p.m.
42 A statement to this effect was overheard by another
witness in the NPR emergency room.
25
Minkoff said to bring her soon since he went off duty at ten. He
told her not to show at up 9:30. Minkoff does not believe he was
told about petechial hemorrhages, or that she was severely
dehydrated. Paul Greenwood was a chiropractor who was on staff in
the CSFSO in Clearwater. On December 5'° he was studying how to
use the e-meter" when called by his superiot Andrea Sprecher a
little before eight. (Sprecher confirms she was paged by Janis
to help and she assigned Greenwood instead because he was
stronger, yet still gentle.) She told him to help take this girl
to the hospital. Greenwood went to the Cabanas. Laura was in the
room and let him in. Lisa was in the room, lying down with her
eyes open, breathing loudly. They carried her to car. Greenwood
never saw any voluntary movement by any extremity or any body
part nor did he see Lisa ever acknowledge his presence. Lisa did
not talk on way to hospital; her breathing changed about halfway
to the hospital and became very quiet.
Kartuzinski declined to provide sworn testimony to the State
Attorney's Office without immunity. In October of 1998 he was
subpoenaed in for a State Attorney investigation, receiving
statutory use immunity as a result of the subpoena. Kartuzinski
acknowledged being at the emergency room and driving Lisa back to
the Ft. Harrison. He acknowledged lying to the police in his
earlier taped statements out of concern for himself and
"possibly" concern for the Church but denies coordinating those
falsehoods with other witnesses." He admitted that he did a
report of his interview with the police for the Office of Special
Affairs after it occurred." He testified contrary to his
earlier taped statements to police that he had a brief
conversation with Lisa when she first arrived at the hotel in
which he suggested it may be necessary to do some auditing and
that it would be nice if she would sleep, take vitamins and eat
well in preparation for this. According to Kartuzinski Lisa said
okay. Kartuzinski did not discuss any specifics with her because
he had not yet determined what auditing would be necessary.
Within a short period of time, Lisa's condition deteriorated
markedly and she was incoherent and no longer competent to
°' The e-meter is a device similar to a galvanometer which
measures changes in skin conductivity and is used during the
auditing process to measure a subjects reaction to questions and
phrases spoken by the auditor. The subject holds a metal
cannister in each hand. The reactions are measured on a needle.
Karmzinski Sworn Statement at pages 72, 76. A copy of this
statement is included as Attachment 12.
45 Kartuzinski Sworn Statement at page 43.
26
make decisions or handle everyday affairs. He had no explanation
for not calling Lisa's family to inform them of her condition.
Kartuzinski acknowledged getting oral reports from Janis Johnson
and written reports from the caretakers. He states that the
latter were put into Lisa's PC folder by him. He also wrote notes
about this in about ten separate pages in the PC folder and made
about 20 pages of notes concerning scriptures and Lisa's
condition'6 Kartuzinski also read a report from auditor Ruthie
Humphery. Humphrey had attempted to audit Lisa during the middle
part of her stay after she had enough sleep. Lisa began licking
the e-meter; the auditing did not continue and was never
attempted again during Lisa's stay" These notes are also not in
the PC folder.
He recalls reading the notes from Petzold or Boykin indicating
that Lisa was too weak to walk or stand and being concerned
about her condition. He states that he also read the subsequent
reports up to her death (these along with all of Kartuzinski's
notes are missing from the file) and recalls them being about
the same - that her condition had not improved which was "not
very able to walk, still not eating enough, still not sleeping"
or drinking enough."
Kartuzinksi further claimed that Lisa was PTS Type III. He
defined PTS as a potential trouble source, meaning that Lisa
would be viewed as someone who represented a threat to herself
and to the "Church." 46 Kattuzinski Sworn Statement at pages 38
49. 47 Kartuzinski Swom Statement at page 49. '°
Kartuzinski Swom Statement at pages 155, 157.
27
Kartuzinski claimed he was notified between 5-6 p.m..°9 that
Laura was trying to get in touch with Janis about Lisa and that
subsequently Janis came over to his office after seeing Lisa. She
was out of breath (as if she had hurried to his office) and
concerned that Lisa was septic - meaning she, had a "big"
infection. They called Minkoff together and Minkoff would not
prescribed antibiotics without seeing the patient. Kartuzinski
specifically contradicts Minkoff's assertion that he suggested
that they take he to Morton Plant if Lisa was really ill, even
though others in the NPR emergency room recall overhearing this
part of the conversation.
Finally, Kartuzinski acknowledges that Lisa's treatment was not
in accord with the tenets of Scientology. Hubbard "scriptures"
indicate that Type Ill's can only be handled by Scientology
organizations with hospital facilities (neither Flag nor any
other Scientology facility meets this criteria) and a specific
directive prevents the treatment of "psychotics" at Flag." The
Scriptures require a full medical examination of a person in
such a distraught condition.5' Kartuzinski admitted that at the
time of the examination at Morton Plant and his initial contact
with her at the Fort Harrison she was not displaying the severe
mental symptoms that later developed. Finally, Kartuzinksi
acknowledged that Lisa did not consent to the injections and
medications he had given to her and she was not capable of doing
so."
Kartuzinski tested that at the time of Lisa's death he was the
Senior Case Supervisor for CSFSO and as such was the highest
person in the organization with control over the handling of
Lisa's situation' He informed Debbie Cook, the Captain of Flag,
of the incident and she would have been aware of the nature of
Lisa's condition from his
" Id. at page 144, 172-174.
50 Id. at pages 19-20.
" Id. at page 23. He assumed without knowing any details
that such an examination was done at Morton Plant.
5' Id. at pages 162, 170.
53 Id at page 203.
28
conversations with her. No one at the time was higher in the
organization to notify than Cook. Cook acknowledged in her own
testimony being informed of Lisa's stay and getting periodic
updates on her condition. Paul Kellerhaus (Senior in the Hubbard
Communications Office), and Arthur Baxter (Head of Security)
were heavily involved in the watch process. In addition Brian
Anderson, vice president of the corporation, has acknowledged
being informed of the situation and getting briefed by Paul
Kellerhaus every several days about Lisa's condition. In addition
to these individuals and the caretakers, the security guards
posted at Lisa's door, and the supervisors who briefed them and
organized a schedule, a significant number of other people in the
hierarchy were aware of Lisa's situation and received updated
information from briefings or conversations with other employees:
Marcus Quirino (Chief Deputy Officer and Chief Officer's
Organizing Officer), Annie Mora (Office of Special Affairs),
Janet Herring (Organizing Officer for Chief Officer of Flag and
former Director of the Corporation).
F. THE ISSUE OF CONSENT.
Informed consent means a voluntary decision after sufficient
explanation and disclosure that the person has at least a
general understanding of the medically acceptable alternatives to
make a knowing health care decision without coercion or undue
influence." In this case it should be viewed in the context of
Lisa's 18-year sojourn with Scientology procedures which over the
course of the year proceeding her death had failed her.
Despite expending large sums of money, she had mental and
emotional difficulties throughout the year of her death
resulting in a mild "psychotic episode" in the summer of 1995.
This was followed by a declaration that she had finally reached
her goal of Clear, and therefore by Scientology definition
should have had no more "engrams" that could be "restimulated" to
cause the "psychotic break" that she subsequently experienced.
She had spent over twenty thousand dollars on courses and
auditing over that summer alone, and despite financial
difficulties and diminishing productivity at her job, had
committed herself to
54 See definitions contained in F.S. §765.101 (1998).
29
another $10,000 to reach even higher levels. After August of
1995, however, she did not pursue these courses or pay the
additional monies to which she had obligated herself and in fact
did not use up the auditing services that she had already
prepaid for. She contacted her mother (who was not a
scientologist) that fall and told a lifelong, non-scientologist
friend that she was coming home to Texas for Christmas and
staying for good Ss
Her conduct at the time of the accident (at least prior to the
arrival of her fellow Scientologists) at best suggested
ambivalence. She indicated she wanted people to think she was
crazy because she wanted help. She referred to herself variously
as a bad person, having bad thoughts, who had taken "her eyes
off the object" and was tired and wanted help. She agreed to go
with paramedics to Morton Plant Hospital for evaluation.
The defendant suggests that McPherson wanted, requested and
consented to the treatment (and presumably the abuse and neglect
which have been alleged). The sole apparent basis for these
assertions, other than Lisa's history as a Scicntologist, is the
note in hospital records by attending physician Flynn Lovett
that Lisa did not want to stay at the hospital and that the
Scientologists had agreed to take care of Lisa and give her the
kind of care "she wanted." The defense then suggests, without
supporting detail, that Lisa made a specific and affirmative
request for "spiritual treatment" by Scientolgists and then
attempts to equate this presumed "request" as justification for
the forced use of medication, injections, herbal remedies and
prescription medicines on an incompetent and resisting patient.
This "consenting" patient had been housed by them in a room
without access to family or the outside world for seventeen days
when she died as a result of her, immobility and --deh-__.-. _ .
_
Consent is largely irrelevant to both charged crimes. No one can
by consent grant permission to another to engage in the practice
of medicine as that authority can only be conferred by licensing
authorities. Similarly, a disabled adult cannot, by "consenting"
to or
" Transcript of Kelly Davis statement.
30
acquiescing in abuse or culpably negligent conduct that causes
death or great bodily harm, eliminate the criminal consequences
for the abuser. See, e.g.. In Sientarecki v. State, 724 So.2d 626
(Fla. 4" DCA 1998), review granted by Sieniarecki v. State, 729
So.2d 394 (Fla. 1999). More importantly however, the credible
testimony does not support the suggestion of consent. ?'he actual
statement of Lisa to hospital officials was simply that she did
not want to stay and wanted to leave with her friends from the
congregation. According to Judy Gsoldsbeny-Weber site indicated
only that she found the noise and confusion and the doctors
"poking" her bothersome and wanted to go someplace quiet. Initial
oral and taped statements to police by Janis Johnson and Alain
Kattuzinski (the two corporate employees most involved in Lisa's
care) indicated that Lisa had not consented to or requested any
procedures or medication, and that since it would violate
Scientology principles to provide such treatment without
informed consent, none were planned. Indeed as late as February
1997 this continued to be the official position of the CSFSO. A
February 22, 1997 letter from attorney Sandy Weinberg,who
represents the CSFSO in both the civil and criniiriil
proceedings, responded to police inquiries by stating: You have
also asked for the person who was in charge of Lisa's stay at the
hotel in November and early December. Lisa was not at the hold
for services and therefore there was no auditor or case
supervisor from the Church in charge. However, Alain Kartuzinski
and Jams Johnson periodically received information on her
status.[emphasis supplied] In October of 1998, nearly three years
after his initial statements to the police and only after being
granted immunity, Alain Kartuzinksi has now changed his
testimony. He admits that he did not discuss with Lisa the
possibility.of Lisa going back to her own residence but simply
asked her if he could drive her to the Fort Harrison. After Lisa
was taken directly to a room in the Cabana area, Kartttzinski
had a brief visit with her at the room at which time the
following conversation allegedly occurred:
Lisa was sitting on the bed. She was looking maybe a little
better actually at that point, so I sat down at the other side
of the bed. I said that we-we would be doing some auditing and
that-is that all right with her and she said, "Yes," and I said,
you know." It would be nice if
you just rested and ate some good meals, took your vitamins in
preparation for this auditing," and she said, "Okay, I'll do
that."' At the time of this alleged conversation Kartuzinski had
not yet decided what type or how much auditing needed to be done
and had no specific discussions with her about specific
procedures, medication, the circumstances or length of her stay
at the Fort Harrison or the potential cost she would be facing.
Moreover, by Kartuzinski's own admission, Lisa's condition at the
time of this conversation was markedly different from her
deiirious and psychotic state a few days later. '1'lterefore, the
possible treatments and alternatives that Lisa faced once she
became delusional and dangerous to herself and others were not
the same as she had faced at Morton Plant or the first day of her
stay when Kartuzinski alleges he spoke with her. The informed
decision she would have faced would have been markedly different
as she continued to deteriorate in the defendant's exclusive
care. After seventeen days of nightmarish failure of the CSFSO's
diagnostic and treatment decisions, in which she had lost 20-40
pounds, become severely dehydrated, and developed abrasions and
bruises over much of her body, it is unlikely that a rational
person would have decided to continue this course. Since no
licensed medical doctor ever saw Lisa, and she was not medically
evaluated once she became extremely symptomatic, none of her
caretakers would have been in a position to explain the
alternatives to her. Of course, no one attempted to do so, nor
was any informed consent to any of these procedures ever
acquired.
The overwhehning evidence, however, indicates that within 48
hours of her arrival at the Fort Harrison and throughout her
stay in the hands of the defendant corporation she so markedly
deteriorated that she was incapable of coherently discussing her
own needs or of caring for herself or of giving consent to any
treatment procedure. The persons who gave injections to Lisa,
forced medication down her throat with an irrigation syringe,
and mixed herbal remedies and other medications in milkshakes
did not inform Lisa of the nature and purpose of the substances
she was ingesting or attempt to get her consent at least in part
because they felt she was incapable of coherent communication.
Kartuzinski Sworn Statement October 13, 1998, at page 72.
32
Over the course of the seventeen days of her stay at the Fort
Harrison, Lisa's conduct was anything but cooperative as she
descended quickly (if the caretakers are to be believed) into
disorientation and auditory and visual hallucinations, repeatedly
tried to walk out of the room, fought - spmetimes violently -
with her caretakers requiring security guards to be posted at her
door, rarely slept, refused to eat or drink on any consistent
basis, would not voluntarily take medications given her, was
held down while unauthorized injections were administered, held
down on three occasions while a concoction of prescription drugs
and aspirin were injected down her throat by an unlicensed
dentist, frequently cursed her caretakers, and also accused them
of trying to kill her. Lamps, mirrors and phones were removed
from her room.
The condition of her body was a poignant testament to the
difficulty of her fma1 days: she had bruises, inflicted by her
own conduct or the restraint imposed by her "caretakers"
(sometimes accomplished barehanded other times done with a towel
to get a better grip), over her extremities and trunk and
abrasions, some resembling insect bites, over her hands wrists
ankles and feet. Her eyes were sunken as a result of
dehydration, her body thinned by weight and water loss. Dried
material was caked on her teeth. Even her fellow Scientologists
have referred to the visual condition of her body as "shocking
and unbelievable" and "horrific."
During Lisa's stay she slept sufficiently to perform auditing on
only one occasion and when it was attempted Lisa responded by
licking the e-meter then throwing it. No other auditing
"treatment" or use of Scientology "technology" was attempted
throughout her stay. The defendant was equally unsuccessful in
its attempts to gain Lisa's cooperation in taking medications,
vitamins, herbal remedies and other drugs, and in eating,
drinking and sleeping.
For instance, Teresa Cezare, an Argentinean national who was an
employee of the defendant, watched after Lisa on the 24'° and
28'° of November. Teresa testified that on both occasions Lisa
refused to eat or drink and was spitting out food and fluids. She
deteriorated from the first visit to the second and had
developed more bruises ("violet") on her body.
33
Cezare indicates she had been told by security guards that Lisa
likes to try to leave the room and to not let her do so. On two
to three occasions when she was there, Lisa tried to leave and
indicated that she wanted to go (she was not fully clothed), but
did not indicate that she wanted to go "hopte." Lisa resisted
Cezare's efforts to return her to the room and Cezare had to hold
Lisa by the shoulders and guide her back in and sit her in a
chairs' Similarly, Lisa tried to walk out twice on Security Guard
Sam Ghiora when he was posted to the front door of the room. On
the first occasion, as she started to walk out the door Chiora
.pointed to direct her back inside; she initially said that he
wasn't CMO (a corporate/church office) and could not tell her
what to do and then, referring to him by name said she didn't
understand what was happening and for him to please help her." In
a second incident, Lisa walked to the door where Ghiora was
stationed and attempted first to knee him in the groin and then
poke him in the eye. Ghiora states she was not coherent at the
time 59 Other caretakers also report attempts by Lisa to walk
out the door or break the window in the room.6°
Clearly Lisa was also not cooperative in taking medicine or in
eating or drinking the food and fluids she was offered by her
caretakers. After the first few days, Houghton's involvement was
precipitated by the fact that he knew how to make uncooperative
subjects swallow medication by using a syringe to put the
substance far enough down the throat that swallowing became
reflexive. Initial medications were sought in liquid or
intramuscular form so they would be able administer them
effectively. The caretaker notes and testirnonies are replete
with indications that Lisa spit out vitamins, medicine, food and
fluids. Although
n Sworn Statement of Teresa Cezare , May 1997 at pages 28-31. S3
Sworn Statement of Sam Ghiora May 1997, at page 12. 5' Id. at
page 22.
"° See, e.g., Sworn Statement of Sylvia DelaVega at page 17;
Sworn Statement of Valerie tDemange at pages 85, 92. Statement
of Heather Petzold (Hoff) at page 17. Statement of Laura Arrunada
at pagel9.
34
her behavior was erratic, it is clear that after the first few
days she never had a complete meal and was not eating and
drinking enough to sustain life."
For instapce, Emma Schamerhorn, who personally cared for Lisa
early in her stay before being replaced by Janis Johnson,
testified that the most fluid she took in while she was with her
was a few swallows of protein shake and couple of swallows of
water. Sate rald not think Lisa had more than 2-4 ounces of
fluids during the periods that she was on watch; the most Emma
ever saw her eat at one time was a banana. Emma agreed that Lisa
was not eating and drinking enough to keep her alive in the long
run.' Similarly, Heather Petzold, who cared for Lisa the second
half of her stay, was beginning to get franticb3 about the
situation in early December and noticed Lisa's rapid physical
decline over the last several days of her life`" Although she
didn't believe Lisa needed to go to the hospital, Petzold
nonetheless wrote reports around the first or second of December
that "she (Lisa) was continuing to scream, you know just things
over and over. She's defecating on the bed. She's - she doesn't
walk around as much she is sleeping less. She - we tried to give
her protein drinks, we tried to give her like eggs, whatever we
could give her, and I haven't been able to succeed. We need to
change something."65 Petzold's reports have been lost or
destroyed by the corporation, as have all caretaker notes for
the last two days of Lisa's life. Petzold testified that she
didn't believe there was any day where Lisa was fed and ate
sufficiently.'
61 Because the caretaker notes are not complete and the
recollections and testimonies of caretakers are limited in
detail it is difficult to precisely reconstruct the exact amount
of fluids and food which Lisa consumed during her 17 day "stay"
at the Ft. Harrison.
6'Sworn Statement of Emma Schamerhom at pages 102-106. 6' Sworn
Statement of Heather Petzold at page 47. Sworn Statement of
Heather Petzold at page 42. Sworn Statement Heather Petzoid at
pages 33-35. "s Id. at page 44.
35
Lisa's continued resistance was also manifested by the number of
times she was restrained and attacked or tried to harm her
caretakers. Testimony suggested that Lisa was violent for periods
of up to two hours at a time, and had to be held down for
periods of thirty minutes, forty five minutes and up to an hour
" She attempted to slap, gouge, kick and strike her caretakers,
struck one on the arm, gave another a black eye and accused
others of wanting to kill her." She was held down while trying
to iteep her quiet, while trying to take her temperature, while
trying to medicate her orally, and while giving leer
injections.'
Janis Johnson has suggested in her taped statement to police in
May of 1996, in the presence of corporation counsel Bob Johnson,
that it was Lisa who wanted to go to New Port Richey for medical
help instead of Morton Plant. Ms. Johnson admitted that it was
apparent to her from Lisa's skin and sunken eyes that she was
"majorly" dehydrated. In addition, she apparently believed Lisa
to be suffering from such a massive systemic infection that her
capillaries had burst causing petechial hemorrhages on her arms
and legs. Nonetheless, she claimed that Lisa was conscious and
coherent and wished to be taken to New Port Richey to Minkoff -
to someone who would treat her with respect. Moreover, Johnson
suggested that Lisa had not been mentally ill during her stay,
but just a little stressed out. She described Lisa as "with it"
and just there for "rest and relaxation."
These characterizations were patently false; the severity of
Lisa's medical condition as demonstrated by the forensic
evidence indicate she was incapable of coherent conversation and
essentially unconscious at the time she allegedly had this
conversation. Paul Greenfield, who assisted in carrying Lisa to
the van and transporting her to the hospital, testified that
°' Statement of Heather Petzold.
"' See caretaker note 00154 for Saturday December 2, indicating
that Lisa thought caretakers were "psyches or other enemies who
wanted to kill her. "Statement of Valerie DeMange at pages 43;
85. Statement of Patricia Stracener at pages 24-25. Statement of
Alice Vongrondelle at page 21. Statement of Barbro Wennberg at
pages 15, 33. Statement of Rita Boykin at page 84.
6' Statement of Demange at page 43. Statement of Stracener at
pages 24-25. Statement of DeLaVega at page 29.Statement of
Houghton at pages 55, 143, 175 . Statement of Schamerhom at
pages 29, 50-51 and second Statement at page 90. Statement of
Wennberg at page 52.
36
although her eyes were open she was motionless and
uncommunicative for the entire period he saw her. She never
spoke to him, acknowledged his presence, or made any voluntary
movement of any kind. Her breathing was labored even before the
trip began.
Based upon Lisa's bizarre and delusional behavior, every
caretaker with the exception of Johnson has described Lisa as
incoherent and incapable of making decisions about her welfare.
For instance, Leslie Woodcraft testified that Lisa seemed
incapable of making decisions,'o and David Houghton indicated
that Lisa was not competent to make decisions on medication or to
make even the most basic decisions of whether to see a doctor."
Rita Boykin indicated that Lisa only spoke incoherently and that
she did not attempt to communicate with her because she did not
believe her to be capable of giving a coherent response."
Heather Petzold testified that she never had a coherent "comet
cycle" with Lisa except for a single occasion on a single day
when Lisa asked her name."
Finally, after being granted immunity, Kartuzinski testified
under oath that Lisa never asked for any of the medications or
other remedies used on her. He acknowledged that it was clear
after the first day that Lisa was unable to function by herself,
had serious mental problems, and was incapacitated as far as
handling day to day living, including being unable to make
decisions about her own welfare '° Additionally, Kartuzinski
testified that he and Janis called Minkoff together before
deciding to take her to the hospital in New Port Richey. He is
unaware of any discussion with Lisa about where to take her and
does not believe she
'° Sworn Statement at page 29. " Sworn Statement at page
169. '2 Sworn Statement at page 21.
n Sworn Statement at page 91. See, also Sworn Statement of Alice
Vangrondelle (second statement, April 9, 1998) at page 13. '°
Sworn Statement at pages169-170.
37
was competent to discuss this. Janis never related that she had
such a conversation with Lisa. He states that he made the
decision for her to go to the Pasco hospital."
G. SCIENTOLOGY PRINCIPLES. The Courtih not bound to accept
self-serving statements of the defendant as to either what its
practices are or which of its practices are "religious" in
nature. A defendant cannot immunize itself from criminal
responsibility by merely attaching the word "religion" to its
activities, nor, by blending references to religion into its
activities, can it change essentially commercial or secular
undertakings into religious ones or expand the rights of
religious protection to such non-religious matters. Tony & Susan
Alamo Foundation v. Sec. of Labor, 471 U.S. 290, 105 S.Ct. 1953,
85 L.Ed.2d 278 (1985) (Religious foundation which engages in
commercial enterprises which include service stations, retail
businesses, hog farms, construction companies, a motel, and a
candy manufacturer is subject to the provisions of the Fair
Labor Standards Act, even where foundation claims all of its
activities are a part of its religious mission and foundation's
employees claim not to want the protections of the Act).
In United States v. Bauer, 84 F. 3d 1549 (9th Cir.1996),
defendants, Rastafarians, were convicted of conspiracy to
manufacture and distribute marijuana, distribution of marijuana,
possession of marijuana, and various related charges. The
defendants appealed. The Court of Appeals held, inter alia, that
the federal Religious Freedom Restoration Act was no defense to
conspiracy and money laundering charges. The Court observed: It
is not enough in order to enjoy the protections of the Religious
Freedom Restoration Act to claim the name of a religion as a
protective cloak. Neither the government nor the court has to
accept the defendants' mere say-so. The court may conduct a
preliminary hearing in which the defendants will have the
obligation of showing that they are in fact Rastafarians and
that the use of marijuana is part of the religious practice of
Rastafarians.
The principle has also been uniformly applied in situations not
involving drug laws. In People v. Hodges, 10 Ca1.AppAth Supp.
20, 13 Ca1.Rptr.2d 412 (Ca1.App. 1992), a pastor and assistant
pastor, who were also president and principal of church school,
were convicted of violating a statute requiring child care
custodians to report known or suspected
n Id. at pages 160.161.
38
instances of child abuse to the state's child protective agency:
The pastors wanted to "handle the matter within the church" in
derogation of the law and asserted their First Amendment rights.
The Superior Court upheld the conviction, and stated:
Although a determination of what is "religious" belief or
practice entitled to constitutional protection may present a
most delicate question, the very concept of ordered liberty
precludes allowing every person to make his or her own standards
on matters of conduct in which society as a whole has important
interests. (Wisconsin v. Yoder (1972) 406 U.S. 205, 92 S.Ct.
1526, 32 L.Ed.2d 15.)....[Alppellants claim the school is an
integral part of their church ministry and to comply with the
reporting statute would threaten substantial impairment of the
exercise of the Pentecostal faith ....The statute in no way
infringes on appellants' religious practice when they are acting
solely in the capacity of pastors. However, when, as here, a
student seeks assistance from them as administrators of the
school, their obligation under the statute arises. While the
distinction between the two positions may not always be clear,
given the compelling state interest served by the Reporting Act,
if the information comes to a teacher/principal/clergyman in any
way through the school setting, reporting is mandatory. The
compelling state interest furthered by the reporting statute,
protecting children from child abuse, justifies any burden on
appellants' religious practice ....The State may justify an
inroad on religious liberty by showing it is the least
restrictive means of achieving some compelling state interest
....[Ilf appellants are held to be exempt from the mandatory
requirements of the Reporting Act, the act's purpose would be
severely undermined ....[Mere is no other less intrusive way to
satisfy the act.
Thus, this Court has jurisdiction to determine for itself for
purposes of RFRA and other defenses raised by CSFSO what the
relevant tenets of Scientology are.
Scientology has its origin in the publication of the book
Dianetics in 1951 by L. Ron Hubbard. Hubbard claimed that he had
discovered the hidden source of all psychosomatic ills and human
aberrations and that Dianetics skills had been developed for
their invariable cure. Dianetics repeatedly stressed that its
underlying theory and its techniques were "scientific." He
claimed Dianetics was an exact science, confirmed by clinical
research. He compared Dianetics with other sciences and made
repeated claims of the scientific nature of his research and
discoveries.
In Hubbard's terminology the "analytical mind" is the concious
mind, which operates flawlessly like a computer. However, it
tray direct the body in an "aberrated" manner if fed false data
by the unconscious or reactive mind. Hubbard claimed that the
source of these
39
human aberrations were "engrams," an irrational association made
by the "reactive" (unconscious) mind with an unpleasant event
that becomes "keyed in" and then "restimulated" when similar
events occur in the future. The reactive mind is a moron and is
capable only ofrecording events literally when the analytical
mind is rendered unconcious by sleep, injury, drugs, or illness.
The engram becomes keyed in by a similar event in the future and
then later becomes "restimulated" causing psychosomatic illness
or aberrant behavior.
Hubbard posited that most such engrams occurred prenatally when a
fetus, embryo or zygote was rendered "unconscious" by a blow to
the mother's abdomen (by the husband, examining doctor or during
sexual activity) and through some unexplained phenomenon the
individual cells perceived and recorded the overheard statements
as engrams. Hubbard explained that the ability of the cells to
record events begins with and even before conception. (Dianefcs
at page 187.) These engrams could be discovered and removed from
the memory of the reactive mind by the process of auditing.
Auditing entails the patient being asked a series of specified
questions while holding the grips of an e-meter, a device which
measures changes in skin conductivity. When all engrams in the
reactive mind were eliminated the person became "Clear," an
almost superhuman state in which the Clear was as superior to a
normal man as a normal man was to an insane person: As a
standard of comparison, a Clear is to the contemporary norm as
the contemporary norm is to a contemporary institutional case.
The margin is wide and it would be difficult to exaggerate it. A
Clear, for instance, has complete recall of everything that has
ever happened to him or anything he had ever studied. He does
mental computations, such as those of chess, for example, which
a normal would do in half an hour in ten or fiteen seconds. He
does not think "vocally" but spontaneously. There are no demon
circuits in his mind except those which might amuse him to set
up - and break down again - to care for various approaches to
living. He is entirely selfdetermined. And his creative
imagination is high. He can do a swift study of anything within
his intellectual capacity, which is inherent, and the study would
be the equivalent to him of a year or two of training when he
was "normal." His vigor, persistence and tenacity to life are
very much higher than anyone has thought possible."76
Hubbard, categorized Dianetics as discovering
's Dianetics, at page 242.
40
"...the exact anatomy of the human mind" The aberrative power of
the engrams was discovered. Procedures were developed for
erasing them. The amount of benefit from running half a dozen
engrams exceeded anything that man had ever been able to do for
anybody in the history of the human race."
Subsequent to Dianetics, Hubbard went on to found the religion of
Scientology of which Dianetics and auditing remained a core
part. Building on Dianetics, Hubbard claimed to have discovered
"what it was that the mind was coating" - the thetan. With
Scientology, Hubbard developed additional auditing procedures
and levels of advancement beyond "Clear" - beginning at OT-1 (OT
standing for operating thetan) and higher. The material contained
in these higher levels has not been fully disclosed to the
public.
Hubbard also developed a philosophy to explain case failures.
Hubbard indicated that all persons associated with a suppressive
person (a person who is against Scientology or against "anyone
helping anyone else") would "roller coaster" instead of making
consistent progress. Such people were classified by Hubbard as
"PTS," which stands for Potential Trouble Source, indicating the
person means potential trouble for himself and for Scientology.
Hubbard classified potential trouble sources into three
categories with the third and most disturbed type being extremely
pscyhotic. Hubbard indicated that such persons, Type Ill's, were
in need of medical evaluation as they may be suffering from a
physical illness with a known medical cause. Second, he indicated
that they could only be handled in organizations that were
equipped with hospitals since intravenous feeding and other
medical treatment of a non- brutal nature might be necessary. The
Fort Harrison was not so equipped and specific Hubbard
directives precluded the treatment of psychotics at the Fort
Harrison.
For instance, Hubbard Communications Office Bulletin 24.11.65
(Reissued in November of 1987) titled "Search and Discovery"
declares that "The Type III PTS is mostly in institutions or
would be .... All institutional cases are PTSes. The whole of
insanity is wrapped up on this one fact." "Type III [PTS] is
beyond the facilities of orgs not equipped with hospitals as
these are entirely psychotic." Hubbard indicates "medical care
of a very
41
unbrutal nature is necessary, as intravenous feeding and
soporifics (sleeping and quieting drugs) may be necessary. Such
persons are sometimes also physically ill from an illness with a
known medical cure." Apparently recognizing that this treatment
will not be universally effective, this Hubbard directive goes
on to note "But there will always be failures as the insane
sometimes withdraw into rigid unawareness as a final defense,
sometimes can't be kept alive and sometimes are too hectic and
distraught to ever become quiet. "(emphasis supplied) The
ultimate goal in "handling" potential trouble sources was to
either change the perspective of the suppressive person who was
affecting him or to completely dissociate from that person and
end the relationship.
In 1973 Hubbard introduced the "introspective rundown" an
auditing procedure for "psychotic breaks" which he referred to
as a "technical breakthough which possibly ranks with the major
discoveries of the twentieth century." The bulletin claimed that
in 1970 "the actual cause of psychosis was isolated... In the
ensuing years this has been proven beyond doubt to be totally
correct." The rundown makes no mention of potential trouble
sources or suppressive persons but indicates that psychotic
breaks are caused by introversion: "The essence of the
introspective rundown is looking for and correcting all those
things which caused the person to look inward worriedly and
wrestle with the mystery of some incorrectly designated error.
The result is continual inward looking or self- auditing without
relief or end." As can be seen by the attachments to the Reiss
affidavit, subjects are audited with an e-meter by being asked a
series of unusual questions and gauging their responses on the
meter.
As an auditing procedure, however, the introspection rundown
requires, under Scientology beliefs, that the subject have
adequate nutrition and sleep before it can be used. Thus,
Kartuzinski crow blames a lack of sleep or nutrition for the
failure of auditing to assist Lisa during her stay. It was
briefly attempted on one occasion and never tried again.
Alain Kartuzinski provided three Hubbard scriptures during his
sworn testimony which he and other CSFSO officials had knowingly
violated and which he testified were
42
applicable to Lisa McPherson's situation. These directives
prohibit the handling of psychotics at the Flag Service
Organization. Hubbard's language makes clear that acceptance of
psychotics or people with psychotic breaks is prohibited in part
because the inability to cure them may leave the organization
open "to failures." [See attachment 13.)
II. THE DEFENDANT'S CRIMINAL CONDUCT WAS NOT CONSISTENT WITH
NOR JUSTIFIED BY SCIENTOLOGY RELIGIOUS BELIEFS. The defendant
suggests that their employees' actions do not constitute a crime
because they were following Scientology beliefs, yet at the same
time suggests corporate liability is inappropriate because the
same actions were not necessitated by and were in fact
inconsistent with the tenets contained in Scientology scripture.
Since neither the local corporation nor its employees may create
or alter the religious doctrines of Scientology, the
corporation's admissions demonstrate that the defense has not
and cannot establish that the actions upon which the prosecution
is based, were justified by the religious beliefs and practices
of Scientology.
There is no constitutional or statutory right to practice
unlicensed medicine or abuse disabled adults simply because this
criminal conduct may be alleged to be a religious practice.
Therefore, the consistency of the corporation's actions with the
religious tenets of Scientology is a potential affirmative
defense only as allowed by statutes prohibiting the unlicensed
practice of medicine. It must be emphasized, however, that no
Scientology religious tenet precludes medical treatment,
evaluation or supervision of persons that are physically or
mentally ill; indeed Hubbard's writings suggest underlying
medical conditions can be the cause of apparent mental illness
and that hospital facilities, medical treatment and intravenous
feeding are a necessary part of treating someone who is
"psychotic." No religious tenet authorizes forced medication or
injections or any other procedures to which the "parishioner"
has not validly consented. Nor does any Scientology tenet
authorize unlicensed personnel to determine through diagnosis
that physical or medical causes are not responsible for
"psychotic behavior."
43
5.
Similarly, the statements of those persons involved in the
incident do not support the defendant's assertions. Janis
Johnson, for instance, the unlicensed former doctor assigned to
oversee Lisa's care, has denied that any of the above practices
would be justified by Scientology principles: The Church doesn't
treat mental illness at all... I mean she (Lisa) did the ... she
did the usual thing. If you think somebody's mentally ill, then
they go and get evaluated. You see... the point of Scientology
isn't to treat physical or mental illness .... It's not like
Christian Science where you avoid all medical treatments
or you're supposed to depend on faith to heal you or
something. That's not what's going on." Johnson transcript at
pages 58-59.
She further denied that diet, an exercise regimen or any form of
counseling would have been used to try to improve Lisa's mental
condition and denied knowing what an introspection rundown was."
Similarly, Judy Goldsberry - Weber, a Scientologist with a
nursing background, was very upset that Lisa was forced
medicated without doctor approval and complained to CSFSO
authorities about it. She obviously did not consider Lisa's
treatment mandated by Church doctrine and questioned why it was
allowed to continue, indicating she would have been screaming to
Dr. Minkoff for heavier sedation and "IV's." She further stated
she had taken people to Morton Plant on many occasions and would
have taken Lisa there rather than New Port Richey.
Employees and other Scientologists also acknowledged that forcing
services on a non consenting parishioner violates Scientology
doctrine.' David Minkoff, who is at OT-8 level Scientologist,
and was the doctor who attended Lisa's death, indicated that
policy from Hubbard's writings requires that anyone with a
mental disease must go through a physical examination. A medical
doctor needs to examine the patient and make sure that there
isn't anything that could be the cause of the problem." In his
second statement, Minkoff
T' Transcript at page 60.
'° Houghton second statement at page 148. Minkoff Second
Statement May 19, 1998 at page 68. A copy of this statement is
attached as exhibit 7.
" Minkoff Swom Statement April 20, 1997 at page 103. A copy of
this statement is attached as exhibit 6. See, Technical
Bulletins, Volume 8 at page 327 "The correct action on an insane
patient is a full searching clinical examination by a competent
medical doctor."
44
reiterated this concern, indicating that a complete physical
including x-rays and possibly an MRI should be done on any "Type
III," as Hubbard indicated and Minkoff's experience confirmed
that physical illness or injury can be the root cause of a
mental condition. Moreover, MInkQff indicated that when the
person is incompetent to consent to such procedures, the family
is consulted. Thus, a complete physical should have been done at
the outset.
Finally, all employees made clear that the giving of shots by
M.L.O. employees was not authorized and could only be permitted
by a licensed physician. In this case repeated injections were
given without patient consent and while she was being held down,
without medical authority, by unlicensed and untrained CSFSO
personnel.
III. TBE INSTANT PROSECUTION IS NOT SIMILAR TO OR AFFECTED BY
TBE PROSECUTION OF BENRY LYONS FOR HIS INDIVIDUAL CRIMINAL
ACTIVITY.
The defendant suggests that the instant charges cannot be
reconciled with the State Attorney's Office's failure to charge
the National Baptist Convention with the crimes committed by its
president, the Reverend Henry Lyons. The assertion is based on
the stated but unsubstantiated conclusion that "Lyons was the
Convention's most senior official and that the Convention
explicitly ratified and affirmed the acts of Reverend Lyons."
While there was evidence that Lyons arguably embezzled or
misappropriated a large amount of money from the Convention,
Lyons was never charged with these crimes. It was these
defalcations and only these that were ratified on behalf of the
purported victim, the NBC. The ratification by the.Convention
occurred after an inquiry by the Reverend E. V. Hill who
investigated solely whether monies from the convention itself had
been misappropriated.' The resolution plainly states that "there
have been no indications of misappropriation of convention funds
or wrongdoing on the part of Dr. Henry Lyons which would pre
empt his continued service to this convention as president."
'° Deposition of E. V. Hill in State v. Henry Lyons and
Bernice Edwards, Case No. CRC 98-03449 CFANO. December 30, 1998,
at pages 5-8. Trial Testimony of E.V. Hill, February 10, 1999, at
pages 55-63.
45
Lyons was ultimately charged with fraud against a series of
business corporations and the conversion of charitable monies
entrusted to him by the Anti-Defamation League. There was never
an allegation that the National Baptist Convention, USA, Inc.,
itself was involved in Lyons' criminll acts. Rather, the
evidence adduced during the investigation and confirmed during
trial indicated that Lyons fraudulently invoked the Convention's
name to defraud large corporations into the payment of monies
into bank accounts that he controlled but which were not revealed
to the Convention itself. These thefts were clearly motivated by
Lyons' personal greed and allowed him to support mistresses, buy
vacation homes and live a lavish lifestyle. Lyons continued to
mislead the public and the Convention as to his guilt, causing
the faithful among his followers to continue to believe in his
innocence.
In the Lyons case, the State had the opportunity through tracing
bank records and interviewing the victims of the case to
reconstruct Lyons crimes and build a case against him
individually. The unsubstantiated suggestion that the State has
intentionally avoided individual charges ignores the
difficulties the State was facing in proving individual guilt
when the only witnesses to establish the necessary facts were
paid employees of the defendant, some of whom lied to the police
and who refused to give sworn testimony without being granted
use immunity. Moreover, crucial documents had been lost or
destroyed by CSFSO and were unavailable to investigators.
The defendant's Motions incorrectly assume that evidence
admissible against the corporation must necessarily be
admissible to prove charges against individual defendants and
that proof of corporate guilt, including criminally negligent
omissions, necessarily subsumes proof beyond a reasonable doubt
as to which individual actors are criminally responsible. 46
IV. NEITHER THE FLORIDA NOR FEDERAL CONSTITUTIONS MANDATE
THE ACCOMODATION OF CRIMINAL ACTS ALLEGEDLY MOTIVATED BY A
DEFENDANT'S RELIGIOUS PRACTICES.
The First Amendment of the United States Constitution provides
that "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of
religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof." For over one
hundred years, however, the Supreme Court has distinguished
between the right to hold a religious belief, which is uniformly
sustained, and the right to engage in a religious practice or
conduct that violates the criminal law. In Reynold v. U.S., 98
U.S. (8 Otto) 145 (1878), the Court considered the issue of
whether a Mormon convicted for the federal crime of bigamy in
the Utah Territory should have been acquitted if he married a
second time because he believed it to be his religious duty.
Rejecting this proposition the Supreme Court held that religious
beliefs cannot justify the commisison of an act made criminal by
the law of the land. The Court noted: ...the only question which
remains is, whether those who make polygamy a part of their
religion are exempted from the operation of the statute. If they
are , then those who do not make polygamy part of their religious
belief may be found guilty and punished, while those who do, must
be acquitted and go free. Laws are made for the govemment of
actions, and while they camtot interfere with mere religious
beliefs and opinions, they may with practices. Suppose one
believed that human sacrifices were a necessary part of religious
worship, would it be seriously contended that the civil
government under which he lived could not interfere to prevent a
sacrifice? Or if a wife religiously contended that it was her
duty to burn herself on the funeral pile of her dead husband,
would it be beyond the power of the civil govemment to prevent
her belief into practice?... Can a man excuse his practices to
the contrary because of his religious belief? To permit this
would be to make the professed doctrines of religious belief
superior to the law of the land, and in effect to permit every
citizen to become a law unto himself. Government could exist
only in name under such circumstances ...[Wlhen the offence
consists of a positive act which is knowlingly done, it would be
dangerous to hold that the offender might escape punishment
because he religously believed that the law which he had broken
ought never have been made.°'
Two years later the Supreme Court made it clear that these
principles apply equally to a Church itself, not only the
individual adherents, and that the corporate entity could not
escape the consequences of its criminal conduct. In The Late
Corporation of the Church of
Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints v. United States, 136 U.S. 1
(1890), the Court upheld an
s' Reynolds v. U.S., 98 U.S.(8 Otto) 145 at 166 (1878).
47
act of Congress which, as a result of the Church's involvement in
polygamy, repealed the act incorporating the Mormon Church as a
religious corporation, abrogated its Charter and forfeited all
Church property not used for religious worship or burial. The
Court ruled that the pretense of religious belief cannot deprive
Congress of the power to prohibit polygamy and all "other open
offenses against the enlightened sentiment of mankind." Speaking
of the Church's endorsement of and practice of polygamy, the
Court stated:
One pretence for this obstinate course is, that their belief in
the practice of polygamy or in the right to indulge in it, is a
religious belief, and therefore, under the protection of the
constitutional guaranty of religious freedom. This is altogether
a sophistical plea. No doubt the Thugs of India imagined that
their belief in the right of assassination was a religious
belief, but their thinking did not make it so. The practice of
suttee by the Hindu widows may have sprung from a supposed
religious conviction. The offering of human sacrifices by our
own ancestors in Britain was no doubt sanctioned by equally
conscientious impulse. But no one, on that account, would
hestiate to brand these practices, now, as crimes against
society, and obnoxious to condemnation by the civil authority !2
These principles remain valid today. See, Potter v. Murray City,
760 F.2d 1065 (10"' Cit. 1985). A full century after its
decision in Reynolds, the Supreme Court reaffirmed that
decision's vitality in Employment Division, Department of Human
Resources v. Smith, 494 U.S. 872 (1990): Alfred Smith and Galen
Black had been fired from their jobs with a private drug
rehabilitation company and then denied State unemployment
compensation all as a result of their use of an illegal
controlled substance, peyote, in a sacramental ceremony of the
Native American Church of which they were members. On initial
remand, the Oregon Supreme Court had determined that Oregon law
contained no exemption for the religious use of peyote; the
Oregon Court had fiirther ruled, however, that the absence of
such an exemption and the resulting denial of unemployment
compensation due to misconduct violated Smith's and Black's
religious freedom. The United States Supreme Court disagreed, and
distinguished prior cases which had dealt with hybrid claims
involving freedom of religion and other constitutional rights
arising out of the denial of unemployment claims. The Court noted
that it had never held as Smith and Black urged that "when
otherwise prohibitable conduct is accompanied by religious
convictions, not only the convictions but the
32 Late Corporation, supra at page 49.
48
conduct must be free of governmental regulation." Rejecting this
argument, the majority, quoting the Reynolds decision, ruled: We
have never held that an individual's religious beliefs excuse him
from compliance with an otherwise valid law prohibiting conduct
that the State is free to regulate. On the contrary, the record
of.more than a century of free exercise jurisprudence
contradicts that proposition. As described succinctly by Justice
Frankfurter in Minersville School Dist. Bd. Of Ed. V. Bobitis,
310 U.S., 586, 594-595 (1940): 'Conscientious scruples have not,
in the course of the long struggle for religious toleration,
relieved tire individual from obedience to a general law not
aimed at the promotion or restriction of religious beliefs. The
mere possession of religious convictions which contradict the
relevant concerns of a political society does not relieve the
citizen from the discharge of political responsibilities
(footnote omitted).' We first had occasion to assert that
principle in Reynolds v. United States, 98 U.S. 145 (1879), where
we rejected the claim that the laws against polygamy could not
be constitutionally applied to those whose religion commanded
the practice. 'Caws,' we said 'are made for the government of
actions, and while they cannot interfere with mere religious
belief and opinions, they may with practices... Can a man excuse
his practices to the contrary because of his religious belief!
To permit this would be to make the professed doctrines of
religious belief superior to the law of the land, and in effect
to permit every citizen to become a law unto himself.'°'
The Court also noted that it had never used the compelling state
interest test to invalidate a state law with an across the board
criminal prohibition on a particular form of conduct. It held
that such an approach would be unsound and would conflict with
the vast majority of its free exercise cases. To make the
government's ability to enforce generally applicable prohibitions
of socially harmful conduct depend on "measuring its effects on
a religious objectors spiritual development" or to make his
obligation to obey such a law contingent upon the law's
"coincidence with his beliefs" would contradict "both
constitutional tradition and common sense." Use of the compelling
government interest requirement, as the Court had in the past
when evaluating racial discrimination or restrictions on free
speech, was not "remotely" comparable to the evaluating such
general laws of neutral application. "What it [the compelling
state interest test] produces in those other fields - equality of
treatment and an unrestricted flow of contending speech - are
constitutional norms; what it would produce here - a private
right to ignore generally applicable laws - is a constitutional
anomaly."
° Smith, supra., at 879.
49
The majority ruled that because our country's diversity of belief
and the value placed upon or that religious divergence, society
could not afford the luxury of deeming presumptively invalid
every regulation of conduct that does not protect an interest of
the highest order. Such a rule the Court said:
Would open the prospect of constitutionally required religious
exemptions from civic obligations of almost every conceivable-
ranging from compulsory military service, ew, e.g., Gillette v.
United States, 401 U.S. 437 (1971); to the payment of taxes,
see,e.g., United States v. Lee, supra; to health and safety
regulation such as manslaughter and child neglect laws, see,
e.g., Funkhouser v. State, 763 P.2d 695 (Okla. Crim.App. 1988);
compulsory vacination laws, seM, e.g., Cude v. State, 237 Ark.
927, 377 S.W. 2d 816 (1964); drug laws, see, e.g., Olsen v. Drug
Engorecment Administration, 279 U.S. App. D.C. 1, 878 F. 2d 1458
(1989); traffic laws, sM, Cox v. New Hampshire, 312 U.S. 569
(1941); social welfare legislation such as minimum wage laws, sM,
Tony and Susan Alamo Foundation v. Secretary of labor, 471 U.S.
290 (1985); child labor laws, seM, Prince v. Massachusetts, 321
U.S. 158 (1944); animal cruelty laws, see, e.g., Church of the
Lukumi Babalu Aye Inc., v. City of Hialeah, 723 F.Supp. 1467
(S.D. Fla. 1989), cf., State v. Massey, 229 N.C. 734, 51 S.E. 2d
179, appeal dism'd, 336 U.S. 942 (1949); environmental protection
laws, see, United States v. Little, 638 F.Supp. 337 (D.C.Mont.
1986); end laws providing for equality of opportunity for the
races, see, e.g., Bob Jones University v. United States, 461 U.S.
574, 603-6G4 (1983). The First Amendment's protection of
religious liberty does not require this."
The Court noted that a number of states had made exceptions to
their drug laws for the sacramental use of peyote. To say that
such an exemption may be permitted, however, the Court said, is
not to say it is constitutionally required: It may fairly be said
that leaving accomodation to the political process will place at
a relative disadvantage those religious practices that are not
widely engaged in; but that unavoidable consequence of democratic
government must be preferrred to a system in which each
conscience is a law unto itself or in which judges weigh the
social importance of all laws against the centrality of religious
beliefs."
Allegations by the defendant that criminal charges against it, as
a "church," are "virtually unprecedented in the history of the
United States" is disingenuous at best. Moreover, the defendant's
elaboration on this assertion, that "Indeed, with one minor and
illchosen exception, in no reported case was a church even
charged with a criminal offense" is inaccurate and misleading in
its present context. So, too, is the defendant's claim that "The
°" Id., at 888
85 Id., at 890
50
historical fact that in no reported case has a church in this
country ever been criminally convicted stands as irrefutable
evidence that such prosecutions are not necessary to protect the
State's interest in enforcing its criminal laws."
CSFSO ignores certain obvious historical facts. The seminal case
of Reynolds v. United States, 98 U.S. (8 Otto) 145 (1878), for
example, was one of several criminal prosecutions of Mormon
bigamists by the United States Government in the Territory of
Utah, in a process that ultimately led to the complete
dissolution of the corporation under which the Mormons operated,
and the seizure of corporate property by Federal officials
operating under the auspices of the United States Attorney
General. The Late Corporation of the Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter-Day Saints v. United States, 136 U.S. 1 (1890). While not
technically a prosecution, the Federal Government's dissolution
of the Mormon church and decision to proceed by information to
forfeit church property far exceeded in scope and effect the
current effort by the State of Florida to hold the defendant
responsible for the unlicensed practice of medicine on, and
abuse and/or neglect of Ms. Lisa McPherson, a disabled adult.
In limiting its language to the history of the United States the
defendant has intentionally chosen its words carefully. Its
counterpart, the Church of Scientology of Toronto, Inc., was in
recent years tried for and convicted of breach of trust, fraud
and other crimes in Canada. Regina v. Church of Scientology of
Toronto, et al. (1997] 116 C.C.R. 1. The Toronto case is
particularly telling as to the authority of a democratic state
to prosecute a corporate "church" for violations of criminal
laws. The Church of Scientology of Toronto had argued that
corporate liability was inappropriately applied to a religious
non-profit corporation and that the right to religious freedom
under the Canadian Charter of Rights prohibited prosecution of a
religious corporation. Applying the Canadian equivalent of
"strict scrutiny" analysis, the Canadian Court rejected the
claims and upheld the corporation's conviction.
51
was held in the county jail in default of payment. He sought
release by virtue of a statute enacted a month after his
conviction which provided relief to indigent persons indefinitely
confined for failure to pay a fine in a criminal case. The Court
granted relief, ruling that application of ftpew statute was not
precluded by (then) Article III, section 32 because the new
statute did not in any way affect the State's ability to
prosecute or punish aggravated assault:
We do not discover, nor is there, in the act of of May. 25, 1891,
anything which purports to repeal or amend the act of 1881. Any
offense committed under the act of 1881 prior to the approval of
the latter act, or even sugsequent to it, can be prosecuted and
punished in the same manner as could be had the act of 1891
never been enacted. The offenses defined or created by the former
act, and the punishment demanded against any of them by it, are
in no wise changed or affected by the act of 1891; and a court
would look in vain to the latter act to find in it anything
changing either the nature of the offense created, or even the
character or degree of the punishment authorized by the act of
1881. In so far as the act of 1881 authorizes the prosecution or
punishment of any person, it is not affected by the act of 1891.
The same punishment may be inflicted, and the same form of
sentence is to be entered, as before the approval of the latter
act. The form of sentence which has been used in this case is
that ordinarily used. In addition to judgment that the
petitioner pay the fine and costs, it orders that the sheriff
'keep him in custody until the judgment of the court is complied
with.' This order as to custody is not part of the punishment
authorized by the act of 1881,. lemphasis supplied] Thus, the
Court ruled that the 1891 act had no effect on the prosecution or
punishment of the defendant under the pre-existing statute. It's
only effect was on additional language in the sentence relating
to imprisonment for failing to pay the fine, language which was
not authorized under the 1881 Act.'
Consistent with Ex parse Pells, Florida Courts have held that
retrospective application of a separate and superficially
unrelated enactment would violate this provision if the later act
°9 Relying on kx parse Pells, the Supreme Court in State v.
Watts, 558 So.2d 994 (Fla. 1990), found that a 1985 amendment of
the youthful offender statute (Section 958.14) changing the
sentence that could be imposed upon revocation of community
control could be applied where the conduct constituting the
violation occurred after the statute's enactment. The Court
noted that the change was to a statute different from that
defining the crime or the initial punislunem and which had no
direct connection to either. Quoting from E_r pane Pells, the
Court ruled that the statutory change in no way affected
prosecution or punishment for any previously committed crime,
holding that "an offense committed prior to or subsequent to the
1985 amendment can be prosecuted and punished in the same manner
as it could be had the ' 1985 amendment' never been enacted."
Subsequently, however, in Arnette v. State, 604 So.2d 482 (Fla.
1992), the Court revisited this amendment and ruled that the
statute did not in fact change the sentence which could be
imposed on a violation and was simply a clarification of the
legislature's prior intent that defendants sentenced as youthful
offenders retain their status even if convicted of community
control violations.
55
affected the prosecution or punishment for a previously committed
crime. In State v. Pizarro, 383 So.2d 762 (Fla. 4'° DCA 1980),
the Court held that the initial Youthful Offender Act, enacted as
a new statute in 1978, (Chapter 958) could not be applied to a
defendant whose crime was committed before its effective date.
The Act did not specifically state it was amending, superceding
or repealing prior statutes, and claimed only to create an
"additional" discretionary sentencing option for defendants of a
certain age who met certain criteria. Accord, Page v. State, 687
So.2d 1357 (Fla. 3' DCA 1997); Bradley v. State, 385 So.2d 1122
(Fla. 1' DCA 1980); Allen v. State, 383 So.2d 674 (Fla. 5"' DCA
1980). Additionally, in Carawan v. State, 515 So.2d 161 (Fla.
1987), the Supreme Court had overruled existing precedent
construing the statutory and constitutional provisions relating
to double jeopardy to hold, in essence, that a single act could
not form the basis for more than one conviction. The legislature
promptly added an additional subsection to 775.021 declaring its
intent that the Blockberger test (rather than the test
articulated by the Carawan Court) be reinstated as the test for
double jeopardy. Despite the legislature's intent to overturn
the Carawan decision and return law to its pre-existing state,
Florida Courts have consistently held, based upon Article X,
Section 9, that the addition to Sec. 775.021 can not apply to
the prosecution or punishment of crimes committed prior to its
effective date. Scarpillo v. State, 576 So.2d 377 (Fla. 4`° DCA
1991); Collins v. State, 578 So.2d 30 (Fla. 4'" DCA 1991),
overruled on other grounds, 634 So.2d 1103 at 1106. Collins v.
State, 577 So.2d 986 (Fla. 401 DCA 1991).
Applying the standards of Ex parse Pelts to the instant case, it
becomes clear that RFRA is a statute significantly "affecting"
prosecution and punishment and cannot be applied to immunize the
defendant from its previously committed crimes. By its own terms,
RFRA creates a previously nonexistent "defense" which may be
asserted by some but not all persons and purports to supereede
existing statutory and case law. See, Sec's. 761.03(2),
761.05(1). As interpreted by the defendant, the intent of the
enactment was to impose not only the strict scrutiny test on
criminal prosecutions where religious practices are alleged to
be burdened, but to also impose the additional burden of
establishing that the least restrictive
56
This constitutional mandate substantially limits the use of RFRA
as a defense to a state criminal prosecution. Certainly, the
unlicensed practice of medicine and the medical neglect of
disabled adults are unsafe and immoral acts as the legislature
has recognized in creating criminalpenalties. Having made these
clearly unsafe and immoral acts criminal for all citizens, the
legislature is not permitted, much less required, to grant
immunity to religious entities guilty of the same misconduct.
The defense may suggest that RFRA should be upheld as a
legislative interpretation of the Constitution which is entitled
to deference by this Court. While legislative enactments may be
presumptively correct when they are required to enable the rights
enumerated in the Constitution, that cannot be the case when the
enactment, as interpreted by the defendant, is contrary to an
express Constitutional demand. Nor can such a presumption be
indulged when the defendant's interpretation of RFRA would
require the legislature to have adopted constitutionally
inconsistent positions.
By utilizing its "police power" to create criminal penalties for
this morally wrongful and unsafe conduct the legislature has
determined that practicing medicine without a license and the
abuse of a disabled adults are practices governed by language of
Article I, Section 3. Florida courts have repeatedly recognized
that regulation of the medical arts is necessary for public
safety. Spiro v. Highlands General Hospital, 489 So.2d 802 (Fla.
2d DCA 1986); State ex rel. Munch v. Davis, 196 So. 491, 143
Fla. 236 (Fla. 1940); Reants v. State, 279 So.2d 839 (Fla. 1973);
Carbo, Inc. v. Meiklejohn, 217 So.2d 159 (Fla. 1969); Cf.,
Golden v. McCarty, 337 So.2d 388 (Fla. 1976). The potential
dangerousness to the public of the practice of medicine by unsafe
or incompetent practitioners is one of the purposes behind the
enactment of Chapter 458. See, sec. 458.301.
Similarly, both the regulatory and investigative responsibilites
imposed on the Department of Children and Families by Chapter
415 and criminal penalties for preventing the abuse and criminal
neglect of the elderly, disabled and children contained in
Chapters
58
See, also In re Advisory Opinion of the Governor, 334 So.2d 561
(Fla. 1976); Parole Commission v. Lockett, 620 So.2d 153 (Fla.
1993); Wainwright v. Turner, 389 So.2d 1181 (Fla. 1980).
Clearly then, the retroactive application of RFRA to grant pardon
to individuals or entities based upon the suggestion that
religious practices are alleged as justification for for criminal
conduct, would exceed the Legislature's power and intrude upon
both the exclusive executive function of clemency and the
constitutional discretion of the prosecution to institute
criminal charges. Cf., State v. Montgomery, 467 So.2d 387 (Fla.
3`d DCA 1985).
D. RETROACTIVE APPLICATION OF RFRA TO THE INSTANT
PROSECUTION WOULD CONSTITUTE AN UNCONSTITUTIONAL ESTABLISHMENT
OF RELIGION UNDER TILE STATE AND FEDERAL CONSTITUTIONS IN THAT
IT FAILS TO HAVE A SECULAR PURPOSE, ITS PRIMARY PURPOSE IS TO
ADVANTAGE RELIGION OR IT CREATES EXCESSIVE ENTANGLEMENT WITH
RELIGION.
As has been previously discussed, the constitution protects the
freedom of religious belief, but Congress and the state
legislatures remain free to prohibit dangerous or immoral
religious practices through statutes of general application.
Florida's Constitution contains specific language preventing the
justification of such practices because they have in part been
motivated by religious belief. The Supreme Court of the United
States and the Courts of Florida have regularly been faced with
defining the line between legislation designed to protect the
free exercise of religion and laws favoring religion which
violate the establishment clause.
In City of Boerne v. Flores, ! U.S. -, 117 S. Ct. 2157 (1997),
the United States Supreme Court declared Federal RFRA
unconstitutional as it applied to the States, as being beyond
Congress power to legislate under Section 5 of the Fourteenth
Amendment, which empowered congress to enforce the provisions of
the amendment by appropriate legislation. Justice Kennedy writing
for the majority ruled that "RFRA is so out of proportion to the
a supposed remedial or preventive object that it cannot be
understood as
61
responsive to, or designed to prevent unconstitutional behavior.
It appears instead to attempt a substantive change in
constitutional protections." Justice Kennedy noted that the reach
and scope of RFRA distinguished it from other measures passed
under Congress enforcement power, even in the area of voting
rights. "Sweeping coverage ensures its intrusion at every level
of government, displacing laws and prohibiting official actions
of almost every description and regardless of subject matter
Any law is subject to challenge at any time by any individual who
alleges a substantial burden on his or her free exercise of
religion."
Id. at 2190.
In deciding that the extension of RFRA to state and municipal
governments was beyond the power of Congress under Section 5 of
the Fourteenth Amendment, the Court did not resolve serious
challenges as to whether RFRA was an establishment of religion
and was also unconstitutional as applied to the federal
government. Justice Stevens in a concurring opinion succinctly
stated the issue:
In my opinion, the Religious Freedom Restoration Act of 1993
(RFRA) is a "law respecting an establishment of religion" that
violates the First Amendment to the Constitution.
If the historic landmark on the hill in Boerne happened to be a
museum or an art gallery owned by an atheist, it would not be
eligible for an exemption from the city ordinances that forbid an
enlargement of the structure. Because the structure is owned by
the Catholic Church, its is claimed that RFRA gives its owner a
federal statutory entitlement to an exemption from a generally
applicable neutral civil law. Whether the Church would actually
prevail under the statute or not, the statute has provided the
Church with a legal weapon that no atheist or agnostic can
obtain. This governmental preference for religion, as opposed to
irreligion, is forbidden by the First Amendment. Wallace v.
JaJfree, 472 U.S.38, 52-55, 105 S.Ct. 2479, 2487-2489, 86 L.Ed 2d
29 (1985). Id., at page 2172. The impact of Boerae on the
establishment issue remains uncertain, although the Clinton
administration has declined to challenge the statute's
constitutionality as it applies to the federal government" By
declaring RFRA unconstitutional as applied to
94 As the defendant suggests some Courts since Boerne have
continued to hold RFRA is constitutional as applied to the
federal government. However, a number decisions have held based
upon Boerne that RFRA is no longer constitutional as applied to
the Federal government. See, e.g.. United States v. Sandia, 6
F.Supp. 2d 1278,1281(D.N.M. 1997); Branch Ministries, Inc. v.
Richardson, 970 F.Supp. 11,13(D.D.C. 1997); Waguespack v.
Rodriguez, 220 B.R. 31, 36 (W.D.La. 1998); In re Andrade, 213
B,R. 765. 772 (Banks. E.D. Cal. 1997); Gelizer v. Crossroads
Tabernacle, 214 B.R. 101, 106 (Banks. S.D.N.Y. 1997); In re
Gates Community Chapel of Rochester, Inc., 212 B.R. 220, 225-26
(Banks. W.D.N.Y. 1997); In re Saunders, 214 B.R. 524, 526
(Banks. D.
62
the State's, however, the Supreme Court's opinion left state
courts free to decide whether State legislation such as
Florida's RFRA can withstand State and Federal Constitutional
scrutiny.
Whether a given statute favors religion in such a way as to be an
"establishment of religion" is hardly a new issue. State and
federal Courts have repeatedly applied the three prong test
enunciated in Lemon v. Kurtzman, 403 U.S. 602, 91 S. Ct. 2105
(1971), to decide such a question. The Lemon test requires that
such a statute (1) have a secular purpose, (2) not have the
advancement of a specific religion or religion in general as its
primary purpose, and (3) not create excessive entanglement with
religion. If a statute fails any of these criteria, it will be
held invalid. Florida Courts have utilized these same criteria
in evaluating statutes under Article I, Section 3 of the Florida
Constitution. Recently, the United States Supreme Court has
indicated that the third prong of "excessive entanglement" while
still applicable is actually subsumed under factor two. Agostini
v. Felton, 521 U.S. 203, 117 S. Ct. 1997 (1997). See, e.g.,
State v. Easley, 1999 WL 565866 (Fla. 4th DCA 1999).
As conceded by the defendant in its Motion to Dismiss the
legislative purpose of Florida's Religious Freedom Restoration
Act was to create a new defense to all persons claiming a
substantial burden on their exercise of religion. Its sole
purpose was to advantage religiously motivated individuals and
entities by applying the strictest constitutional test known to
all potential interactions and litigation with government
entities and agencies. Unlike individually crafted accommodation
provisions, RFRA applies across the board by empowering religion
with a defense that, outside the arena of criminal prosecution,
will be difficult if not impossible to overcome.
RFRA is not a statute which can be said to have a secular purpose
because it is designed to benefit a class including both
religious and nonreligious. While, it is a permissible "secular
purpose" to enact legislation which allows religious entities to
avoid
Mass. 1997).
63
excessive entanglement with government, Corporation of Presiding
Bishop of Latter Day Saints v. Amos, 483 U.S. 327, 107 S.Ct.
2862 (1987), the defense interpretation of RFRA is not so
limited. The State has charged the defendant with abuse of a
disabled adult and practicing medicine without a license. The
defense suggests that RFRA mandates that an individual or entity
charged with these or any crimes not be prosecuted in order to
prevent the embarrassment or displeasing but lawful public
criticism that results from that criminal activity. The defense
also argues, that since it costs money for a religious
corporation to defend against charges, regardless of their actual
guilt, they may not be prosecuted. The defense suggests that
under RFRA, the State must accept without question the criminal
defendant's allegations as to what beliefs and practices are
central to its religious freedom. Finally, the defense suggests
that this defense must apply retroactively, even though the
defense is created three years after the commission of the
crime.
Surely the legislature did not intend to so empower religiously
motivated criminals and allow guilty persons or entities to
escape prosecution, simply because prosecution may be
embarrassing or costly, because that will in every instance be
concomitant with the prosecution or conviction of serious crime.
If the Court adopts the defense's interpretation of the statute,
the statute is an unconstitutional preference for religion.
Granting license to abuse the disabled cannot be justified by
the purpose of "allowing" a religion to advance itself by risking
the lives of its parishioners.
The primary effect of Florida's RFRA is to privilege religious
entities and religiously motivated individuals across the board.
As Justice Stevens noted concerning the federal RFRA statute, it
grants a broad defense not available to the secular world. The
unlimited scope of RFRA as the majority in Boerne noted, is "so
out of proportion to a supposed remedial or preventive object
that it cannot be understood as responsive to, or designed to
prevent, unconstitutional behavior. It appears instead to
attempt a substantive change in constitutional protection." As
interpreted by the defendant, the Florida RFRA neither
accommodates nor remedies burdens on particular religious
practices but rather expands constitutional rights for only a
privileged few. The areas in which religious individuals or
64
entities might be free to act without government intervention is
both long and broad, including euthanasia, polygamy, bigamy,
incest, child abuse, animal cruelty, assisted suicide, and racial
and marital status and sexual orientation. Unlike individual
accommodation statutes which are based upon an individualized
understanding and history of interaction between specific
religious beliefs and particular government activity, RFRA is an
excessive and unmerited perquisite.
A statute will also be invalid if it fosters excessive
entanglement between the government and religion. As articulated
by the First District Court of Appeal in Silver Rose
Entertainment, Inc., v. Clay County, 646 So. 2d 246 (Fla. 1" DCA
1994):
The entanglement which is forbidden is comprehensive,
discriminating and continuing state surveillance... day-to-day
surveillance of administration of religious activities..., and
programs whose very nature are apt to entangle the State in the
details of administration. (citations omitted).
It is clear that the State's action in prosecuting these two
felony charges does not excessively entangle the State in the
CSFSO's religious mission. The State's prosecution is limited to
the secular criteria of whether CSFSO practiced medicine without
a license and whether it permitted a disabled women to die. The
real excessive entanglement occurs if RFRA is permitted to stand
and courts must shape every law to every religion.
Florida RFRA as interpreted and argued by the defendant would be
an unconstitutional establishment of religion.
I 65
E. THE DEFENDANT'S DEFENSE UNDER RFRA FAILS BECAUSE THE
INSTANT PROSECUTION DOES NOT "SUBSTANTIALLY BURDEN" THE FREE
EXERCISE OF RELIGION.
1.._ _ THE PROSECUTION OF CSFSO FOR THE INSTANT CHARGES DOES
NOT FORCE ADHERENTS TO ESPOUSE BELIEFS OR ENGAGE IN PRACTICES
CONTRARY TO SCIENTOLOGY DOCTRINE OR TO REFRAIN FROM THE PRACTICE
OF THEIR RELIGION. In order to invoke the protections of Florida
RFRA, the defendant must sufficiently allege and establish that
its practice of religion is substantially burdened. The State
denies that the instant prosecution places any significant
burden upon the defendant's religious activity, much less a
substantial one, and suggests that the prosecution does not
impact activity that is religious exercise under the
Constitution or RFRA, or under the defendant's tenets. Indeed,
the large body of case law defining "substantial burden" under
Federal RFRA, after which the state act was patterned, is
inconsistent with the defense assertions." See, e.g. People v.
Peck, 52 Cal.App. 4''' 351, 61 Ca1.Rptr.2d 1 (1996) (criminal
conviction for manufacture,distribution and transportation of
marijuana not a substantial burden even though use of marijuana
was a religious sacrament); Smith v. Fair Employment and Housing
Comm'n, 12 Ca1.4'" 1143, 913 P.2d 909, 51 Ca1.Rptr.2d 700 (1996)
(State law prohibiting discrimination by landlord based on
marital status not a substantial burden on landlord who sought
to discriminate based on his religious beliefs); Moran v. Moran,
188 Ariz. 139, 933 P.2d 1207 (Ariz.Ct.App. 1996) (Requirement of
legitimizing marriage by obtaining a marriage license is not a
substantial burden); Gallo v. Salesian Soc., Inc., 290 N.J.Super.
616, 676 A.2d 580 (Super.Ct.App.Div. 1996) (Application of State
Law prohibiting age and gender discrimination to Catholic High
School did not constitute substantial burden); International
Church of the Foursquare Gospel v. City of Chicago Heights, 955
F.Supp. 878 (N.D.III. 1996) (Denial of special use permit to
build new Church on land zoned for commercial use did not
constitute a substantial burden); Daytona Rescue Mission, Inc. v.
City
" One professor, in analyzing the effectiveness of RFRA in
accomplishing its stated goals, has compiled a comprehensive
list of cases deciding the substantial burden issue between
Federal RFRA's enactment in 1993 and the Boeme decision in 1997.
Lupu, Ira C., 20 U. nnx. 4nTLE ROCK L.J. 575 (1998) appendix.
66
of Daytona Beach, 885 F.Supp. 1554 (M.D. Fla. 1995) (Denial of
Church request to allow church and other buildings to serve the
homeless did not constitute a substantial burden); Terry v. Reno,
101 F.3d 1412 (10"' Cir. 1996) (Statute providing criminal
penalties for impeding access I9 abortion clinics did not
substantially burden religious beliefs and practices of abortion
protesters); In re Bloch, 207 B.R. 944 (Bankr. D. Colo. 1997)
(Recovery by trustee in bankruptcy of tithes to church is not a
substantial burden and is the least restrictive means of
achieving a compelling state interest.)
Defendant's religious tenets do not require defendant or its
representatives to inject unprescribed substances into an
incompetent patient, or force medication upon patients without
their consent. Therefore, this prosecution for the violation of
laws prohibiting such acts does not substantially burden
defendant's religiously motivated conduct. Nor does it
substantially burden CSFSO's exercise of religion to refrain
from actions which, in effect, involuntarily commit an
incompetent person to an unlicensed and unequipped facility when
these actions are not consistent with the defendant's existing
policies and dogma. Compliance with the prohibition against
practicing medicine without a license neither coerces adherents
to believe religious matters prohibited by Scientology nor
requires them to abandon any of its central religious tenets.
In a case on point, Dickerson v. Stuart, 877 F. Supp. 1556
(M.D.Fla. 1995), Dickerson sought to invalidate and enjoin
enforcement of Florida Statute §§467.001-467.209 on the basis
that the statute substantially burdened her exercise of
religion. This chapter regulates the licensing of midwives and
certified nurse midwives, setting forth the required training and
education for the practice of midwifery, which is defused as
"the practice of supervising the conduct of a normal labor and
childbirth, with the informed consent of the parent; the practice
of advising the parents as to the progress of the childbirth;
and the practice of rendering prenatal and postpartem care." The
statute also makes it a third degree felony to practice
midwifery without a license.
67
Dickerson alleged that in accord with her religious beliefs, she
prayed for and encouraged and assisted parents in giving birth
at home and rendered assistance to parents concerning home
childbirth before, during and after pregnancy, provided
information and instruction on giyjng birth at home, gave a
"helping hand" to support the mother and in "emergency"
situations would handle or touch the newborn. The Court ruled
that no substantial burden had been shown, noting at page 1159:
In the present case, Plaintiff has not shown a substantial burden
of her religious freedom. Accepting as true that Plaintiff's
religion favors home births, there is nothing in Florida's
Midwifery Practice Act which prohibits Plaintiff from praying
for others to have home childbirth. Nothing in the challenged
Act prohibits Plaintiff from sharing her belief that people
should have home births. All that the statute prohibits is an
unlicensed individual from engaging in the practice of
supervising and advising on the progress of normal labor and
childbirth, and rendering care to the pregnant mother. Moreover,
Plaintiff does not allege that her ability to obtain a midwifery
license is conditioned on any factor relevant to the practice of
her religion. Plaintiff does not allege that, in order to obtain
a midwifery license in Florida, she will have to perform acts
forbidden by her religion, or that having obtained a license,
she would thereafter be prohibited from practicing her religion.
The Court went on to find that, even assuming that a substantial
burden had been shown, the State clearly had a compelling state
interest in the health of expectant mothers and newborn babies
and that "a person lacking training may very well miss symptoms
of infection or disease and warning signs of labor complications
leading to endangerment of the health of both mother and
newborn." The Court ruled that the licensing requirements
appeared "well-suited for achieving Florida's legitimate
interest in having competent individuals supervise childbirth."
The Court concluded that the licensing requirements were
narrowly tailored to achieve the protection of the health of the
mother and newborn and therefore also passed the "least
restrictive means" test required by RFRA.
Similarly, the defendant in the instant case could have, without
abandoning or impacting their religious beliefs, chosen to have
employees appropriately licensed to provide the medical care
imposed upon Lisa McPherson or used already licensed physicians,
such as Dr. Minkoff, who was clearly available to them, to
diagnose Lisa's condition and provide for Lisa's medical care.
Moreover, the legislature has created a religious accommodation
68
defense96 to the charge of unlicensed practice of medicine that
protects individuals or entities whose actions were taken in
compliance with the "Religious tenets of any church in this
state." Therefore, the corporation has a affirmative defense,
which if raised and supported by evidence will prevent
conviction except when those involved have ignored their own
religion's precepts or have imposed those precepts on a non
consenting third party. Under these circumstances, it cannot be
legitimately argued that prosecution, conviction or punishment
would prevent or coerce other Scientologists from continuing to
practice in the way mandated by the Church's beliefs.
The corporation is also charged with abuse and neglect of a
disabled adult. It cannot rationally be argued that not engaging
in criminal abuse or medical neglect which causes the death of or
life threatening harm to its own parishioners substantially
burdens the CSFSO's religious beliefs. The severity of Lisa's
condition was such that she required hospitalization both to
prevent injury to herself or others and to maintain adequate
nutrition and hydration to sustain her health and life. Based
upon the severity of symptoms displayed by Lisa while she was
kept at the defendant's hotel, a complete medical examination
was required by Scientology doctrine to determine the medical
cause(s), if any, of her illness. Hospitalization and medical
care were therefore required both by traditional medical and
legal principles and by Scientology doctrine."
Thus, the seeking of non-psychiatric medical help for a person
who appears either physically or mentally ill does not violate
the tenets of Scientology. Similarly, neglecting or abusing a
disabled adult by forcing medication into her system, giving
unauthorized injections or attempting any other unrequested
treatment upon her is neither mandated nor countenanced by
Scientology's beliefs. If the charges are sustained by proof
beyond a reasonable doubt, it cannot reasonably be believed that
the legislature intended that such criminal acts escape
punishment as a result of its enactment of RFRA.
Fla. Stat. $458.303(1)(g) (1995).
97 See pages 38- 41.
69
2. THE INSTANT PROSECUTION DOES NOT FORCE SCIENTOLOGISTS TO
MAKE MANDATORY PSCHIATRIC REFERRALS. The defendant, in a rush of
hyperbole, suggests that not only did Lisa "adamantly" reject
psychiatric treatment while at Morton Plant but also that the
instant prosecution will force the "Church and its followers
.... to refer all Scientologists experiencing [PTS Type III
behavior], upon pain of prosecution and conviction to
psychiatrists." (Defendant's RFRA Motion at pages 37-42). This
is clearly untrue. The obligations imposed upon the defendant
corporation to provide appropriate treatment for Lisa and upon
which the instant prosecution is based, stems from their
decision to voluntarily assume the status of caregiver of a
disabled adult and keep her in its custody through what amounted
to an unauthorized, de facto "involuntary hospitalization."'s
Lisa was clearly incapable of caring for herself. The defendant
completely controlled her access to medical diagnosis, her
access to care for her physical and mental needs, her access to
nutrition, medicine and fluids, and her contact with family
members and the outside world.
Any obligation to refer Lisa for treatment sterns from this
voluntary acceptance of responsibility, knowingly made, even
though" Scientology's own teachings recognized that the
corporation is inadequately equipped for and therefore prohibited
from such activities. Thus, by not assuming the role of
caregiver, the defendant would have been acting in accordance
with adherents' and employees' beliefs and have avoided any
alleged obligation of psychiatric referral. This avoidance is
clearly not a substantial burden under RFRA or the Constitution.
'° The cases so heavily relied on by the defendant concerning
whether civil liability is appropriate for "religious
malpractice" are clearly inapposite and factually and legally
distinguishable because they did not involve a custodial setting
and the responsibilities that accompany it. See discussion at
pages 82-83 infra. Moreover, these cases involved pastoral
counseling activity for which the parties involved were not
required to be licensed (and therefore there was no criminal
violation of a regulatory statute) and did trot involve a
statute such as chapter 827 which places affirmative duties upon
persons who assume the role of caregiver for a disabled person.
These cases also do not deal with the issue of involuntary
restraint or the imposition of practices upon persons without
there consent. w See pages 41-43.
70
Further, on closer analysis, the issue of mandatory referral for
psychiatric care is not presented by the facts of this case in
the fashion that the defendant's argument suggests. The issue of
what modality of treatment should have been afforded Lisa was
quite simply not an appropriate decision for untrained personnel
to make in hotel setting. Competent medical diagnosis would have
to determine whether Lisa's symptoms, such as delirium and
mental confusion, initial insomnia and hyperactivity, and later
unresponsiveness were caused by known physical illnesses such as
dehydration, disease, infection or reaction to medication. If
so, the condition could be treated by traditional methods. If
these symptoms were determined to be a result of what physicians
term mental illness and what Scientology labels a "psychotic
break," then and only then would a determination have to be made
as to whether she would undergo traditional mental health
treatment.
Lisa's right of self-determination to reject or accept methods of
treatment prohibited by Scientology would not be extinguished
either by her being held in the custody of Scientologists or by
her referral to a licensed medical facility. In other contexts,
Florida courts have developed a procedure of substituted
judgment for determining the health care choices of incompetent
individuals, in which the court determines the likely choice
that the patient would have made if still competent. Dubreil,
Matter of, 629 So.2d 879 (Fla. 1993); In re Guardianship of
Browning, 568 So.2d 4 (Fla. 1990). While there is no federal
constitutional right to refuse psychiatric treatment" and no
Florida Court has directly ruled on this issue, other states
have held that non-emergency hospitalization does not forfeit a
mentally ill patient's tight to refuse psychotropic medication.
See, e.g., ANNOTATION, "Nonconsensual Treatment of Involuntarily
Committed Mentally Ill Persons with Neuroleptic or
AntipsychoticDrugs as Violative of State Constitutional
Guaranty," 74 A. L. R. 4' 1099 (1989). For example, if the
patient is incompetent to make a decision whether to reject or
accept such treatment, courts have required the issue to be
decided based upon substituted judgement See, e.g. Rogers v.
Com'r of Dept. of Mental Health, 458 N.E.2d 489 (Mass.
'°° See cases cited in Riese v. St. Mary's Hospital acrd Medical
Center, 243 Cal Rptr. 241 (Cal.App. 1" 1988) at page 252.
71
1983; In re Boyd, 403 A.2d 744 (D.C. 1979) or allowed temporary
medication to occur only after judicial intervention with
continued medication only if approved by the patient, his family
or a health care surrogate. Riese v. St. Mary's Hospital and
Medical Center, 243 Cal.Rptr. 241 (Cal. App. 1'° 1988).
Moreover, Lisa's ultimate choice was far from predetermined.
There is evidence that, despite her long tenure as a
Scientologist, Lisa was about to sever her ties with the
defendant corporation and return to Texas. She had engaged in
expensive and significant Scientology treatment that had failed
to prevent two psychotic episodes within the last six months of
her life. Lisa's lack of sleep had prevented the use of auditing
to "treat" her illness. Seventeen days of "caretaking" by CSFSO
only resulted in exacerbation rather than remission of her
condition. Thus Scientology seemed to hold few if any viable
treatment options to cure her illness and she would have been
forced to choose between continued and perhaps indefinite
hospitalization or the use of more traditional therapies to
stabilize her condition.
CSFSO had no right to deny Lisa medical diagnosis and care in
order to insure that its wishes as to her treatment came to
fruition. Sieniarecki v. State, 724 So.2d 626 (Fla. 4' DCA 1998),
review granted fry Sieniarecki v. State, 729 So.2d 394 (Fla.
1999). Since the mental condition of Lisa was never medically
diagnosed, it is impossible to say whether Lisa would have ever
been faced with a choice of whether to accept or reject
traditional mental treatment had she been timely and
appropriately hospitalized. The State's evidence suggests,
however, that if she had been timely hospitalized or even been
seen by a competent medical doctor, she would have remained alive
to make that choice - a choice that the defendant had no
authority to foreclose. Certainly, given the option, Lisa would
choose to be alive. The same medical help which the defendant
belatedly sought for Lisa could have been sought in a timely and
appropriate manner.
The defendant also suggests that the prosecution imposes "legal"
disabilities on it and certain adherents, specifically the
treatment of PTS, Type III behavior and use of the
72
introspection rundown. However, it is more likely that
prosecution will support compliance with Scientology policy by
the local corporation with Hubbard's directives that psychotics
not be treated at Flag, that they be given comprehensive medical
examinations before treatment and that "Type III'!" not be
treated at "orgs" such as Flag without hospital facilities. Since
a Hubbard directive prevents treatment of psychotics by CSFSO
employees this does not constitute a substantial burden to the
religious beliefs of the organization. Moreover, since an
introspection rundown was never accomplished and therefore did
not contribute to Lisa's demise, only the charge of practicing
medicine is potentially affected by this claim. Because the
statute prohibiting the unlicensed practice of medicine contains
a religious accommodation defense for following the religious
tenets of a church, it cannot be validly argued that the
prosecution has the claimed effect.
3. THE ALLEGED REPUTATIONAL INJURY OR "STIGMATIZATION" DOES
NOT CONSTITUTE A SUBSTANTIAL BURDEN UNDER RFRA. Since the
defendant cannot make a credible argument that its Scientology
adherents will be prevented from voluntarily engaging in
practices that are consistent with their professed beliefs, the
defendant instead argues that the embarrassment to individual
adherents caused by the prosecution is a substantial burden and
may impact the corporation's recruitment of new adherents. If the
charges are sustained however, the unstated premise of this
argument is that the legislature intended and the constitution
permits RFRA to stifle the truthful criticism of an entity
emanating from its commission of criminal acts. While
Scientology adherents have the legitimate right to believe as
they will and to recruit others to those beliefs, the defendant
does not have the right to distort the truth or command the
courts to excuse criminal abuse and neglect in order to
accomplish this purpose. Similarly, individuals have a right to
choose to become involved in Scientology or to avoid doing so. If
the charges are proven, the defendant has no right to limit
potential adherents access to truthful information.
Certainly, no court has recognized this type of reputational
injury as a substantial burden on religious practice. Alamo v.
Clay, 137 F.3d 1366 (D.C.Cir. 1998). In Alamo,
73
the Alamo Christian Church brought action challenging the Parole
Commission's decision to deny parole to its pastor, Tony Alamo
f/k/a Bernie Lazar Hoffman. The church alleged that the Parole
Commission's decision violated its rights under federal RFRA and
the Free Exercise Clause of the First Amendment, not just Tony
Alamo's individual rights. Essentially, the church argued that
the Commission's decision was signifcantly influenced by its
discriminatory views of the Alamo Church, causing the church
reputational injury as well as depriving it of the services of
its pastor. The United States District Court for the District of
Columbia dismissed the action and the church appealed. The Court
of Appeals, Edwards, Chief Judge, affirmed and held that church
did not have Article III standing to bring action: [Tjhe injuries
alleged by the church -- loss of the services of its pastor and
damage to its reputation - fail to satisfy the requirements for
standing under Article III of the U.S. Constitution ....Alamo
Church lost the services of its pastor as a consequence of Tony
Alamo's criminal conduct, for which he was convicted and
sentenced to jail ....Thus, the church's alleged injury was
caused by Alamo's criminal conduct for which he was convicted,
not by the Commission's subsequent decision denying him parole.
Accordingly, the church's loss of its pastor is not fairly
traceable to the Commission's allegedly illegal parole decision
Casting Alamo's continued incarceration in terms of its effect on
the church is a specious attempt to get around case law limiting
the review of parole decisions to habeas actions ....Although it
is plain that Alamo's conviction initially disrupted his
pastoral relationship with Alamo Church, the church simply
presumes (and implicitly asks the court to presume) that a grant
of parole will restore it ....Because it is purely speculative
whether, following his release on parole, Tony Alamo would return
as pastor of Alamo Church, a third-party causation problem
remains ....Purely speculative or conclusory assertions of the
consequences of the alleged stigma do not satisfy the Supreme
Court's requirements for specific, concrete facts demonstrating a
particularized injury.
In a different but nonetheless relevant context, the courts have
concluded that harm from legitimate criticism is not actionable
under the First Amendment. In Religious Technology Center v.
Lerma, 908 F. Supp. 1353 (E.D.Va. 1995), RTC, the Scientology
entity owning copyrights to Hubbard's works brought action
against an individual internet access provider, and the
Washington Post based upon their dissemination Hubbard's
copyrighted materials. The Court had denied a temporary
restraining order but entertained RTC's motion for rehearing
based upon claims that the free exercise clause entitled them to
relief. In again denying injunctive relief, the Court strongly
criticized RTC's suit suggesting RTC's motive in bringing suit
was not to safeguard its secrets but to stifle criticism of
74
Scientology in general."' RTC alleged economic harm would result
by the potential loss of new parishioners through ridicule if
the copyrighted materials were taken out of context. In denying
relief the Court noted " RTC must accept the fact that a frank
criticism of Scientology religious tenets may deter some
potential parishioners. Harm from legitimate criticism is not
actionable under the First Amendment or the copyright laws." The
Court suggested that employing the courts to stifle lawful
public criticism would have amounted to allowing RTC to use the
machinery of the government to practice its beliefs, by
enjoining otherwise permissible activity.
Courts have also ruled that reputational injury to a group is not
the equivalent of injury to the individuals who compose the
group. In Prov. Gov. of Rep. Of New Afrika v. Amer. Broadcast,
609 F. Supp. 104 (D.D.C. 1985), the Court ruled that a plaintiff
who alleges defamation must show that the statement was of and
concerning him. A defamatory statement against a group or class
does not give rise to a cause of action on behalf of its
individual members. AccordAdams v. WFTV, Inc., 691 So.2d 557
(Fla. 5' DCA 1997). While not directly on point, these cases
illustrate a crucial point concerning the instant case: the
prosecution of a corporation for abuse of a disabled adult and
the unauthorized practice of medicine through its employees
neither infringes on nor denigrates the religious beliefs of the
adherents of the religion who are themselves, innocent of
wrongdoing. Moreover, the filing of the charges has already
occurred and it is the continuation of the prosecution that CSFSO
seeks to remedy. Certainly the dismissal of the charges not on
the merits but based upon RFRA will hardly constitute an
exoneration from guilt and end the criticism to which the
corporation claims it is being subjected.
'°' See, also, Religious Technology Center v. Genna, 908 F.Supp.
1362 (E.D.Va. 1995). "The Court finds the motivation of
plaintiff in filing this lawsuit against the Post is
reprehensible. Although the RTC brought the complaint under
traditional secular concepts of copyright and trade secret law,
it has become clear that a much broader motivation prevailed -
the stifling of criticism and dissent of tire religious
practices of Scientology and the destruction of its opponents."
75
The State disputes the defendant's assertion that the publicity
contained in defense exhibits are relevant or authoritative and
moves to strike the affidavit concerning the articles as being
insufficiently authenticated and intentionally incomplete. The
exhibit contains only publicity since the filing of charges and
does not attempt to show the previous publicity generated not as
a result of the charges but as a result of the defendant's own
actions and the filing of a civil suit by the victim's estate.
These actions themselves created public interest in the case and
substantial publicity long before the filing of the instant
criminal charges. The demonstrations referred to in the defense
motions and exhibits were planned before the filing of charges
for the anniversary date of the victim's death. They would have
occurred regardless of the filing of corporate charges and
certainly would not have been diminished had the State filed
criminal charges against individual Scientologists rather than
the corporation.
Any confusion between the corporation and the religion itself has
been repeatedly and intentionally cultivated by the defendant's
own actions. CSFSO is one of dozens of Scientology corporations
whose title begins with "Church of Scientology." In an apparent
effort to gain support for its position that the entire religion
is under attack, the corporation has repeatedly chosen to refer
to itself as the "Church" in numerous pleadings in both the
civil and criminal proceedings. This duplicity is clearly
disclosed by the transcript of the motion for statement of
particulars. The defense eschews references to its client's
title that would distinguish it from the large body of adherents
and numerous other Scientology corporations with similar names
and insists instead that it be referred to as the "church,"
thereby fostering the confusion it claims was created by the
media.
This nomenclature is hardly mandatory. In Scientology
publications, employment contracts and internal documents the
defendant is frequently referred to as "Flag" or "Flag Service
Organization." On the Bates stamping of exhibits for the civil
case the corporation identifies itself by its initials FSO as
does Mary Story in her Affidavit about the activities of local
Scientologists. Even a brief perusal of the articles attached to
the Rinder affidavit shows that that the comments by CSFSO and
Scientology officials have supported and added
76
to the confusion. They have rarely noted the distinction that the
charges are only against a local corporation and respond instead
as if the "Church of Scientology" had been charged. Moreover,
members of other Scientology entities have responded on behalf of
the church as if they were employees of the entity charged.
This type of injury is simply not a substantial burden within
RFRA and does not coerce Scientologist into abandoning their
beliefs.
4. THE ALLEGED FINANCIAL HARDSHIP ON CSFSO DOES NOT
CONSTITUTE A SUBSTANTIAL BURDEN. The defendant further suggests
that either the potential $15,000 in fines or the expenses and
efforts of litigating the case constitute a substantial burden,
suggesting that a massive reorientation of Church energy and
resources is necessary. These claims are, of course,
unsubstantiated by any detail, but it is unlikely that revenue
producing services would be curtailed to finance the litigation.
The defendant is charged with two felony counts and facing a
maximum $15,000 fine. CSFSO has been engaged in a civil case
since 1997 and which is set for trial next year; since the
financial liability of the civil case far exceeds its exposure
in the criminal case it is unlikely that the expenditures can be
attributed to the instant prosecution. Certainly if the CSFSO
claims of usage of its facilities by Scientologists is accurate,
the imposition of a $15,000 fine would be a minimal figure for so
large a group to shoulder.
More importantly, however, the expenses of defending CSFSO
against criminal allegations does not in itself directly force
adherents to abandon beliefs or compel them to espouse beliefs
contrary to their own. Even when such expenses were shown to
actually impact individuals by making the practice of a religion
more expensive, they have not been found to constitute a
"substantial burden" on religion under RFRA or prior case law.
International Church of the Foursquare v. Chicago Heights, 955
F.Supp. 878 (N.D.111. j 1996); Korean Bhuddist Dae Won SA
Temple of Hawaii v. Sullivan, 87 Hawai'i 217, 953 P.2d 1315
(1998); Lakewood Ohio Congregation of Jehovah's Witnesses v.
Lakewood, 699
77
F.2d 303 (6'° Cir. 1983); Accord, Braunfeld v. Brown, 366 U.S.
599, 81 S.Ct. 1144 (1961). In International Church of the
Foursquare Bible, supra, the Church was attempting to gain a
special permit allowing it to refurbish commercially zoned
property to hold services. The Court ruled that the Church had
failed to show the likelihood of success on the merits in order
to obtain a preliminary injunction, because the permit denial
did not impact religious belief but only where it could be
practiced. The city did not prohibit the Church from relocating
in residentially zoned areas even though this might be
substantially more expensive. The court concluded " additional
expense, at least so long as it is not an inflated expense not
imposed on most landowners," is not a substantial burden within
the meaning of RFRA.
5. THE SINGLE CASE RELIED ON BY CSFSO TO ESTABLISH
SUBSTANTIAL BURDEN IS INAPPOSITE.
The only case cited by CSFSO in support of its position that its
religious practices are substantially burdened by the instant
prosecution, Mockaitis v. Harcleroad, 104 F. 3d 1522 (9"' Cit.
1997), is clearly inapposite. In Mockaitis, jail officials had
surreptitiously taped privileged communications between a priest
and a jail inmate suspected of a triple homicide. Once the taping
became known the priest petitioned the Court to destroy the tape
and prevent future taping in the jail because the conversations
involved the Catholic sacrament of confession. In a curious turn
of events, however, the defendant wanted the conversation
preserved, indicating he had not confessed to the murders in
question, but to unrelated burglaries and had expressed his
innocence to the murder charges.
The Court ruled that surreptitious taping of these privileged
conversations had substantially burdened the priests exercise of
religion in that it made the contents of the confession
available to others and potentially undermined the confidence
others would have in the confidentiality of their confessions to
the priest. However, the Court also ruled that the preservation
of the tape at the request of the defendant, who had the right
to waive the privilege, did not substantially burden the
priest's religious freedom. Mocktaitis had argued
78
that the continued existence of the tape and every new public
reference to it gave him discomfort and was hurtful to him and
increased his sense of betrayal. The Court held that these
psychological consequences did not constitute a substantial
burden under RFRA.
The direct impact of secretly recording a confessional and the
chilling effect on future confessionals cannot be analogized to
the defendant's claims of reputational injury and embarrassment
since they do not prevent Scientologists from practicing as they
wish. If anything these claims are more analogous to the
psychological injury that the Mockaitis court held not to be a
substantial burden.
For nearly a quarter of a century adherents have gone to
Clearwater to study Hubbard's teachings and participate in
auditing.. They continue to do so at the rate of 15002000
adherents a week according to CSFSO's allegations. The State is
not attempting to prevent Scientologists from practicing their
religion in Pinellas County or anywhere else. Rather, the State
became involved because Lisa McPherson died as a result of abuse
and neglect and was the subject of the unlawful practice of
medicine that was not justified by or consistent with Scientology
beliefs. The State has a paramount interest in protecting its
disabled citizens and protecting the public by bringing to
justice the persons or entities responsible for this serious
criminal activity.
F. IF RFRA WERE APPLICABLE, THE INSTANT PROSECUTION WOULD
MEET BOTH THE COMPELLING STATE INTEREST TEST AND THE LEAST
RESTRICTIVE MEANS TEST.
1. COMPELLING STATE INTEREST. The defendant concedes, as it
must, that the State has a compelling state interest in the
enforcement of the criminal statutes under which it is charged.
See, e.g., Whyte v. U.S., 471 A. 2d 1018 (D.C.App. 1984); Potter
v. Murray City, 585 F.Supp. 1126 (D.C.Utah 1984), afrmed as
modified, 760 F.2d 1065 (10' Cir. 1985); cf., Peavy v. State, 442
So.2d 200 (Fla. 1983); J.A.S. v. State, 705 So.2d 1381 (Fla.
1998); Shaktman v. State, 553 So.2d 148 (Fla. 1989); Stare v.
Rutherford, 707 So.2d 1129 (Fla. 4'° DCA 1997). Instead, the
79
i
defendant argues that the State has no compelling state interest
in prosecuting an entity as opposed to individuals. It is an
altogether novel and legally unsupported premise, that the
compelling State interest or the least restrictive means
requirements limit the State to prosecuting only_one of multiple
defendants and that the State must elect whom of the guilty
parties to prosecute. The argument presumes the existence of
prosecutable cases against others independent of their individual
immunized statements. Of course, every defendant will argue that
the remaining guilty parties and not he or she should be
prosecuted.
The commission of a crime by a corporation is no less significant
than that committed by an individual. Our statutes and law have
long recognized that participation of multiple parties in a crime
is more dangerous and serious than the isolated acts of an
individual; thus, conspiracy between two or more people is
criminally punishable even though the agreed upon crime is never
attempted or comes to fruition. Federal and State RICO statutes
recognize that the participation in crimes by corporate and
other business organizations and even more loose knit enterprises
may justify more serious penalties. Clearly, neither history nor
case law nor applicable statutes restrict criminal prosecution of
entities to only "white collar" crimes.
The State's compelling interest is to prosecute those responsible
for crime, in this case the individuals or entity responsible
for Lisa McPherson's condition and ultimate death. The defense
suggests that prosecution of the corporation is inappropriate,
but the facts indicate otherwise. The incident occurred at CSFSO
facilities, where dozens of employees from a number of CSFSO
offices participated in the incident with the knowledge,
approval and later ratification of CSFSO officers and a
director. Janis Johnson, who was assigned to Lisa's care, was
allegedly not present for the last three days of Lisa's life,
apparently being assigned to the more significant job of
assisting a California doctor in performing staff physicals.
Alain Kartuzinski had virtually no direct contact with Lisa after
the first day. Because the last days of the caretakers' notes
were lost or destroyed, his knowledge of Lisa's condition was
not known until his testimony was taken.
80
Clearly, this case is one involving collective action, collective
responsibility and collective inaction. The State has a
compelling interest in prosecuting the entity responsible for
practicing medicine on Lisa McPherson and causing her injury and
death.
- - 2. LEAST RESTRICTIVE MEANS. The defense argues almost
incomprehensibly that prosecution, conviction and possible
imprisonment of its own minimally paid employees is less
intrusive than the fifteen thousand dollar fine faced by the
corporation. For this to be an available less restrictive
alternative under RFRA, however, the Court must adopt the
illogical position that the corporation must be allowed to assert
a RFRA defense but that the individual defendants (whom the
defendant continues to assert were acting on religious beliefs)
cannot.
To begin with, "least restrictive means" in a constitutional
setting means least restrictive reasonable means, not least
restrictive means imaginable. The Florida Bar v. Schreiber, 407
So.2d 595 (Fla. 1981), vacated on other grounds, 420 So.2d 599
(State regulation of commercial speech). In analyzing whether
the least restrictive means are utilized, the court must consider
all of the relevant circumstances, including procedural
safeguards, in conjunction with the actual intrusion into
constitutionally protected rights. Shaktnum v. State, 553 So.2d
148 (Fla. 1989) (Pen register is least intrusive means to
intrude on privacy interests of alleged bookmaker).
The State has a compelling interest in the enforcement of its
criminal laws, the protection of its citizens from criminal
activity, and the punishment of criminals. The State may,
consistent with constitutional safeguards, impose any measure of
punishment that is proportionate to the crime and not cruel or
unusual on convicted criminals, including the ultimate sanction
of death for humans and dissolution for artificial entities.
See, Peavy v. State, 442 So.2d 200 (Fla. 1983) (No merit in claim
that death penalty was not least restrictive means available to
further compelling state interest in first-degree murder case);
J.A.S. v. State, 705 So.2d 1381 (Fla. 1998) (Statute prohibiting
sexual contact with children
81
f,.
under 16 years, even if consensual and with another minor under
16 years, furthered State's compelling interest through least
intrusive means).
In the casg at bar, the State has followed all established
procedural safeguards in the bringing of charges against the
defendant, and the defendant can show no constitutionally
cognizable intrusion on any constitutional interest that results
from the State's actions. Shaktman. The due process standards
and reasonable doubt standard of proof applicable to criminal
prosecutions provide the highest level of procedural safeguards
in the legal system.
VI. THE DEFENDANT CORPORATION MAY BE HELD CRIMINALLY LIABLE
FOR THE UNLAWFUL PRACTICE OF MEDICINE AND THE ABUSE AND NEGLECT
OF LISA MCPHERSON.
The Church of Scientology, Flag Service Organization, Inc., is
charged with the felonies of practicing medicine without a
license and causing great bodily harm or permanent disability to
Lisa McPherson, a disabled adult. The CSFSO is a Florida non
profit corporation initially formed in 1981 and having its
principle offices in Clearwater Florida, where it occupies
numerous buildings and employs a staff of over 1000. The stated
purpose of the corporation is to "espouse, present, propagate,
practice, ensure, and maintain the integrity of the religion of
Scientology." The actual functions of CSFSO within the
Scientology domain are to provide high level auditing to
adherents in Clearwater and throughout the world, as well as to
provide the training of auditors. In fact, Scientology touts
CSFSO's Clearwater facilities as providing the highest quality of
such services on the planet, referring to "Flag" as the "Mecca"
of Scientology. Thus, it is clear that CSFSO and Scientology
represent its staff as being exceptionally well trained and
skilled in the delivery of high level "spiritual technology."
The formation of CSFSO as a non-profit corporation under Chapter
617, Florida Statutes, precludes profit generated by the
corporation from being passed on to members, officers or
directors but does not preclude the corporation from generating
revenue or
82
accumulating wealth.'°t Fla. Star. 617.01401(5) (1998). In fact,
the directives of Scientology founder L. Ron Hubbard, which the
Church acknowledges as "scripture," make it unmistakably clear
that employees are obligated to "make money," "make more money,"
and "make others_produce so as to make more money"'°' on behalf
of Scientology. By choosing to take advantage of the resulting
benefits of incorporation such as limited liability, tax
exemptions, having the right to contract and having the right to
sue for injunctive relief or damages, CSFSO has voluntarily
subjected itself to the laws relating to artificial entities,
both civil and criminal. While the corporation suggests that it
receives monies in the form of "donations" this is a misuse of
the common meaning of the word. Adherents are required to pay in
advance for twelve and a half hour blocks of auditing at an rate
of approximately $4000 per block which equates to approximately
$300 per hour. Some levels of auditing are considerably more
expensive, costing from $10,000 to $17,000 per block." Scrupulous
account is kept and adherents are notified when the hours they
have paid for have expired. In contrast, the highest level
technical person at CSFSO known as the Senior Case Supervisor is
paid the same as all otter employees and auditors, $50 dollars a
week for a seven day work week (up to 13 hours a day with
allowance for 2.5 hours of taking courses) along with meals and
residence in one of Scientology's converted motels. If the level
of services supplied by CSFSO approaches the implied claims of
the defendant's pleadings, a tremendous cash flow is being
generated by CSFSO operations.
A basic tenet of Scientology is the Doctrine of Exchange which
states that in order to receive it is also necessary to give. As
one court has characterized it, "A Scientologist is obligated to
exhange something he values for anything he acquires. Thus, he
must exchange cash for auditing services. He must exchange cash
for Scientology books. He must exchange any original LRH
documents he possesses for the satisfaction of advancing he
'°t The labyrinthine structure of Scientology and its many
corporations, as well as their financial orientation and money
flow is detailed in Church of Spiritual Technology v, United
States, 26 CI.Ct. 713 (1992).
'°s HCO Policy Letter of 9 March 1972.
'°° A schedule of costs for these services is attached as exhibit
4.
83
Scientology cause." Church of Spiritual Technology v. United
States, supra at 726. Thus, the court concluded, in many ways
the management of Scientology Churches is indistinguishable from
commercial enterprises. Id.
The articles of incorporation place CSFSO under the control of a
Board of Directors, consisting of no fewer than three, and no
more that five directors, with the "authority to control,
regulate, oversee, and manage its activities, affairs and
properties." At all relevant times the directors and officers of
the defendant were Mary Vogeding (President), Brian Anderson
(Vice President), Marsha Lovering (Secretary)", Barbara Meador
(Treasurer) and Debbie Cook (Director). The internal
organization of CSFSO follows the divisional model used
throughout Scientology and documented more fully at pages 373
373 of "What is Scientology" attached as an exhibit to the
defendant's pleadings. Within this heirarchy, Debbie Cook, a
director of CSFSO, was the Captain of Flag, or its highest
ranking officer. Alain Kartuzinski held the post of Senior Case
Supervisor, the person in charge of spiritual technology, who
was the highest authority on such issues within the corporate
organization.
Almost a half century ago, in State ex rel Losey v. Willard, 54
So. 2d 183 (Fla. 1951), the Florida Supreme Court recognized
that corporations may be held accountable for acts of
"misfeasance, malfeasance or nonfeasance." The Court ruled that
this was so even when the acts constituting the offense required
a specific intent or were ultra vires. Corporate criminal
liability is well-established in the common law. See, 13 Am.Jur.
1057-1066, Corporations, Secs. 1132, 1134, 1137, 1144, 1145;
Brill, Cyclopedia Criminal Law Secs. 139-142; Fletcher,
Cyclopedia Corporations (Perm. Ed.), Secs. 4942, 4943, 4944,
4946, 4948, 4949, 4951, and 4959. See, State v. Shouse, 177 So.2d
724 (Fla. 2d DCA 1965); State ex rel. Losey v. Willard, supra.
In recognition of this rule the courts have held a corporation
subject to prosecution for manslaughter, State v. Lehigh Valley
R. Co., 90 N.J.Law 372, 103 A. 685; Granite Constr. '°' Judy
Fontana replaced Marsha Lovering as a member of the Board of
Directors in March, 1996.
84
Co. v. Superior Court of Fresno, 149 Cal.App.3d 465, 197
Cal.Rptr. 3 (Ca1.App.5th Dist. 1983); Commonwealth v. Penn
Valley Resorts, Inc., 494 A.2d 1139 (Sup.Ct.Pa. 1985); Sea Horse
Ranch, Inc. v. Superior Court, 24 Cal.App.4' 446, 30 Ca1.Rptr.2d
681 (5 `° Dist. 1994); People v..13eneral Dynamics Land Systems,
Inc., 438 N.W.2d 359 (Mich.App. 1987); for practicing law without
a license, People v. California Protective Corp., 76 Ca1.App.
354, 244 P. 1089 (1926); for practicing medicine without a
license, People v. John Woodbury Dermatological Institute, 192
N.Y. 454, 85 N.E. 697 (N.Y.App. 1908); cf., in People v.
Painless Parker Dentist, 85 Colo. 304, 275 P.2d 928 (Colo. 1929);
for obstructing a highway. Palatka & 1. R. R. Co. v. State, 23
Fla. 546, 3 So. 158 (Fla. 1887); for obtaining money by false
pretenses, State v. Salisbury Ice & Fuel Co., 166 N.C. 366, 81
S.E. 737, 52 L.R.A., N.S., 216; for criminal libel, People v.
Star Co., 135 App.Div. 517, 120 N.Y.S. 498; for selling beer to
a known intoxicant in violation of statute, Stewart v. Waterloo
Turn Verein, 71 Iowa 226, 32 N.W. 275; for criminal conspiracy,
State v. Eastern Coal Co., 29 R.I. 254, 70 A. 1; United States v.
Nearing, 252 F. 223 (S.D.N.Y. 1918); for grand larceny, People v.
Canadian Fur Trappers' Corporation, 248 N.Y. 159, 161 N.E. 455,
59 A.L.R. 372; for usury, State v. Security Bank of Clark, 2
S.D. 538, 51 N.W. 337; for selling butter under the statutory
weight, State v. Belle Springs Creamery Co., 83 Kan. 389, 111 P.
474 (1915), 515; and for antitrust violations, United States v.
Hilton Hotels Corporation, 467 F.2d 1000 (9th Cir. 1972), cert.
denied, 409 U.S. 1123, 93 S.Ct. 938.
A corporation may be held criminally responsible for illegal acts
of its employees if the acts are (a) related to and committed
within the course of employment, (b) committed in furtherance of
the business of the corporation, and (c) authorized or
acquiesced in by the corporation. State v. Municipal Auto Sales,
Inc., 222 So.2d 278 (Fla. 3d DCA 1969). The purpose of this rule
is to insure that the criminal acts are those of the corporation
and not those of a dishonest employee. West Valley Estates,
Inc., v. State, 286 So.2d 208 (Fla. 2d DCA 1973). It is not
necessary, however, to show corporate approval or acquiescence
by showing that corporate directors or officers have participated
in or have specifically known of or approved the criminal
conduct. In West Valley Estates, for instance, the corporation
85
was criminally charged with the illegal dredging of submerged
lands. The uncontroverted evidence was that neither the
president nor the board of directors of the corporation knew of
or authorized the illegal dredging. Wittman; the corporate
employee in charge of the Florida operations, however, did know
of and authorize it. He allegedly was a vice president of the
corporation, but was claimed to be merely a salaried employee.
Relying on the leading case of Commonwealth v. Beneficial
Finance, 275 N.E.2d 33 (Mass. 1975), the Second District
concluded that Wittman's complicity in the crime was a sufficient
basis upon which to convict the corporation regardless of
whether he was actually a corporate officer: We think the
Massachusetts court correctly stated the rule that "corporation
is criminally liable for the acts of an agent who has been
vested with the authority to act on behalf of the corporation in
the sphere of corporate business in which he commits the criminal
act The fact that Wittman was a Vice President is not a
necessary element of the corporation's criminal liability. The
parties acting on behalf of the defendants in the Beneficial
cases were not officers. The important point is that they were
shown to be acting on behalf of the corporation within the limits
of their authority. West Valley Estates, at 209.
In Beneficial Finance, the court gave a detailed exposition of
corporate criminal liability ruling that a corporation's
liability does not hinge upon whether corporate officers or
directors specifically knew of or approved the conduct, but on
the kinship of the act to the powers of the employees
responsible. The court concluded:
Considering everything we have said above, we are of the opinion
that the quantum of proof necessary to sustain the conviction of
a corporation for the acts of its agents is sufficiently met if
it is shown that the corporation has placed the agent in a
position where he has enough authority and responsibility to act
for and in behalf of the corporation in handling the particular
corporate business, operation or project in which he was engaged
at the time he committed the criminal y as
The fact that the acts may not have been expressly authorized or
may have even been expressly forbidden by corporate. policy will
not defeat criminal liability. Id. at 86. Moreover, knowledge
individually possessed by employees may be attributed to the
'°s Commonwealth v. Beneficial Finance, 275 N.E. 2d 33 (Mass.
1975) at page 86.
86
corporation as a whole. See, e.g., United States u. Bank of New
England, N.A., 821 F.2d 844 (1" Cir. 1987) and cases cited
therein.
Alain Kartyiinksi testified that he was the highest level
corporate employee with decision-making authority over Lisa's
handling. The corporate Vice-President as well as the Captain of
Flag (also a corporate director) were aware of Kartuzinski's
handling of the situation and even received updates on the
victim's "progress." A large number of employees were utilized
with the approval of numerous supervisors and the incident was
known of and monitored by supervisors in the OSA, Security
Division, M.L.O. and other corporate offices. After Lisa's death,
the corporate officials knew in even more detail about her
deteriorating condition and the widespread involvement in her
care, yet allowed employees to mislead the police and continued
to support those false statements by press releases for over a
year into the investigation. The complicity in the crimes arising
out of Lisa's stay at the Fort Harrison is widespread and the
responsibility for the failure to act is collective. The defense
suggestion that there is no basis for corporate liability is
simply false.
The defendant further argues that normal employee liability
through respondeat superior does not apply to churches under the
First Amendment and that therefore it would be improper for the
Court to allow imputation of criminal liability to the
corporation. This is a clear misstatement of the law. Churches
remain liable for the intentional torts and negligence of their
employees when acting within the scope of their employment,
under the same principles as other entities. Cutler v. St.
John's United Methodist Church, 489 So.2d 123 (Fla. 1" DCA 1986);
Cruz v. Hundley, Hialeah Church of Christ, 371 So.2d 698 (Fla.
3' DCA 1979); Latorre v.. Baptist Church of OJUS, 498 So.2d 455
(Fla. 3°° DCA 1986); Drake v. Island Community Church, 462 So.2d
1142 (Fla 3'4 DCA 1985); Folwell v. Bernard, 477 So.2d 1060
(Fla. 2°° DCA 1985). The cases cited by the defendant involve
situations where factually the acts of the employees could not be
legally attributed to any employer regardless of tire employer's
religious nature. Mark K. v. Roman Catholic Archbishop of Los
Angeles, 79 Cal.Rptr.2d 73 (Cal.App. f" 1998); Rita M. v. Roman
87
Catholic Archbishop of Los Angeles, 232 Ca1.Rptr. 685 (Ca1.App.
2'd 1986). In those circumstances, plaintiffs have attempted to
sue the employer for negligent hiring or negligent supervision
rather suing under agency principles. Thus these cases cannot be
read to indicate that churches art:Jtot criminally or civilly
liable in the same way as other entities for the acts of their
agents which may be attributed to the employer.
Even the cases on which the defendant erroneously relies,
however, make it clear that the refusal of the courts to
intervene in such situations under the First Amendment does not
apply in the compelling circumstance involving a criminal act:
ITlhe issue of whether the First Amendment protects the church
when its clergy commits criminal acts is not before us. In any
event, we are persuaded that just as the State may prevent a
church from offering human sacrifices, it may protect its
children from injuries caused by pedophiles by authorizing civil
damages against a church that knowingly (including should know)
creates a situation in which such injuries are likely to occur.
We recognize the State's interest must be compelling in order to
interfere in the church's selection, training and assignment of
its clerics. We would draw the line at criminal conduct. Doe v.
Dorsey, 683 So.2d 614 (Fla. 5th DCA 1996). The defendant's
attempts to suggest that this language would only justify civil
liability for a criminal act. It is ludicrous to suggest,
however, that the State's interest in allowing civil damages for
negligent hiring by a church who is not responsible for the
actual crime is more compelling that prosecuting the individuals
and entities who are criminally responsible.
The defendant continues to misconstrue the applicable statutes
and the Hermanson decision. The positions in this defense
argument have been previously addressed in both this motion and
the State's contemporaneously filed responses to motions to
dismiss one and motion to dismiss two which are hereby
incorporated to prevent repetition.
Additionally, the defendant's reliance on Baumgartner v. First
Church of Christ Scientist 141 I11.App. 898, 490 N.E.2d 1319,
(1986) and Nally v. Grace Community Church 47 Cal.3d 278, 253
Ca1.Rptr 97 (1988) is legally and factually misplaced.
Baumgartner ruled that there is no cause of action for
malpractice committed by religious counselors where the treatment
is volurvarily sought by a competent person who is not in the
custody of
88
the party being sued. The state has not based its prosecution on
whether the corporation incompetently applied its own religious
technology.'°' Under Florida law the corporation and its
employees assumed responsibility for Lisa's condition under a
specific statute dealing with disabled adults. They assumed a
duty the breach of which subjects them to criminal liability.
Moreover, since the defendant was in fact practicing medicine,
though unlicensed, the appropriate standard of care is that of a
physician not an ordinary person or a pastoral counselor. State
v. Heines, 144 Fla. 272, 197 So. 787 (Fla. 1940).
Nally is equally inapposite. The decedent, who took his own life,
had been under continuing treatment by both medical and
psychiatric professionals. Church non-therapist pastoral
counselors who were also advising him but not purporting to cure
his depression suggested he seek professional help and even
hospitalization which he and his parents (the plaintiffs)
declined. He was apparently competent, though depressed, was not
in the Church's custody but living on his own. As the court noted
"Under traditional tort law, one is ordinarily not liable for the
actions of another and is under no duty to protect another from
harm, in the absence of a special relationship of custody or
control." Moreover, by becoming a "caregiver" CSFSO assumed a
legal duty toward McPherson under F.S. 827. Nally might be
applicable if the defendant had merely intervened at Morton Plant
and done nothing. It did not, however, and the Nally case is
clearly inapplicable.
Finally, it is not the prosecution but the defense that has
injected the issue of religious doctrine into the proceeding,
asserting it as a defense under RFRA and under the specific
language of chapter 458. It is wholly illogical to allow the
defendant to assert a substantive defense and then suggest that
its mere assertion not only deprives the court of the ability to
adjudicate that defense but also requires a verdict in its
favor.
'°' Rather it is the defendant who has injected compliance with
Scientology's religious tenets as a defense to the unlawful
practice of medicine.
89
VII. THE PROSECUTION OF THE DEFENDANT DOES NOT VIOLATE THE
FREEDOMS OF RELIGIOUS EXERCISE AND ASSOCIATION OF ITS
PARISHIONERS OR OF ANY OTHER ADHERENTS TO SCIENTOLOGY.
The Defendant asserts that the charges against it should be
dismissed because the prosecution burdens the rights of
association and speech of Scientology's adherents. The Defendant
goes on to argue that "[a] heavy burden rests on the State to
prove," apparently before trial, "that the alleged acts were, in
fact, committed pursuant to Church direction, rather than by a
few wayward staff members." The defendant goes on to assert
that, "Because that stringent burden not only cannot be met, but
is not even alleged, the principles embodied in [National Assn.
for the Advancement of Colored People v. Claiborne Hardware Ca.,
458 U.S. 886, 102 S.Ct. 3409, 73 L.Ed.2d 1215 (1982)] and its
predecessors, as reinforced by [the] Florida [Religious Freedom
Restoration Act], demand that these claims of vicarious criminal
liability against the Church be dismissed." The defendant is in
error as to both the facts of this case and the applicable law.
The prosecution of Church of Scientology Flag Service
Organization, Inc., for secular offenses does not infringe on
the rights of free expression and association on the basis of any
effect of the prosecution on individual adherents to
Scientology. The prosecution of a religious corporation for
crimes neither infringes on nor denigrates the religious beliefs
of the adherents of the religion: Such a prosecution is
concerned not with religious practices, but with secular conduct.
It neither impinges upon the collective exercise of freedom of
religion, nor amounts to an interference with freedom of
individuals to associate with one another. The prosecution
notwithstanding, the members of the religion remain free from
coercion and constraint in the practice of those religious
beliefs that do not threaten the public order. The constitution,
after all, shelters individuals and groups only to the extent
that religious beliefs or conduct might reasonably or actually
be threatened by the prosecution.
Reliance by the defendant on Claiborne, and many other cases it
cites is misplaced, and would only be applicable, if at all, if
the State was attempting to pierce the defendant's
90
corporate veil and impose criminal liability on the Church of
Scientology International, Inc., or other members of the
Scientology conglomerate. See, Church of Scientology of
California v. Blackman, 446 So.2d 190 (Fla. 4th DCA 1984). The
cases cited by the defendant are factually and analytically
distinguishable from the instant case: *Claiborne involved a
civil lawsuit against the national headquarters of the
N.A.A.C.P., in New York City, which was remote in time and place
from the conduct complained of, which occurred in Georgia. *In
re Asbestos School Litigation, 46 F. 3d 1284 (3d Cir. 1994)
involved a class action lawsuit against an industry lobbying
organization that was even more remote in time and place to the
conduct complained of than the national headquarters of the
N.A.A.C.P. in Claiborne, and stands for the proposition that
mere membership in a national group, and nothing more, does not
expose that group to civil liability. -In Sweezy v. State of New
Hampshire, 354 U.S. 235, 77 S.Ct. 1203 (1957), the Supreme Court
held that where a college professor was questioned by the New
Hampshire Attorney General pursuant to authorization by the
state Legislature, concerning the content of professor's lectures
and his knowledge of the Communist party and its adherents, his
contempt conviction for refusal to answer was an invasion of the
professor's liberties in the areas of academic freedom and
political expression, and so bears no similarity in fact or law
to the case at bar. ,,Healy v. James, 408 U.S. 39, 92 S.Ct 2338,
33 L.Ed.2d 266 (1972) involved a college's refusal to recognize
a student organization, in contravention of the school's own
rules, solely on the basis of unsupported apprehension that the
student group would be "disruptive." The Supreme Court ruled that
denial of recognition would be properly authorized on a showing
that the group refined to comply with the college's rule that it
abide by reasonable campus regulations. This case, cited by the
defendant, thus stands for the proposition that there may be
intrusions on associatioual rights where the law is being
violated. See Dennis v. United States, 341 U.S. 494, 71 S.Ct. 857
(1951). •UnitedMine Workers of America v. Coronado Coal Co., 259
U.S. 344, 42 S.Ct. 570 (1922) and Coronado Coal Co. v.
UnitedMine Workers ofAmerica, 268 U.S. 295, 42 S.Ct. 570
91
(1922) involve the same facts of physical and temporal remoteness
as existed in Claiborne, and is similarly inapposite. *Rizzo v.
Goode, 423 U.S. 362, 96 S.Ct 598, 46 L.Ed.2d 561 (1976) was a
case of federal judicial restraint as to the internal
disciplinary affairs of a state agency, the Philadelphia Police
Department, in which the plaintiff lacked the requisite personal
stake in the outcome, there was no showing that the defendant
city officers had acted affirmatively in the deprivation of
constitutional rights of the plaintiff classes, and principles
of equity militated against the imposition of a civil
injunction. The case was not decided on the basis of any
constitutional issues of freedom of association or collective
responsibility. •Monell v. Dept. of Soc. Serv. of City of N. Y. ,
436 U.S. 659, 98 S. Ct. 2018, 56 L.Ed.2d 611 (1978) involved the
application of the Civil Rights Act of 1871 to local government
units as "persons" under the Act for purposes of gaining
equitable relief for back pay owed, as a limited intrusion on
sovereign immunity. The case had nothing to do with corporate
criminal liability, or the doctrine of respondeat superior.
Of all the association cases cited by the defendant, the only one
that is factually and legally analogous to the case at bar is
strongly supportive of the State's prosecution. Ex parte United
Steelworkers of America, Local Union 7533 v. United Steelworkers
of America, 536 So.2d 32 (Ala. 1988). In that case, the Dixie
Electrical Manufacturing Company filed a petition for a rule nisi
in regard to alleged infractions of a temporary restraining
order and a preliminary injunction preventing a national union,
a local striking union and two members of the local union from
engaging in certain activities. The local union and two members
were found guilty of contempt. On the petition for writ of
certiorari by the local union and the two members, the Alabama
Supreme Court held, inter alia, that the evidence was sufficient
to conclude that the local union authorized and participated in
unlawful acts of its individual members where the union members
voted unanimously to strike, the union itself maintained pickets
at the entrance of the targeted plant, the union maintained a
tent for strikers as protection against inclement weather, the
union provided picket captains for picket
92
lines, the union held regular strike meetings, and the union
provided strike funds to assist with the personal needs of
striking local members in need. Id.
The defendant was deeply and immediately involved in the events
that have resulted in its prosecution: All of the criminal acts
leading to Ms. McPherson's death occurred on property under the
exclusive ownership and control of the defendant. Among the chief
actors were several of the defendant's own directors, its
Medical Officer, members of its internal security force, various
staff members of the defendant, and even its librarian. Several
of the corporate actors literally laid their hands on the late
Ms. Lisa McPherson in the course of the perpetration of the
crimes with which the defendant has been charged. In marked
contrast to the facts of Claiborne and other cases cited by the
defense, the defendant provided a room and other accommodations,
medical staff, caretakers, physical security, billed Ms.
McPherson for services rendered, and transported her dead body to
New Port Richey in a corporate van. The defendant was, in every
respect, the directing force in the determination of Ms.
McPherson's fate.
VII. TO THE EXTENT THAT THE MOTION TO DISMISS ARGUES THE
INSUFFICIENCY OF THE EVIDENCE OF THE STATE'S CASE OR THE FACTUAL
SUFFICIENCY OF ANY ALLEGED DEFENSES IT SHOULD BE STRICKEN OR
SUMMARILY DENIED.
The instant investigation consists of forensic evidence and
opinions, numerous interviews and sworn statements of civilian
witnesses as well as oral, written, taped and court reported
statements from employees and documents created by and acquired
from the defendant. As the defendant is aware, many individuals
have changed their testimony in significant or subtle ways, and
there are also significant and irreconcilable differences in the
testimonies of the various employees and inconsistencies between
their version of events and the forensic evidence. It is
therefore difficult to accurately summarize the basis of the
corporate prosecution.
93
It is the State's belief that the defendant is aware of the
details of this testimony, but rather than attempt to set out
the testimony in detail, the defense attempts to limit the
`evidence" to that presented in a probable cause affidavit.
Moreover, the motion assumes the truthfulness of caretaker
accounts even when refuted by the State's expert forensic and
clinical testimony. The State believes, that under the statutes
which form the basis for the charges against the defendant, there
is no constitutional exemption for practicing medicine without a
license or abuse of a disabled person even if the actions were
fully based on religious beliefs or practices. Because the
defense does not attempt to set forth the full facts of the case
and because it alleges facts in a conclusory and slanted way, the
motion should be stricken. Moreover, alleging the facts in such
a generic way with no actions or testimony attributable to
individual actors or witnesses makes it diffcult to respond with
specificity. However, the State denies that the acts of
commission and omission which constitute the basis of the instant
criminal charge were mandated by, fully based on, or justified
by Scientology dogma. The State denies that Lisa McPherson
validly requested or consented to the procedures constituting the
practice of medicine or the abuse and neglect that led to her
great bodily injury and death.
To the extent that the defense motion raises the sufficiency of
the evidence to establish the elements of the underlying crimes,
the only proper vehicle is a sworn motion under 3.190(c)(4). The
Motion is improper in form, not properly sworn is based upon
unsubstantiated allegations and should be stricken or denied.
Moreover, issues concerning state of mind such as intent are
innappropriate for resolution in even a properly filed c(4)
motion.
Wherefore, the moves this Honorable Court to deny defendant's
Motion to Dismiss Based Upon the Religious Freedom Restoration
Act.
94
CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE
I HEREBY CERTIFY that a true copy of the foregoing has been furnished to
Morris
"Sandy" Weinberg, Jr., Esq., Zuckerman Spaeder Taylor & Evans, P.A., 401
E. Jackson
Street, Suite 2525: -Tampa, FL 33602, by HAND this &'day of December,
1999.
BERNIE McCabe, State Attorney
Sixth Judicial Circuit of Florida
by:
KulzInIA&C-7Dou
glas E.rrow
Executive Assistant State Attorney
by, V"
Mark R. Garry
Assistant State Attorney
by: 1/~!Il~
William H. Burgess,
Assistant State Attorney