Judge rejects church argument
The rulings say the Church of Scientology's actions in respect
to Lisa McPherson are not protected by the Constitution.
By THOMAS C. TOBIN
© St. Petersburg Times
April 8, 2000
TAMPA -- In a ruling that stunned the Church of Scientology and
its lawyers, a Hillsborough County judge said Friday that
religious rights are not a central issue in the 1995 death of
Scientologist Lisa McPherson.
Circuit Judge James S. Moody Jr. also said it is not clear
whether McPherson consented to her treatment by Scientology
staffers before she died in their care. That question should be
left to a jury, the judge said.
Moody denied two requests by Scientology lawyers to throw out a
wrongful-death lawsuit filed against the church three years ago
by McPherson's family.
After trying several times to get Moody to change his mind,
Scientology's lawyers glumly retreated. One, frustrated,
chucked a fistful of papers onto the defense table.
Moody's words contrasted sharply with those of Susan F.
Schaeffer, the chief circuit judge in neighboring Pinellas
County, who considered the same set of facts earlier this week
in a criminal case against Scientology.
Schaeffer said she will take a month to decide whether to
dismiss two felony charges against the church in McPherson's
death. But the church's lawyers reminded Moody of Schaeffer's
comments during a two-day hearing.
Unlike Moody, Schaeffer said she thought McPherson consented to
her care by Scientology staffers. She also spoke favorably of
the church's chief defense -- that the Scientologists who cared
for McPherson were exercising their constitutional right to
practice religion and thus can't be charged or sued.
"I respect Judge Schaeffer greatly, but I doubt her rulings are
going to affect my rulings," Moody said.
McPherson, 36, was isolated for 17 days at Scientology's Fort
Harrison Hotel as staffers there tried to nurse her through a
mental breakdown. She underwent a Scientology procedure called
the Introspection Rundown, in which Scientologists try to quiet
a disturbed person before religious counseling.
In the Hillsborough County lawsuit, as in the Pinellas County
criminal case, the church is accused of withholding timely
medical care from McPherson. She died as Scientology staffers
drove her in a van to a distant hospital.
Moody said the core issue is whether McPherson consented to
entering the Fort Harrison Hotel.
The church says the evidence shows she clearly consented. But
Ken Dandar, the lawyer for McPherson's family, said McPherson
was incompetent to make such a decision. He cited a sworn
statement from a doctor who examined McPherson and was
concerned about her mental condition just before she entered
the Fort Harrison Hotel. The doctor said McPherson wanted to go
home.
Even if McPherson did consent to entering the hotel, Moody
said, there are questions about whether she withdrew that
consent later.
"You say she then consented forever to whatever they wanted to
do," Moody told a Scientology lawyer. "That doesn't make sense
and it's not the law. Even a religion cannot use coercive
practices. If she changes her mind, she changes her mind."
The church says McPherson consented but later became mentally
incompetent to make decisions about her care, leaving staffers
legally bound to honor her initial request for Scientology care.
The issue of whether McPherson and the staffers were engaged in
religious practice is not central to the case, Moody said.
Scientology, he noted, does not prohibit its members from
getting medical care.
But Scientology lawyer Eric Lieberman argued that every act by
the church staffers was motivated by a religious conviction
among Scientologists that psychiatry is harmful and their fear
that taking McPherson to a hospital for psychotic symptoms
would have put her in the psychiatric ward.
Church lawyer Sandy Weinberg told the judge he had stripped
Scientology of its primary defense and suggested the church
might appeal.
"It has everything to do with religion[sic]," Weinberg said.