Scientology
(Gerry Armstrong is my friend now that we are both out of
Scientology, and I have already told him this story. I have told
him how sorry I am for my part in trying to destroy him when I
was still an OSA staff member. I’ve told several other people
this story as well, and they have urged me to share it because
it is such a classic illustration of how far DM and his cronies
are willing to go to destroy their enemies.)
I was the managing editor of FREEDOM Magazine in the Spring of
1985, when Julie Christoffersson’s lawsuit against the Church of
Scientology was being retried. I was also the main writer for
the Office of Special Affairs, meaning that when DM needed
something special written, he called on me.
Julie Christoffersson had named Gerry Armstrong as a witness in
her trial. DM wanted to discredit Gerry because he was extremely
concerned about the information Gerry had. Gerry had been the
LRH Archivist up until the end of 1981, and as such he had had
access to all of LRH’s personal papers. These included documents
which, I know from my own viewing of them at the beginning of
1982, provide incontrovertible evidence that LRH suffered from
clinical paranoid schizophrenia and manic depression from a very
early age.
There were letters to his parents in which he exhibited wildly
delusional paranoia. There was a document, known during Gerry’s
trial as "the Affirmations," in which LRH clearly revealed
himself to have delusions of grandeur. There was another
document, nicknamed "Blood Ritual," in which LRH described in
grisly detail various methods of horrific sexual torture which
he wanted to inflict on his second wife, Sara, whom he had met
when he was heavily involved in black magic.
Gerry had been the first person in Scientology to see all of
these documents. He was critiquing many of the "About the
Author" sections in the LRH books and comparing the information
in them to the documents he had in the archives. In the fall of
1981 Norman Starkey, then directly under DM in Special Project,
which would soon become Author Services, Inc., received a report
that the information that was being published about LRH’s life
by Scientology was false, according to the documents in the
archives. It was clear that some of the documents (such as Blood
Ritual) could present public relations problems if they were
ever made public.
When Norman received this report he immediately ordered Gerry in
for security checking, since he was obviously disaffected and
clearly critical of LRH, which of course meant that he had
overts and withholds against LRH which needed to be "pulled."
Gerry got into such serious ethics trouble, in fact, that it
made him realize how deeply he had been defrauded by LRH and
Scientology.
Gerry was working at the time with Omar Garrison, a writer who
had been hired to write a biography of LRH. Gerry had been
systematically making copies of all the archives materials and
taking the copies to Omar for his biography research. By the
time he blew in November 1981, Gerry had photocopied the entire
archive for Omar.
DM, Norman Starkey, Lyman Spurlock, Terri Gamboa, Vaughn and I
all tried to get Gerry to come back to Scientology and also to
return the copies of the archives materials. When it became
apparent that Gerry was not going to do either, and it became
known that he had sent LRH’s documents to anti-Scientology
attorney Michael Flynn, DM had the Church of Scientology of
California file suit against Gerry for theft of the documents.
Because it looked like CSC might lack standing, DM arranged for
Mary Sue to intervene in the suit, because she had the strongest
claim on LRH’s personal papers, since she was his wife.
I was part of the Gerry Armstrong Dead Agent Unit -- the GA DA
Unit for short. Vaughn, myself, Andy Lenarcic, Ann Lenarcic, and
a few others worked round the clock to come up with evidence
that would prove Armstrong was a "shoddy researcher" and
therefore was wrong in saying that the information being
published by the church about LRH was false.
We did everything we could to find evidence to back up claims
LRH had made about himself. We looked high and low for proof
that on a shakedown cruise of the PC 815 during World War II,
LRH really had sunk a submarine off the coast of Oregon in 1942,
for example. The evidence just did not exist. We tried to find
evidence that he had really graduated from George Washington
University and that he had studied nuclear physics at Princeton.
It just wasn’t true. We tried to prove that he had been on an
intelligence mission to break up Aleister Crowley’s Ordo Templer
Orientis (OTO) when he went to Pasadena in 1946 and began
dabbling in black magic. There just wasn’t any evidence.
CSC’s and Mary Sue’s case againt Gerry was tried by Judge Paul
Breckinridge in the Spring of 1984. Michael Flynn was Gerry’s
attorney. He is a brilliant lawyer, and he ate Mary Sue and the
church for breakfast during that trial. Flynn’s defense of Gerry
was to show that Gerry had taken copies of the documents knowing
he would have to defend himself against the church’s fair game
tactics, the point being that he needed the documents to prove
that the church was lying.
Flynn was so successful in his defense of Gerry that Judge
Breckinridge issued a now-famous decision in which he labeled L.
Ron Hubbard a paranoid schizophrenic and called the Chruch of
Scientology an alter-ego of Hubbard’s insanity. Scientology was
able to get the documents sealed, and they remained sealed until
the case settled in 1986 (at which time they were returned to
Scientolgy), but Gerry dealt a crushing blow to LRH’s
credibility during that trial. Needless to say, Gerry Armstrong
became one of Scientology’s most hated enemies from that time on.
Then in the summer of 1984, Gerry testified in a child custody
case in London, the Latey case, which also resulted in a
devastating decision against Scientology. So DM was determined
to discredit Gerry so that he would be useless in any future
litigation.
DM ordered an intelligence sting operation against Gerry. Gene
Ingram got an LAPD officer, Phillip Rodriguez, to sign off on a
bogus authorization to wiretap or videotape Gerry secretly. It
was not actually authorized by the LAPD and Rodriguez later got
in trouble for it. Then Mike Rinder and Dave Kluge (one of OSA’s
intelligence operatives at the time) both set up meetings with
Gerry Armstrong, pretending to be disaffected Scientologists who
were considering going to the authoritites with incriminating
information about the church. Mike’s role was important because
he was a high-level management staff member whom Gerry knew very
well. He met with Gerry and basically said he was extremely
dissatisfied with the way the church was being run and wondered
if Gerry could hook him up with anyone in the IRS or FBI. Gerry
had, in fact, been contacted by investigators from the IRS
Criminal Investigation Division, because at that time the IRS
was seriously investigating LRH and Scientology for criminal
fraud. So Gerry gave Mike the names of the agents he had spoken
to.
But DM wanted more than this. DM wanted evidence that Gerry was
a paid informant of the IRS, because this would show the judge
that Gerry’s testimony was tainted. The only problem was, Gerry
wasn’t a paid informant. So no matter how Rinder and Kluge asked
their questions, they couldn’t get Gerry on videotape saying he
was being paid to attack the church. Rinder and Kluge asked him
all kinds of leading questions, trying in every way possible to
get Gerry to say what they had been ordered to get him to say.
But to no avail.
So DM called me in and ordered me to edit the transcripts of the
videotapes to make it look like Gerry was admitting to being a
paid informant, even though he never had admitted any such
thing. I was to edit out Rinder’s and Kluge’s leading questions
so it looked like Gerry was volunteering information, when in
fact all he was really doing was answering a hypothetical
question that had been posed to him.
I went through the transcripts and pulled the "best" parts I
could find, doing my best to comply with DM’s orders to make
Gerry look like a paid informant. Privately I thought it was
obvious, even after the editing, that Gerry was being set up,
but I dutifully turned in my doctored transcript to DM, who then
turned it over to Ted Horner, a Gold staff member in charge of
film editing, to use my edited transcript to do the final edit
on the videotapes.
Then I went back to editing FREEDOM Magazine and my other normal
duties and thought no more about it.
One night about a month later I was called over to the OSA Int
conference room along with several other key OSA US staff. DM
and Norman were both there, looking extremely morose. DM told us
that they had taken the videotape into court and demanded to
show it to the judge, saying it would prove conclusively that
Gerry Armstrong was a paid liar. The judge agreed to see the
videotape in camera (meaning in his chambers, not in open
court). But the judge did not have the reaction DM and the
others had expected. After seeing the videotape, the judge was
enraged and told the Scientologists, "I have heard about these
dirty tactics that you use against your perceived enemies, but
now that I have seen it for myself I think you are much, much
worse than I had ever imagined!" And kicked them out of his
chambers.
Now, you have to understand that in Scientology the "wilful
suspension of disbelief" is a way of life, so much so that no
one, from DM on down, ever admits for even a moment that
everything that happens in there is nothing more than
play-acting. Everyone is so good at it that they fool themselves
into thinking they really believe what they’re pretending.
So it was with the GA videotapes. When DM ordered me to doctor
the tapes he never for a moment acted like he actually knew that
he was ordering me to doctor them. With a straight face he
ordered me to edit the tapes to take out all the irrelevant bits
so it would be a concise record of Gerry’s confession that he
was an informant. And when I edited them that was truly what I
told myself I was doing. Everyone joined in the delusion that we
were simply tightening up the videotape.
And when DM told us about the judge’s reaction, he managed to
sound absolutely convinced that the reason the judge had reacted
that way was that the judge was biased against Scientology. DM
put on a very convincing show of being totally outraged at the
judge’s reaction. Now, looking back on the experience, I think
it is possible that DM really is that deluded. I also think it’s
entirely possible that DM and the others at the very top know
exactly what they are doing and are simply manipulating all of
the lower level staff into doing their dirty work for them. To
this day I’m not really sure which it is.
I know that for myself, there was a part of me that wasn’t
surprised at all at the judge’s reaction. In fact, there was a
part of me that, even that night as I listened to DM’s
performance, wondered it he was really that delusional.
But that part of me was buried deep beneath my Scientology
persona. Certainly I would never have voiced such thoughts. I
just wanted to do what I was ordered to do as quickly as
possible so I could get some sleep and have maybe a few minutes
of privacy. That was all I cared about back then.
DM ordered me and the rest of the FREEDOM staff to turn the
edited GA videotape transcripts into a special edition of
FREEDOM. If the judge wouldn’t listen, then we would take the
issue to the people of Portland! That was what DM said.
So Andy Lenarcic, Tom Whittle and I spent the next several days
putting together the copy for this special edition of FREEDOM.
When it was completed I had to fly up to Portland and personally
present the manuscript to DM for his approval. I stood there in
his condominium watching him read, hoping he would approve it
the first time through so I wouldn’t have to fly back up with a
revised version. To my great relief, he signed off his approval
and I was permitted to fly back to Los Angeles.
I was then responsible for getting two million copies of that
special edition of FREEDOM printed and distributed to every
doorstep in Portland, Oregon. Jonathan Epstein, Finance Chief
Int at the time, was the one who pulled the money out of various
corporations, including CSI, IAS, CS WUS and several other local
outer org accounts, to pay for this monstrous, ridiculous,
useless project.
I doubt anyone in Portland ever read the damn special edition. I
certainly wouldn’t have if I’d found it on my doorstep. It
certainly didn’t help Scientology win the Christo case, either.
When the $30 million judgment came down DM ordered every
Scientologist on the planet up to Portland for the now-famous
Religious Freedom Crusade, in which thousands of Scientologists
marched through the streets of Portland demanding that the judge
reverse the jury’s decision in the Christo case.
I have no idea what other pressure was brought to bear on that
judge behind the scenes. All I know is that DM’s strategy
worked. The judge finally declared a mistrial in the
Christoffersson trial, which served to confirm for DM and
Scientologists all over the world that if you use enough force
and intimidation you can get whatever you want.
> mistrial in the Christoffersson trial, which served to confirm
--
Grady Ward grady@gradyward.com 2F07 AD38 11D4 8493 7143 5E1C E699 2FF2
From: stacy8@gte.net (Stacy Brooks Young)
Subject: A classic example of the fair game policy at work
Date: Thu, 24 Sep 1998 17:48:07 GMT
Message-ID: <6ue152$il$1@news-1.news.gte.net>
From: grady@gradyward.com (Grady Ward)
Subject: Re: A classic example of the fair game policy at work
Date: Thu, 24 Sep 1998 19:29:06 GMT
Message-ID: <360c9cc8.1876644@news.supernews.com>
> Now, looking back on the experience, I think it is possible
> that DM really is that deluded. I also think it’s entirely
> possible that DM and the others at the very top know exactly
> what they are doing and are simply manipulating all of the lower
> level staff into doing their dirty work for them. To this day
> I’m not really sure which it is.
After personally deposing the "Rear" Admiral, I would say that
it is *both*. He is able to call up the appropriate persona as
needed. This trick is not too suprising considering the cult
views on past lives, what is true for you is true, etc.
> for DM and Scientologists all over the world that if you use
> enough force and intimidation you can get whatever you want.
Which is why it is doubly important that we stand up to them NOW
before they get even *more* dangerous.
(707) 826-7712 voice (707) 826-0360 fax http://www.gradyward.com/