Scientology
Earlier today I posted the 14 part 1980 Pulitzer Prize winning
series by Charles Stafford and Bette Orsini under the thread:
"The Scientology assault on Clearwater continues."
The following article was Eugene Patterson's introduction to
the series telling about the long struggle to crack the wall of
mystery surrounding Scientology. At the time, Patterson was
editor and president of the SP Times.
Today, the same wall that has always surrounded Scientology is
filled with holes and has crumbled in many places around the
world. Yet the same criminal behavior in Clearwater that was so
newsworthy in 1980 continues, albeit in a more insidious and
sophisticated way. But where are the investigative journalists?
Don't worry, they'll be here in Clearwater soon.
For four years The St. Petersburg Times has printed fragments of the
Scientology story as our reporters painstakingly pieced it together in the
face of unending obstacles. Now Staff Writer Charles Stafford is pulling
together the whole story in one coherent presentation?or as near to
coherence as the cockeyed facts of the matter will permit.
We know now that The Times was placed at the top of the cult's "enemies"
list shortly after the Scientologists started buying up millions of dollars
worth of property in downtown Clearwater ? vast tracts of the sparkling
little city. They moved a major headquarters off a ship at sea and landed it
in our county seat.
BUT WE WERE NOT particularly surprised to discover this No. 1 designation
for The Times in the documentary evidence that is sending nine of the
church's leaders to jail after conviction in a Washington, D.C. federal
court. We've felt the heat for many years now as our reporters have toiled
to answer the community's question: What is this Church of Scientology, and
what is it doing in Pinellas County?
Our reporters, and particularly Bette Orsini, came under attack by the
Scientologists from the very start when their inquiries pierced the deceit
of a front name and forced the church to identify itself as the secret cash
buyer of the Fort Harrison Hotel.
Church officials harshly denigrated Mrs. Orsini and other Times reporters in
public and slandered them to their editors because they were insistent on
printing the truth. Their investigations of the church's past practices
elsewhere in the world had prepared the reporters, though. They knew it was
a practice of this peculiar organization to try to ruin persons it perceived
as unfriendly.
The record showed it was also a practice to try to intimidate newspapers and
other publications with threats of expensive lawsuits if they did not spare
Scientology their critical scrutiny.
HAVING ALREADY observed the harassment of its reporters and the efforts to
stain their professional reputations, this newspaper fully expected the
church's' threat of a baseless libel suit when it landed oh our desks. We
were not dealing with an organization that played by ordinary rules. So The
Times took the extraordinary step of suing them before they could make good
on their threat to sue us. We asked a court to enjoin the church from
continued efforts at harassment and intimidation of our reporters. We felt
the need for an injunction to protect them as they went about their task of
trying to inform the public about the cult that was setting out to control
Clearwater. They needed it.
Now you will know what happened next. By infiltration or burglary or both,
operatives of the church stole communications between The Times and its
attorneys, both its St. Petersburg lawyers and its Washington law firm. They
were reading our mail. Theft was being practiced by members of a group
calling itself a church.
The amateurish vilification directed at Times executives by the church's
Clearwater publication, Freedom, was to be expected. The late chairman of
The Times board, Nelson Poynter, was falsely accused of being a CIA agent
(Scientologists alternately considered smearing him as a communist, their
documents show.) This writer was falsely called an FBI informant. So far as
my wife knows, she never received the telephone call a Scientologist plotted
to make to her in an effort to get her on tape saying, unwittingly, some
uncomplimentary things they could use against me.
Unable to find a yielding pressure point inside The Times, church operatives
went to an incredible length. They went after reporter Bette Orsini's
husband.
The fact that he had done nothing wrong did not deflect a poison-pen
campaign against him. He was not even a newspaperman. He was the able
director of a small charity in Pinellas County. An anonymous letter
accompanied by a bale of state documents about his conduct of the charity,
supposedly showing criminality, landed on The Times' city desk and showed up
at two or three other Florida newspapers. Our prompt, in-depth investigation
of the allegations showed Mrs. Orsini's husband was innocent of any
wrongdoing.
She, then, was assigned to discover who had compiled those documents that
accompanied the poison-pen letter aimed at her husband.
Within days this skilled reporter had nailed down the true identity of the
man who had used false credentials to procure many of the documents from the
state records office in Miami. He was a Scientologist.
As The Times built its case for an injuction to protect Mrs. Orsini and.her
family from victimization such as this; it became clear that the innocent
charity was going to be dragged into any court fight between the
Scientologists and The Times with possible resultant damage to its,
fund-raising capabilities, through no doing of its own, and through no
wrongdoing by its, director. Rather than permit an innocent third party to
be even threatened with damage by airing of tip Scientologists' false
allegations, The Times dropped its lawsuit.
But the newspaper and Mrs. Orsini did not drop the reporting effort to
illuminate the dark corners of the church's operations in Pinellas County.
Documents now available show she had badly shaken the church "Guardians"
confidence that they could prevent her from cracking their whole
clandestine spy system. If she could catch the Scientologist in Miami as she
had done, they knew she was doggedly following the right track toward the
truth about them all.
BUT AT THAT point, the U.S. government, after years of investigation, found
a Scientology burglar who was ready to turn whistleblower and tell the
truth. Armed with his testimony about wholesale theft of documents from
government buildings (which Mrs. Orsini detailed in this newspaper last
year), FBI agents obtained search warrants from courts and made raids that
produced the staggering volume of incriminating documents that have now
sent nine Scientologists to jail.
Far more important than those conviction though, is the light the documents
themselves now permit us to shed on operations of the church. In ignorance
of what is happening, a community might submit uncertainly to being
terrorized. A newspaper's job is to make plain the nature of what is
happening, even if it takes years to piece it together, so that information
can guide citizens in their judgments.
Now after four frustrating and at times painful years, we are able, in
Charles Stafford's series, to give you the story. The cult is still here but
the uncertainty about the facts is forever gone.
From: Bob Minton <bob@minton.org>
Date: Sun, 20 Feb 2000 02:28:37 -0500
Organization: The Lisa McPherson Trust, 33 N. Fort Harrison Ave., Clearwater, Florida 33755 Telephone (727) 467-9335, Fax (727) 467-9345
Message-ID: <qm5vaso7bj8fk14jinh812bvk93f5qj4f0@4ax.com>
Shedding light on Scientology's darkside
by EUGENE PATTERSON
St. Petersburg Times
When a strange new force imbeds itself clandestinely in this community and
sets out to harm people who raise questions about it, a newspaper has a
particular duty to resist intimidation itself and inform citizens fully of
what is going on.