Scientology
A friend of mine just told me that OSA called a mandatory
meeting today of all FCCIs (FCCI is how they refer to Flag
public pcs -- it stands for Flag Case Completion Intensive) to
order them to sign an amicus brief stating that they have had
great benefits from their Scientology auditing and that the
state of Florida is discriminating against them by putting
their "religion" on trial. This is then going to be filed in
the McPherson criminal case as a way to put pressure on the
judge to dismiss the case.
Guess Miscavige had to go back to the drawing board when Judge
Downey refused to bow to C of S pressure to step down.
Reminds me of 1985, when a Portland jury awarded Julie
Christoffersen $30 million for the damage she suffered at the
hands of the Church of Scientology. About a half hour after the
verdict was announced, Miscavige got all of OSA US on the
speaker phone in the Legal Bureau and announced that we were
responsible for getting every Scientologist in the world to
Portland for massive street demonstrations to force the judge
to reverse the jury's decision. That was the birth of the
Religious Freedom Crusade.
For the next two months no one in OSA did anything else. We
chartered private planes to fly Scientologists in from Europe
and all over the United States. We spent $2 million to produce
a special edition of Freedom "exposing" Gerry Armstrong (who
had been a witness for Julie) as a paid informant for the IRS.
Of course, Gerry was nothing of the sort. But on Miscavige's
direct orders I personally "edited" the videotapes of the
failed sting operation Mike Rinder and Dave Kluge ran on Gerry
to try to get him to admit on hidden camera that he was. I had
to take out all of Rinder's and Kluge's leading questions and
entrapment to make it look as if Gerry actually was an agent.
The reason we had to publish this Freedom about Gerry was that
Miscavige had showed this supposed videotaped "evidence" in
camera to the judge in the Christoffersen case to get Gerry
thrown out as a witness, but it backfired. Far from convincing
the judge that Gerry was an informant, the tape proved to the
judge beyond a shadow of a doubt that the Church of Scientology
engaged in exactly the kinds of dirty tricks that he had been
warned about. After the judge threw out the bogus "evidence,"
DM decided we would have to tell the story to every citizen of
Portland. As the Freedom editor I had to fly up to Portland and
stand by DM's chair in his condo at the "command center" of the
Religious Freedom Crusade while he personally read and approved
every word of copy for that Freedom. Then we printed enough
copies to deliver it to the doorstep of every single house in
Portland and DM made sure the judge found out about it.
John Travolta was ordered up to Portland, and he flew up in one
of his private planes. Chick Corea was ordered to put on a free
concert for the people of Portland. By the time we were done I
think about 40,000 Scientologists ended up in Portland. Lo and
behold! The judge bowed to the pressure and threw out the $30
million decision.
I've always felt that the Christo reversal was a pivotal moment
in the development of DM's way of dealing with the world. He
came up with an utterly outrageous idea for how to turn a
disastrous decision around and took out all the stops to make
it happen, and it worked. It was stunning. None of us could
believe it when the judge reversed that jury's verdict. It was
totally because of the pressure we put on him. That win went to
DM's head. After that, DM knew for sure that with enough
pressure he could make anything happen. Sure enough, a few
years later he hit the jackpot. Against all odds, he got the
IRS to give him tax exemption.
So what DM knows above all else is that pressure works.
Whatever kind of pressure it takes.
Now he's trying the same tactic on the McPherson case.
So far it's working pretty well. He's gotten one judge off the
case and now he's gotten the medical examiner to change her
findings. And he's managed to get the most politically
well-connected law firm in Pinellas County on his payroll.
Not bad, DM. Your methods of applying pressure have gotten more
sophisticated, not as obvious, a lot quieter. You've gotten a
lot smarter about how to spend your money. But you know, DM, a
bully only has two options: either terrorize a person or buy
them.
What if people stopped being afraid and refused to take the
money? What would a bully do then?
For the sake of Lisa and all the others who have been harmed
and betrayed by your organization, I'm praying Judge Downey
will be able to survive your arsenal of dirty tricks and money.
Stacy
From: Stacy Brooks <stacybrooks@mciworld.com>
Subject: Miscavige and the McPherson criminal case
Date: Sun, 05 Mar 2000 09:28:13 -0500
Message-ID: <par4cs04d7bdd160bgu0u41rm1cmenbhb4@4ax.com>