Scientology
Judge takes Scientology, critics to task
The feud burdens taxpayers, says the judge, who fines two critics but finds no
evidence to rule on dozens of individual allegations.
By DEBORAH O'NEIL
St. Petersburg Times, published February 22, 2001
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ST. PETERSBURG -- After listening for eight long days to allegations between
the Church of Scientology and its chief critics, Circuit Court Judge Thomas E.
Penick spent nearly 90 minutes Wednesday admonishing the church, its
adversaries and even the Clearwater Police Department.
To the church, Penick said there is no need for Scientology agents to
continually stick cameras in critics' faces.
To the keepers of the Lisa McPherson Trust, he demanded they stop taunting
Scientologists and fined two of them. To the Clearwater police, Penick said he
sympathizes with their struggle to maintain order in downtown Clearwater but
warned, "They are coming very dangerously close to becoming a private security
force for the Church of Scientology."
In the end, Penick said, the ongoing feud burdens taxpayers and the public.
Pinellas County sheriff's bailiffs were paid overtime to be at the St.
Petersburg Judicial Building the weekend of Feb. 10, when the hearing began.
Clearwater had to pay a number of police officers who were called to testify.
During eight days of testimony in which each side accused the other of
violating a court injunction that was ordered Nov. 30, Penick said what he
heard was "much to do about nothing."
"Unfortunately, a lot of it was adult nursery school antics," Penick said.
"This calls for a professional nanny, not a judge."
The judge found no evidence to rule on dozens of individual allegations. The
injunction orders church members and critics to stay 10 feet from each other
and delineates where each can picket. But he said two critics crossed the line.
Robert Minton, founder of the Lisa McPherson Trust, was fined $500 and given
six months' probation for waving a 10-foot retractable pole with a copy of the
injunction hanging at the end outside the windows of a Scientology building.
Minton waived "The Threep" on Jan. 6 as he stood in a no-picket zone.
As part of the hearing, the contraption was entered into evidence. Trust
attorney John Merrett asked the judge if the trust could have it back.
Former Scientologist Tory Bezazian, who left the church in July, was fined $100
for walking in a no-picket zone Dec. 7 carrying two protest signs.
Using the phrase "spy cameras," Penick expressed bewilderment at the level of
surveillance that goes on in downtown Clearwater. Church members and critics
regularly can be seen on public sidewalks toting video cameras. And the church
has more than 100 cameras trained on its properties, all of which feed live
into a room in the Fort Harrison Hotel, where they are monitored by church
security staffers.
"I'm missing the point here," Penick said. "I hope someone will let us know
when the great invasion is coming."
The judge said all of this gave him a greater understanding of what Clearwater
police officers face every day as they try to mediate the tension. But, he
said, officers also confused people by giving conflicting information about the
injunction.
"There was far too much street justice being meted out by either off-duty or
on-duty Clearwater police officers," Penick said.
He went on to address the off-duty work officers have been doing for the
church. The church pays the officers.
"Something that's good for the masses, the chance for the officers off-duty to
make some extra money -- and they're trying to do their job," Penick said. "But
it's become obvious to me they're getting a little more help than they need
from the people that are paying their bills."
Police Chief Sid Klein said his department has worked hard to enforce the
injunction fairly. Since the conflict results in a steady stream of police
calls, it's better for Clearwater taxpayers if someone else foots the bill for
the officers' time, he said.
"We're getting it from both sides and now the judge," Klein said. "It's a
losing situation for everybody."
Merrett said the hearing was worthwhile.
"Scientology came in here believing they could finally create their little
corner of the world where their rules can silence the law," Merrett said.
"Judge Penick is in their way."
Clearwater lawyer F. Wallace Pope, who represents the church, said the hearing
showed that the injunction has numerous holes that will be addressed as a
permanent injunction is drafted.
"If they're going to picket, do it peacefully. Don't do it with a lot of
ridicule," Pope said. "Just follow the orders provided in the injunction."
From: User <User@nowhere.com>
Subject: SPTimes: Minton on 6 Months Probation.
Date: Thu, 22 Feb 2001 02:32:15 -0800
Message-ID: <phq99t4ohob9h9g4j3qj70t6799splreos@news2.lightlink.com>