Scientology
Scientology should be treated differently
[St. Petersburg Times, 4/7/01]
I represented the Lisa McPherson Trust and the 10 or more individuals
who were acquitted in the recent trial before Judge Thomas Penick.
Attorney F. Wallace Pope Jr.'s March 28 letter to the editor
(Extra-duty program deserves praise) is just what one would expect
from a Scientology mouthpiece. In his letter, Pope repeated a willful
falsehood he was once forced to retract in court. In fact, no one was
convicted of contempt in the recent trial before Judge Penick.
Adjudication of guilt was withheld as to two of the approximately 13
people Pope and Scientology haled into court; the rest were acquitted
outright.
Pope said that Scientology obtained an injunction against the Lisa
McPherson Trust and certain critics but neglected to point out that
after he saw what was going on, Judge Penick enjoined every
Scientologist on Earth (or "Teegeeack," as Scientology calls our
planet) from coming within 10 feet of people affiliated with the Lisa
McPherson Trust. Judge Penick also enjoined this "church" from
committing acts of violence and harassment.
Pope's letter also omits some important distinctions between
Scientology and any other organization that might seek to hire
off-duty police officers:
The president of the Church of Scientology International skipped bail
in Spain and is currently a fugitive from justice.
Leaders of Scientology, represented by at least one lawyer who works
with Pope, were convicted in a plot involving infiltration and
burglary of federal government offices.
Scientology officials and organizations have been criminally convicted
in Canada.
Scientology tried to frame and destroy Gabe Cazares when he was mayor
of Clearwater.
There is now a civil suit pending over the death of a young woman who
lost 30 percent of her body weight and died in the hands of
Scientology in downtown Clearwater.
Scientology and its web of alter-ego corporations have been repeatedly
cited for abuse of the courts and for framing their enemies and
publishing lies about them.
This is only the tip of the iceberg. If Pope and Clearwater police
Chief Sid Klein can't tell the difference between Calvary Baptist
Church and a syndicate like Scientology, they are a lonely pair
indeed.
Pope claims that the police officers working on Scientology's nickel
are not off duty but are engaged in regular police work as "extra
duty." He fails to report that one of Scientology's pet police
officers admitted under oath at the trial that Scientology decides
where he stands and what he does as long as Scientology is paying for
his services. Furthermore, if these officers were working "extra duty"
as police officers, they would have to be paid overtime wages -- and
they aren't. They are acting as security guards and are paid
straight-time by their employer, Scientology. If anyone doubts that
the cash flow has affected the judgment and behavior of some officers,
the Lisa McPherson Trust can provide enough videotaped evidence to lay
those doubts to rest.
-- John M. Merrett, Jacksonville
From: Jeff Jacobsen <jeffjacobsen@lisatrust.net>
Subject: John Merrett letter to SP Times
Date: Tue, 10 Apr 2001 15:21:29 -0400
Message-ID: <j4n6dt4vbb9e87438chdl7n2a9skavb9ev@4ax.com>