Scientology
http://www.sptimes.com/News/110301/TampaBay/Scientology_critics_t.shtml
Scientology critics to decamp
"It's disappointing, for sure."
He added, "I don't feel beaten. I should, but I don't. I think we will be able
to still continue what we're doing and be able to do it somewhere more
peaceably."
Already some trust staff members have moved out of state, and some of its
records have been removed from the office at 33 N Fort Harrison, Minton said.
The trust's departure will change the face of Clearwater, where the two sides
have battled in the streets and in the courts.
The group's stated mission was to "expose the deceptive and abusive practices of
Scientology and help those victimized by it."
Church spokesman Ben Shaw said the church is happy to see the critics go.
"Clearwater is better off without them," Shaw said. "They came here to stir up
trouble and all they managed to do is stir up trouble for themselves."
The move comes during Scientology's fastest period of growth in Clearwater since
the church arrived in 1975. Some 700 additional Scientologists are expected to
move to Clearwater in coming years to work in the new Flag Building under
construction downtown. The church recently completed expansions of its hotel
accommodations for visiting Scientologists.
The Lisa McPherson Trust has found itself embroiled in criminal and civil
litigation with the church ever since the group arrived. The trust can't close
its offices yet because a judge has granted a church request for an independent
review of trust records as part of a civil wrongful-death lawsuit that
McPherson's estate filed against the church.
Even though Minton is not a party in the suit, both he and the trust have been
drawn into the case, in part because Minton helped fund the lawsuit. Minton and
trust staff have been deposed by church lawyers for hours.
Minton and the trust have faced other legal blows. The courts ordered him to
turn over all of his personal Florida bank records, now in the hands of
Scientology.
And recently, the church named Minton and the Lisa McPherson Trust as
co-defendants with the estate of Lisa McPherson in a lawsuit Scientology has
filed against the estate.
Minton has said the trust has no involvement in the wrongful-death suit against
the church. But in Pinellas County, Minton said, courts always side with
Scientology.
"The reality for us is we need to get out from under the legal issues as much as
we can," Minton said. "Being away from there will help."
Church officials say Minton and trust members have only themselves to blame for
the legal trouble. They have accused Minton of trying to use the civil lawsuit
to get money out of the church and say they want to see his records to prove the
extent of his involvement in the lawsuit.
"If they hadn't gotten themselves in the middle of the lawsuit and used it to
stir up trouble, they wouldn't have gotten all the trouble they're in," Shaw
said. "What these guys are complaining about, they completely brought on
themselves."
Ken Dandar, the lawyer handling the wrongful-death suit against the church, says
Scientology has outmaneuvered the trust, and that has muddied his case.
"I'm glad they're leaving," Dandar said. "Scientology will not be able to use
them. They will no longer be the pawns of Scientology."
While the Lisa McPherson Trust will not be in Clearwater, its work, which has
largely involved documenting the stories of former Scientologists, will go on,
Minton said.
"It's going to be a more amorphous type of entity," Minton said. It will be
headed by trust president Stacy Brooks.
Minton's brazen venture into downtown Clearwater, the spiritual headquarters of
the Church of Scientology, infuriated the church from the start. Scientology
leaders were appalled by the very name chosen for the group, and Scientologists
quickly moved to set up counterorganizations with McPherson's name.
With pickets, vitriolic words and video cameras trained on one another, the
church and the trust duked it out on Clearwater's streets. A judge drew up a
color-coded injunction ordering the parties to stay 10 feet away from each
other.
For many, the public feuds were all they knew of the trust. Minton said he
regrets being so confrontational in his time here.
"Their absence does reduce what has been a constant state of tension in our
downtown area," City Manager Bill Horne said. "That has to be seen as a positive
thing in terms of the kind of tranquility we'd like to see in our downtown."
However, former Scientologists say the trust did much to help people who were
seeking answers and refuge after leaving the church. Several trust staff members
were former Scientologists.
"We felt we were alone," said Lawrence Woodcraft, who left the church in 1995,
followed by his daughters. "A lot of people feel when they come out of
Scientology, they're freaks. When you speak to other people you begin to
realize, it's not me, it's them. It's very comforting to know that."
The trust's departure will eventually result in one change downtown. Last year,
the Clearwater Police Department agreed to allow its officers to work off-duty
providing security for the church to keep peace downtown.
On Friday, Chief Sid Klein said he has always intended to remove the officers,
but he will not rush to remove them until he is sure there are no more
opportunities for confrontations downtown.
As for what he thinks about the trust's departure, Klein said, "Bon voyage."
Copyright 2001 St. Petersburg Times. All rights reserved.
From: ptsc <ptsc AT redneck DOT gacracker DOT org>
Subject: LMT leaving Clearwater
Date: Sat, 03 Nov 2001 09:09:50 -0500
Organization: ARS: Perhaps the Most Malignant Newsgroup on Usenet
Message-ID: <biu7ut89qeagemo088s714t510jeil85cg@4ax.com>
Members of the Lisa McPherson Trust, embroiled in litigation with the church,
are leaving Clearwater.
By DEBORAH O'NEIL
St. Petersburg Times,
published November 3, 2001
--------------------------------------------------------------------
CLEARWATER -- A group of outspoken Scientology critics that operated downtown
for nearly two years is disbanding and will likely close its Clearwater
headquarters, buckling under the strain of legal entanglements with the church.
The Lisa McPherson Trust, founded by New England millionaire Robert Minton and
named after a Scientologist who died in the church's care, probably will close
its headquarters, but it is not clear when, Minton said.
"For everyone's peace of mind and to be able to continue to do what we're trying
to do, it's better we're not there," he said Friday from his New Hampshire home.