Since a certain troublemaking liar has shown up to spew
Minton propaganda again and the events may confuse newbies,
this is the second post in a series to explain the general history.
It is a newspaper article aimed at the general public explaining in
broad strokes what led up to these events.
In short, Bob Minton was a former critic of Scientology who founded an
organization called the Lisa McPherson Trust and then, along with his mistress
Stacy Brooks, turned traitor and gave perjured testimony for Scientology.
This resulted in several months of hearings, on which Scientology based a series
of scurrilous, lying accusations on the perjury of Minton and Brooks. The
Court, in the person of Judge Susan F. Schaeffer, found the perjury of Minton
and Brooks completely unpersuasive and Scientology lost, since the only evidence
supporting Scientology's claims were the brazen lies of the self-confessed
perjurers Robert S. Minton and Stacy Brooks.
http://www.sptimes.com/2002/04/20/TampaBay/Church_s_leading_foes.shtml
Church's leading foes split bitterly
The man who bankrolled legal actions against Scientology excoriates a lawyer and
former ally in court.
By DEBORAH O'NEIL, Times Staff Writer
St. Petersburg Times
published April 20, 2002
CLEARWATER -- For nearly five years, New England millionaire Robert Minton has
bankrolled a civil lawsuit that blames the Church of Scientology for the death
of Lisa McPherson.
Check after check, as much as $2-million, have gone to Ken Dandar, the Tampa
lawyer representing McPherson's estate in the wrongful death lawsuit.
On Friday, Minton, one of Scientology's most vocal critics, sat in court and
testified for the church in a related case.
"Mr. Dandar is a lying thief," Minton said, hitting his fist on the witness box.
With Dandar seated just feet away, in the uncomfortable position of being the
accused rather than the counsel, Minton said, "I am now of the belief Mr. Dandar
is only in this for the money."
The jaw-dropping testimony amounted to a meltdown of Scientology's opposition
front. Should the church succeed, it could seriously damage the biggest
remaining legal challenge from McPherson's death in the care of fellow
Scientologists in 1995.
"We've been saying since the beginning, this case is an absolute sham," said
church spokesman Ben Shaw. "If you fight hard enough for justice, you'll
eventually get it."
Outside the courtroom a group of Scientology critics, some of whom Minton once
supported financially and counted as allies, was ready to be called to the
witness stand to counter Minton's accusations and support Dandar.
The hearing clearly touched off a storm of emotion among those who count
themselves as critics of the church. Minton's close friend, Stacy Brooks, sat in
the audience, red-eyed and exhausted.
In his testimony, Minton said his one-time friend, former Scientologist Jesse
Prince, was so angry to hear that he was testifying for Scientology that he
threatened him. Then, Minton said, Prince told him: "You have become a
Scientologist."
Minton said he ordered Prince to leave and told him, "I never want to see you
again."
The irony was not lost on anyone, including attorneys for the church.
"In 32 years of law practice I have never seen anything like this," said
Clearwater attorney Wally Pope, who represents the church.
Friday's hearing involved a lawsuit filed by the church against the McPherson
estate, alleging breach of contract. The church is challenging Dandar's effort
to name Scientology leader David Miscavige as a defendant in the wrongful death
suit.
Tampa attorney Luke Lirot, representing Dandar, said the entire proceeding was
another effort by Scientology to derail the wrongful death lawsuit, set to go to
trial in June. He described the church's case against Dandar as "much ado about
nothing."
After nearly seven hours of testimony from Minton and Dandar, the hearing was
not finished on Friday. Lirot will argue Dandar's side when the hearing
continues, although a date was not set.
In testimony, Dandar said he has never asked anyone to lie, nor has he done
anything inappropriate with the money Minton gave him, as was insinuated during
Friday's hearing.
Later, Dandar said in an interview that Minton's testimony felt like "your
father killing you." He said he thinks the church is manipulating Minton by
threatening him with a racketeering complaint.
"This man I adore, he was a saint," Dandar said. "It's like stabbing me in the
heart. I'm just sitting there going, 'What did they do to you?' "
Minton's St. Petersburg attorney, Bruce Howie, denied that Minton had been
threatened.
In his testimony, Minton said he'd just had enough of lying and, under the
advice of his attorney, wanted to recant his false statements. Dandar, he said,
had asked him to find a way to donate money to the case that could not be traced
back to Minton's accounts.
--
Home of the Buttersquash Conspiracy http://buttersquash.net
From: ptsc <ptsc@nowhere.com>
Subject: SP Times on turncoat Bob Minton
Organization: The Buttersquash Conspiracy
Message-ID: <rldajv83pfjosmee7cml448h29fe5f0van@4ax.com>
Date: Sat, 09 Aug 2003 18:03:07 GMT