Since a certain troublemaking liar has shown up to spew
Minton propaganda again and the events may confuse newbies,
this is the third 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 is 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.
It should be noted that a synonym for the word "turncoat" used in this headline
is TRAITOR.
---
Scientology turncoat taken to task
The millionaire testifying on behalf of the church "is in all manner of
trouble," a judge says.
By DEBORAH O'NEIL, Times Staff Writer
St. Petersburg Times
published June 13, 2002
----------------------
ST. PETERSBURG -- New England millionaire Robert Minton came forward recently to
say he wanted to set the record straight about lies he told in a wrongful-death
lawsuit against the Church of Scientology.
But his confessions and testimony may bring him a heap of new legal problems.
Judge Susan Schaeffer said Wednesday that Minton could be in serious trouble
with her, the State Attorney's Office and the Internal Revenue Service.
"I think Mr. Minton is in all manner of trouble," Schaeffer said. "Mr. Minton
has perjury problems. Mr. Minton has contempt problems. . . . I think Mr. Minton
has IRS problems."
Schaeffer's comments came during the ongoing hearing on the church's request
that the case be dismissed. The civil lawsuit blames the church for the 1995
death of Scientologist Lisa McPherson.
Minton was not in court Wednesday. His attorney, Bruce Howie, was in the
courtroom but did not speak.
Accusations of wrongdoing in the lawsuit have flown during the proceeding.
Schaeffer made it clear Wednesday that the allegations will be brought to the
attention of prosecutors.
"When this hearing is over," Schaeffer said, "I'm going to turn the matter over
to the state attorney because there are all kinds of allegations of criminal
acts from both sides."
For five years, Minton, once a vocal Scientology critic, gave Tampa attorney Ken
Dandar as much as $2-million to fund the case against the church. But in recent
months, Minton has said he lied under oath at Dandar's urging.
The church has relied, in part, on Minton's statements to accuse Dandar of
serious professional misconduct and to ask Schaeffer to throw out the case.
Dandar has denied the allegations and said the church is extorting Minton.
Minton has filed affidavits recanting some of his earlier testimony. When he
testified recently in court, however, Schaeffer uncovered more lies that Minton
had not corrected in those affidavits.
"Maybe I need someone here to advise this man of his rights," Schaeffer said at
one point during the hearing.
Minton also testified about two financial arrangements that funneled $800,000 of
his money from Europe to the Lisa McPherson Trust, an anti-Scientology
organization he founded in Clearwater. Later, Minton pocketed a large portion of
the money.
The money was transferred that way, Minton said, to keep Scientology guessing
about the source of the trust's money.
Schaeffer noted that it was "a fairly elaborate scheme" to hide the money from
Scientology and "whatever else it is that you're trying to made hide it from."
The church suspected Minton was laundering money, said longtime Scientology
attorney Monique Yingling, who testified Wednesday.
Minton, she said, would know better than to create a direct trail from laundered
funds to himself. Rather, she said, Minton probably was trying to hide the money
from Scientology.
--
Home of the Buttersquash Conspiracy http://buttersquash.net
From: ptsc <ptsc@nowhere.com>
Subject: SP Times: Scientology turncoat taken to task
Organization: The Buttersquash Conspiracy
Message-ID: <apdajvs5fg2g7ds5q6pe2vf5hsfq1ju9qr@4ax.com>
Date: Sat, 09 Aug 2003 18:04:49 GMT