Did Anonymous Just Out Craigslist As Scientology Sympathisers?
Hollywood has a cure-all
Date: Monday, 2 October 1950
Publisher: Sydney Morning Herald (Australia)
Main source: news.google.com
Hollywood has a cure-all
Date: Monday, 2 October 1950
Publisher: Sydney Morning Herald (Australia)
Main source: news.google.com
LOS ANGELES.—The latest craze in Hollywood—and therefore in a
substantial part of America—is known as dianetics. It is described as
"the new science of the mind," and the poor man's psycho-analysis"; and
it has caused more of a commotion in the film city than anything since
kidney-shaped swimming pools.
DIANETICS is claimed to be a
cure for alcoholism, colds, ulcers, and bad films; and a means of
reducing Hollywood divorce and suicide rates.
It preaches
the belief that a patient can rid himself of complexes or "engrams" by
remembering fears and pains suffered as a child.
The high
priest of the new craze is a "science fiction" magazine writer and
former screenwriter, L. Ron Hubbard. His book "Dianetics" is a
best-seller and Hollywood, home of Pyramid Clubs and evangelism, is
going wild about it.
"Movies Need It"
Hubbard says
that three film studios asked him how dianetics could make better
films. He has personally "de-engrammed" five actors.
He explained last week:
"The movie colony has greeted dianetics very enthusiastically, because it needs it very much.
"Dianetics
can help the movies in three ways. Dc-engrammed stars won't hold up
production by getting hangovers and colds; writers will write better;
actors will act better.
"When I visited the set of
'Street-car Named Desire' Kim Hunter was trying to speak with a southern
accent. But it sounded British.
How He Helps
"I explained to her she was mimicking her British mother. Then she was all right."
Hubbard is arranging classes—at 500 dollars for a four weeks' course.
"I hope to start classes for movie industry workers at psycho-analysis rates of 25 or 15 dollars an hour.
"It
will be worth it. One actor I audited couldn't play anybody but himself
on the screen. He was frozen into one type. Now he can play any role."
Some
psychiatrists brand dianetics as a "quack patent cure-all,"
"potentially harmful," "more like a religious cult than a science."
Hubbard blithely says this is a case of the pot calling the kettle black.
"They're just not well informed about dianetics," he says.
Scientology Sex Assault Nightmare
Date: Sunday, 2 October 2005
Publisher: New York Post
Author: Phillip Recchia
Main source: web.archive.org
Date: Sunday, 2 October 2005
Publisher: New York Post
Author: Phillip Recchia
Main source: web.archive.org
A FORMER Scientology staffer is breaking her silence about
being sexually assaulted 100 times at ages 16 and 17 by the church
supervisor she was "ordered" to live with, and then receiving threats
and intimidating phone calls when she reported the abuse.
Five
years ago, Gabriel Williams, then a 27-year-old chief supervisor at the
Church of Scientology in Mountain View, Calif., forced then-16-year-old
Jennifer Stewart to have intercourse with him on the first evening she
moved in, according to her statements in court records.
After
Williams was charged with rape and sodomy with a minor — and later
convicted of sexual battery and sodomy — Stewart's family endured death
threats, stalkers and other harassment.
"We want the world
to know that when Tom Cruise calls psychiatry a 'pseudoscience,' it's
all part of Scientology's plan to brainwash people," said Stewart's
husband, Tom Gorman, referring to the actor's "Today" show interview in
June.
Stewart believed that if she went to the police, she
would not be able to avoid being sent to a psychiatrist.
According to
Scientology, psychiatry is a source of evil. Members who see "psychs" or
take psychiatric drugs will be declared "SP" — "suppressive person" —
and can't achieve spiritual freedom.
In a related civil
suit brought by Stewart against Williams and the church, she recently
received as part of the settlement a "generous monetary resolution,"
said her attorney. Although the church admitted no wrongdoing, it forked
over about $700,000, sources say.
Stewart's ordeal began
in 2000, when she became a supervisor under Williams at the church in
the San Francisco area, where she and Gorman were raised as
Scientologists. She had come to know Williams as someone who made "lots
of overt sexual comments" about women, she says.
Still,
she was told by a senior church staffer that the church had "ordered
her" to work from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. and to live with Williams and his
fiancée at their San Jose flat, which was closer to the church than her
home, making carpooling easier, she says.
"At the time,
Williams was a highly regarded member of the church, so the arrangement
seemed safe," said her father, Michael Stewart. According to court
documents, the church said it "refutes any 'order' by management
instructing the victim to stay with" Williams.
After
Williams assaulted Stewart the first night, he did so again the next,
telling her, "I'll kill you if you say anything," according to the
police report.
"Williams told me everything that was
happening was my fault because I'd been evil in a past life," said
Stewart. "If I told anyone, I'd be sent to a psych and be taken away
from my family."
Only after Gorman became suspicious of
bruises on Stewart's body in May 2001 did she admit what Williams had
been doing, he said.
THE next day, Gorman and Stewart
told Stewart's father. Michael Stewart took his family out of the church
and hid his daughter. A few days later, he told church authorities what
Williams had done.
"A deputy special affairs officer
told me not to go to the police," said the elder Stewart. "If we did,
we'd lose Jennifer to child services."
"The church had no
knowledge of the relationship between Williams and Stewart, and upon
learning of the allegations and determining that Gabe and Jennifer were
indeed having a relationship, Gabe was immediately fired," said Jeff
Quiros, president of the Church of Scientology San Francisco.
Quiros
sent The Post several testimonials from acquaintances and colleagues of
Stewart and Gorman, which he said would have been entered as evidence
in the criminal proceedings had Williams not struck a plea deal that
settled the case without trial.
Elliot Abelson, an
attorney for Quiros' church, emphasized that the church never knew about
Williams' behavior, that Williams was fired within a day of them
finding out about the allegations, and that there have been no other
such cases within the church.
Michael Stewart finally
went to the cops on his daughter's 18th birthday, when the fear of
losing her to the state no longer loomed.
More than a
year after his last assault on Stewart, Williams was arrested in Florida
in 2002 by a San Jose detective, according to the DA in the case.
While
Williams was waiting for his criminal case to be heard, Stewart, who
married Gorman in 2002 and now lives with his family in San Francisco,
filed a civil suit against him and the church.
That was
when the threats began, they say. On one occasion, a man phoned Gorman's
father and said, "SPs don't live long. Your son and his wife, Jennifer,
will be dead soon," according to a police report.
"Who else would use the term 'SP'?" said the younger Gorman. Such incidents continued up until three months ago, he says.
After
doing about eight months in jail, Williams was released last year. Now
on probation, he lives in Clearlake Oaks, Calif., with his wife and two
kids.
"I paid my debt to society in this matter, and I was not found liable in the civil action," Williams said through his attorney.
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