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witnesses unlock sect's closed society By Bill Prescott, Sun staff writer
Clearwater Sun - May 11, 1982
The 16 witnesses who testified in Clearwater's public
hearings on Church of Scientology activities provided the
first-hand information city officials will use if they
decide to design ordinances to regulate the sect.
Boston attorney Michael Flynn, who gathered the
witnesses, said he questioned them extensively about
their Scientology experiences and people they knew in the
sect. He confirmed that information through other
witnesses and contacts inside the church, he said.
If they had not been in the sect, Flynn said,
"I'd have to be pretty much of a dunce to allow my
witnesses to get up there and say the things they
did."
He said church contracts and waivers signed by several
witnesses were put into evidence. He can obtain other
documents, he said, if necessary.
Witnesses who testified of personal involvement in
crimes were granted immunity by prosecutors, or were out
of jurisdictional boundaries, Flynn said.
Of the 16 who testified, Flynn said he represents
Lavenda Van Schaick and Paulette Cooper directly in
separate lawsuits against the Church of Scientology. He
said he is involved also indirectly in lawsuits filed by
Ernest and Adelle Hartwell and Janie Peterson.
The witnesses came from throughout the country and
represented involvement in all levels of the Scientology
organization. In the order they testified, they were:
- Edward Walters, 44, said he is a gambling casino
executive living in Las Vegas, Nevada. Walters
said he had been a high-level auditor with the
church's organization in Las Vegas. He summarized
church policies and organization.
- Ronald Edward DeWolf, 48, said he is the eldest
son of Scientology founder L. Ron Hubbard. DeWolf
said he lives in Carson City, Nevada, where he is
a security officer in a hotel casino. He alleged
his father fabricated most of the biographies
circulated by the church. He also told of the
sect's formation and early years until he quit in
1959.
- Lori Taverna, 39, said she lives in New York
City, where she operates a souvenir stand in
Times Square. She said she was a 17-year veteran
of the sect and alleged a wide range of abuses -
including medical neglect - of church staff
members and their children. Altogether, she said
she spent 11 months in Clearwater during two
stays.
- Casey Kelly, 23, said he is stationed at a U.S.
Navy radar school in Virginia. He said he spent
three years in the Clearwater Flag Land Base
handling church finances and recruitment.
- David Ray, 18, said he lives in San Diego, Calif.
and works at his grandparents' motel. He said he
was in the church six months, most of that time
in Clearwater doing menial labor. He testified
about poor living and health conditions.
- Rosie Pace, 30, lives in hiding in the western
United States, Flynn said. She said church
indoctrination made it difficult for her to leave
and that she spent eight months at the Clearwater
base.
- Ernest and Adelle Hartwell, 62 and 58,
respectively, said they were taken to Hubbard's
desert hideout after being promised a trip to the
Clearwater Flag. Mrs. Hartwell said she was
promised a cure for an intestinal condition,
later diagnosed as colitis by a medical doctor.
- George Meister said he is a businessman living in
Greeley, Colo., and that his 22-year-old daughter
Susan died while on Hubbard's ship Apollo in
Morocco. He said Moroccan and church officials
said the single gunshot wound to her forehead was
self-inflicted.
- Lavenda Van Schaick, 32, said she is in hiding
from church harassment. She said she spent nine
years in Scientology and that she received no
schooling during her teens. She testified about
living conditions of children and contended
hepatitis swept through the Clearwater base in
1977 but was not reported to health officials.
- Janie Peterson, 34, said she lives in Las Vegas,
Nev., and was a member of the sect's enforcement
arm, the Guardian Office. She said sect community
programs such as the Gerus Society, Apple Schools
and Narconon are "basically public
relations." As part of her job, she used
information in confidential confessional files to
fuel smear campaigns, she said.
- Scott Mayer, 38, said he lives in California and
is a legal administrative assistant to the city
of Santa Monica. Mayer, who said he was a former
sect senior executive, told of a worldwide
network of infiltration, conspiracy and
smuggling.
- Robert Dardano, 31, said he is a carpenter in
Boston. He said her burgled legal and medical
offices on church orders to steal confidential
files on sect enemies.
- Paulette Cooper, 39, said she is a free-lance
write in New York City. She testified she was a
target of intensive church harassment after
publishing a 1971 book, "The Scandal of
Scientology."
- Dr. John Clark said he is a physician at
Massachusetts General Hospital. He said he was
harassed after giving lectures about the dangers
of Scientology and other cults.
- Brown McKee said he lives in New London, Conn.,
and was a sect minister for 24 years. He said he
and his two Scientology missions broke away from
the main church in December 1981 after attempting
a reform movement.
Staff writer Steven Girardi contributed to this
story.
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